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A helping hand for helping hands
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INLAND VALLEY March 9, 2002
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Mancy Mintie's Uncommon Good organization pays the school
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debts of attorneys and health-care workers dedicated to serving
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those less fortunate.
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By Joanna Corman / [email protected]
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Linda Samels Ceballos entered Loyola Law School in Los Angeles
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knowing she wanted to represent the poor. She graduated in 1995
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owing $58,000 in loans.
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She was about to run out of means to pay back those loans when
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she took a job at the Inner City Law Center in Los Angeles, a firm
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that fights slum landlords. It was there that she met Nancy
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Mintie.
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Mintie, a Claremont resident, made it possible for Ceballos to
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represent poor clients against wealthy landlords, a calling about
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as low-paying as lawyer jobs get, and pay off her loans at the same
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time. "It kind of stepped in at the right time," said Ceballos, who
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has loan payments averaging $800 a month and whose starting salary
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was $30,000. "Because of the program, I've been able to stay here.
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... There was no way I could make that payment. I barely make it
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now with my regular bills."
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Mintie, who turns 48 this month, started Uncommon Good in
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December 1999. The nonprofit operation pays the debts of attorneys
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and health care professionals who work with the poor. It grew out
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of her work at the Inner City Law Center, which she founded in
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1980, and often depended on the skills of young lawyers with a
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social conscience. In 1998, she stepped down from her role as
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director. Over the next year she realized she needed incentives to
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keep lawyers around after they got a few years of experience. Not
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only were there fewer attorneys entering the field of poverty law,
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some were being driven out of the profession.
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The reason: With attorneys one year out of graduate school
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facing an average debt of just less than $90,000 and starting
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salaries at legal aid organizations averaging $31,000, they
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couldn't afford the job.
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"It really had become an economic impossibility to take these
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jobs and survive on them," Mintie said. "That finding became the
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wake-up call for me and hopefully it will be the wake-up call for
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others in a community that cares about access to justice for the
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poor."
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Her career started more than 20 years ago in a garage behind a
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Catholic Worker soup kitchen on skid row in Los Angeles. She lived
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on a $3-a-week stipend that she spent on pantyhose and bus
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fare.
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Her law practice grew to an organization that brought in
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millions of dollars of damages through its cases against L.A.
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slumlords, allowing poor families to set up college funds and buy
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homes. In all those years, she never lost a case.
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When she stepped down, she had time to notice what was happening
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to the field of poverty law.
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"I realized with a shock that the work had really disintegrated
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and we had lost a whole generation of public-interest lawyers," she
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said. "It had gone from being an economic sacrifice as it was in my
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day to an economic impossibility. ... The whole system has
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essentially collapsed."
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Mintie also started to ask questions about the medical field.
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Almost every person who walks into a free medical clinic, she said,
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faces some legal problem such as an eviction or the loss of Social
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Security benefits. And many of her clients had medical problems
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from living in slum housing such as cockroaches lodged in ear
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canals and rat bite fever, a nonfatal malady that particularly
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affects children. Mintie noticed that health-care professionals
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were graduating with staggering debts and also couldn't afford to
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work with the poor.
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Her work was noticed by Oprah Winfrey, who invited her on the TV
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show March 26, 2001. Mintie received a $100,000 "Use Your Life
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Award" from Oprah's Angel Network, a nonprofit organization that
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awards money to those who help others. Mintie said that all of the
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money has gone to her recipients -- none was spent on overhead. She
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will be out of funds by spring.
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She is trying to get religious organizations to sponsor
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recipients. It is a secular organization, but one that grew out of
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Mintie's religious convictions.
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"I was raised Catholic. I think the tradition for compassion for
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the poor encouraged that gift in me," she said. "My faith said,
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'Yes, this is right.' "
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She said she hopes that religious organizations see the link
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between their beliefs and her work.
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"For so long there has been such misunderstanding between the
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religious community and the work lawyers do for the poor. The work
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that we do is the purest form of expression of the core values of
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all of the major faith traditions."
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Uncommon Good has a few religious sponsors, including her
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church, Our Lady of the Assumption in Claremont, where Mintie plays
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piano daily at the 6:30 a.m. Mass.
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Fourteen people now receive money from Uncommon Good. Debt
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payments can be as low as $300 a month and as high as $2,000. Some
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recipients grew up poor and want to give back, while others feel
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the need despite having a middle-class upbringing. But a
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commonality among some of them was a decision all faced -- should
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they leave their jobs for higher-paying ones? Their low salaries
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and high debt payments were making it impossible to live.
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Recipients include Lisa Levsen, 33, a doctor who graduated from
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USC Medical School with $144,000 in debt and monthly loan payments
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of $1,200. She works as the head physician at the Los Angeles
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Mission, a free clinic on skid row.
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And William Martinez, 28, who cut his medical school studies
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short because he couldn't afford the $39,000 in loans after two
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years of graduate school and four years of college. Martinez works
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two jobs as a physician's assistant and supports his elderly
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parents and 8-year-old son.
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Uncommon Good has a 22-member board of doctors, lawyers and
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representatives of Christian groups and is recruiting mentors. One
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goal is to get the state Legislature to pass a law to provide loan
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forgiveness to medical professionals and lawyers who work with the
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poor. Mintie said she hopes her organization can be a national
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model for other professions.
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She is trying to bring legal aid services to the Inland Valley
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-- the closest legal aid office is in El Monte and represents
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700,000 poor people throughout the San Fernando, San Gabriel and
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Inland valleys.
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"Unless the legal aid is in the community, you can't say you are
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serving the poor," Mintie said.
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Neal Dudovitz is the executive director of Neighborhood Legal
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Services of Los Angeles County, the legal aid office in El Monte.
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He sees attorneys new to poverty law leave all the time because
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they can't afford the salary with their law school debt.
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"She's really opened a lot of eyes in terms of having people
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understand how the educational debt is limiting and reducing the
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services that are available to low-income communities," Dudovitz
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said. "Nancy is light years ahead of the curve on this stuff. Very
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little is being done practically to solve it."
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Mintie, her colleagues say, could have made a lot of money in
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private practice.
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"She's very kind and pleasant," said Julius Thompson, 45, an
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attorney at Inner City Law Center and an Uncommon Good recipient.
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"But she's also a woman on a mission. When she sets her sights on
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something, she's a formidable force."
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