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California Bar Journal
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Few who need legal help get it
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December, 2002
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California lags far behind comparable states in funding legal
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services for the poor, a situation so dire that only 28 percent of
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the civil legal needs of the state's poor and lowerincome residents
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are being addressed.
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That figures translates into 2 million people without the
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ability to access the justice system, according to a new study by
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the California Commission on Access to Justice, which also found
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that despite increased spending, the gap between need and services
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remains substantial.
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"As a practical matter, in most cases there can be no access to
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justice without access to legal assistance," said Jack Londen, past
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commission chair and a partner with Morrison & Foerster in San
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Francisco.
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"Whether we like it or not, sometimes landlords illegally evict
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tenants, children with disabilities are denied proper care,
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veterans don't get services guaranteed to them, and elderly people
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need legal assistance to escape the abuse of a caregiver."
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California has the highest number of people in poverty in the
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nation - 6.4 million, including nearly one in five children. Half
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the nation's increase in poverty in the 1990s, when the number of
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poor jumped 30 percent, occurred in California, and nearly 25
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percent of the nation's poverty increase occurred in Los Angeles
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County alone.
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Even those with jobs are suffering: 26 percent of California
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workers earn poverty level wages. The commission's report, "The
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Path to Equal Justice: A Five-Year Status Report on Access to
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Justice in California," examined how the legal needs of the state's
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poor have changed in the last five years as well as both the
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shortcomings of the justice system and the improvements during that
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period.
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Despite increases in state funding to meet the legal needs of
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the poor, low interest rates (which have reduced the IOLTA fund),
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high unemployment and the present economic downturn have threatened
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any gains.
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States like Minnesota and New Jersey spend three times more than
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California to meet the poor's legal needs, Connecticut and
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Massachusetts spend more than twice as much, and countries like
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England, Canada, Australia, Scotland and New Zealand spend anywhere
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from two to 14 times more proportionately than California, despite
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the fact that California has the world's sixth largest economy.
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The report says the state would need to triple its combined
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public and private investment in legal services to adequately meet
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the legal needs of low-income Californians.
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The 1996 welfare reform legisla tion, in particular, brought
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dramatic changes to the lives of those living in poverty, for while
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fewer people now receive welfare benefits, those who left welfare
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to work are still poor. And the legal issues they face "have become
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more numerous and complex," the report said.
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"Parents who found only low-paying jobs without health benefits
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did not improve the well-being of their children. Women who entered
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the workforce in low-skilled positions with no opportunity to
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acquire marketable skills lack realistic long-term options.
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Obstacles to employment such as lack of child care and
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transportation, domestic violence and job discrimination raise a
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host of new legal issues."
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Those issues revolve around an extensive universe of problems,
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including housing, education, domestic violence, immigration,
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employment, grandparent guardianships, bankruptcy and consumer
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debt, veterans' issues, elder abuse and home equity fraud, the
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report said.
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To meet all those needs, there is only one legal aid lawyer for
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every 10,000 poor Californians. Despite this bleak picture, the
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state's civil justice community has taken significant steps to
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close the gap between need and services in the past five years:
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The legislature and the governor established the Equal Access
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Fund, which has provided $10 million annually since 1999 for more
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than 100 local legal services programs.
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Access to the courts has been enhanced through a variety of
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self-help options, including online assistance in every county, a
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system of family law facilitators, increased funding for
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alternative dispute resolution and simplified forms and
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procedures.
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The Judicial Council is addressing language barriers by
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increasing the availability of qualified interpreters and
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translating forms and instructions into Spanish, Vietnam-ese,
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Korean and Chinese.
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Legal services programs have been strengthened by offering a
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wide range of services, including self-help clinics and hotlines
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and working relationships with social services agencies to meet all
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of a client's needs.
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Still, when more than 70 percent of the poor's legal needs are
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not being met, much remains to be done, the report points out. It
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recommends adding to the access fund, increasing both the number of
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pro bono hours and financial contributions from attorneys, improved
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assistance for unrepresented litigants and access to an attorney
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for those who require one, and development of a statewide plan to
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distribute legal services more evenly throughout the state to
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insure that the rural population also is served.
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"I know my fe llow judges want to do justice and not inflict
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injustice," observed Justice Earl Johnson of the California Court
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of Appeal, who chaired the committee that researched and wrote the
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report.
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"More than anyone, they know it can be nearly impossible to do
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the former and avoid the latter in a one-sided contest where only
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one litigant has a lawyer."
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"Our whole society is harmed when access and fairness are
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denied," said Londen. "Clearly, California can - and must - do
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better."
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