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Legal Services Avoids Budget Cut
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$19 million Congressional appropriation is good news for the
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national nonprofit's Tuscaloosa office
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By Stephanie Hoops
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January 26, 2003
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Congress stepped in Thursday to pass a $19 million appropriation
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for Legal Services Corp., which serves the legal needs of the poor
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through state programs nationwide.
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The appropriation was good news for the six lawyers, one
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paralegal and three secretaries who work at Tuscaloosa's Legal
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Services office and receive salaries much less than those of
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employees at private law firms.
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From left, Mary Frances and Artis
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"I'm ecstatic," said Willie Mays Jones, managing lawyer of the
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McKinney talk to Willie Mays Jones, Tuscaloosa office. "We didn't
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know what was going to happen." managing lawyer at Legal
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Services'
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Tuscaloosa office. The infusion of funds effectively saved
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Alabama's Legal Services programs, which have been scrambling to
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find funding amid layoffs and benefit cuts.
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Congress' appropriation for LSC takes it from a budget of $329.3
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million to $348.4 million, which will be divvied up nationwide. And
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it means Alabama won't have a half-million dollars cut from its
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budget as had been expected. Instead, it will receive $6.4 million
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for fiscal year 2003, the same as last year, said national LSC
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spokesman Eric Kleiman.
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"It was like pennies from heaven," Kleiman said.
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But Alabama's Legal Services programs still lack funds, said
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Tracy Daniel, executive director of the/sAlabama Law
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Foundation.
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"We're just treading water," said Daniel, whose organization
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gives money to LSC programs in Alabama.
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Daniel said funding must be doubled in the next five years if
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Legal Services is to continue to meet the needs of the poor.
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Alabama spends less than $11 per eligible person on Legal Services,
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and the national average is $20. The state is at the bottom of the
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nation in funding the services.
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"We are dead last," said Melinda Waters, executive director of
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Legal Services Corp. of Alabama, the largest of the state's three
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LSC programs.
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Alabama's Legal Services programs have been working with a
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statewide task force to find a way to improve its system. They've
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presented LSC in Washington, D.C., with a proposal to centralize
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the services into one program, which the national office is
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expected to accept or reject next week.
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Consolidation would be a big change because the state has been
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operating for decades with three programs, which together serve the
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state's 67 counties. Waters' program serves 60 counties, including
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Tuscaloosa. The other two are Legal Services of Metro Birmingham,
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which serves Jefferson and Shelby counties; and Legal Services of
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North Central Alabama, which serves Madison, Jackson, Morgan,
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Limestone and Cullman counties.
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"The main problem we're facing today is the fact that there are
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[698,079] people living at or below the federal poverty guidelines
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in Alabama and we have, in our 60 counties, 45 lawyers to serve 76
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percent of that population," Waters said.
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The Alabama State Bar Volunteer Lawyers Program helps the state
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to some extent. Linda Lund, program director, said 25 percent of
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lawyers with an active license volunteer. Some churches have
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programs as well, but Lund said she has no data on them.
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"I can't tell you how important I think a Legal Services program
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is, not only for Alabama but for our country and system of
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government," Lund said.
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"If a large portion of our population has no access to the third
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tier of government, they're basically ostracized."
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Even with the volunteer lawyers, however, only 10 percent of the
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need is being met, Daniel said.
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Washington D.C.-based Legal Services Corporation, a private,
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non-profit organization established by Congress in 1974, provides
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85 percent of the funding for Legal Services programs
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nationwide.
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Alabama's funding comes primarily from the national LSC, with
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other funds coming from federal and private grants, the Alabama
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State Bar Interest on Lawyers Trust Accounts program and private
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donations.
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The people who use Legal Services include veterans, family
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farmers and people with disabilities. Legal Services provides
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lawyers to help them only with civil legalities, such as consumer,
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family, housing and employment law matters. The services are free.
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Only those whose incomes do not exceed 125 percent of the federal
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poverty level qualify for the services.
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Mary Frances McKinney saw her lawyer at Tuscaloosa's Legal
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Services office Friday. McKinney's house was sold in October on the
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Tuscaloosa County Courthouse steps after she and her husband were
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sued by a local business. Legal Services is trying to get it back
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for the elderly couple.
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McKinney said she wouldn't know what to do if Legal Services
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weren't around.
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"We'd probably lose everything we had if we didn't have this
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place," she said.
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In West Alabama, abused women make regular use of Legal Services
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as well.
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Last year at Tuscaloosa's Turning Point Domestic Violence Sexual
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Assault Services, half of the 160 women who sought shelter used
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Legal Services, said executive director Kathy Benitez.
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"I had a client come in off the street one day and she said,
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`I'm really afraid he's going to kill me this time, I need a
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protection from abuse order.'" Benitez said. "So I immediately
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called Legal Services and their attorney made an appointment with
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her, worked her in that afternoon. That's just one recent
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example."
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The lawyers who work for Alabama's programs are not highly paid.
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Starting pay is only $31,196, Waters said. Tax records show Waters
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earned around $65,000 in 2000. By comparison, tax records show the
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director of the program at the Atlanta Legal Aid Society earned
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upwards of $80,000 during that time.
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But those who work for Legal Services in Alabama say the money
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is not why they entered the field.
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"Having grown up poor myself, I know that a lot of people are
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taken advantage of and need someone to advocate for them," said
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Jones.
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Jones has been with LSC of Alabama's Tuscaloosa office since
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1986. Raised in housing projects, she took the job after graduating
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from the University of Alabama School of Law because she wanted to
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give back to her community.
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"I could have gone to a law firm and I would have made more
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money - a lot more money," Jones said. "I know that I'm not getting
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paid as much as I could in the private sector, but I'm doing a lot
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of good work for people who really need it."
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Waters said she'd like to get an appropriation from the state
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legislature to help Legal Services in Alabama, but she realizes
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that is unlikely, given the state of the economy. A better option
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might be to tack a filing fee onto new cases filed in state courts,
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with the money going to help fund Legal Services, she said. That is
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how indigent criminal defenders get paid.
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"We can't lobby," she said. "We do not have paid lobbyists and
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we are, in fact, a non-profit public interest law firm and that
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kind of approach to the legislature would require a lot of
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education."
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Waters said the organization is already making difficult
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decisions about who to turn away.
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"Unfortunately our clients, being poor, have nowhere else to
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turn for legal representation," she said. "So unlike people who are
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fortunate enough to be able to afford attorneys and can go to
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another lawyer, our clients are simply lost in the legal system if
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they cannot get access to it from us."
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Reach Stephanie Hoops at [email protected] or
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722-0204.
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