Book a Demo!
CoCalc Logo Icon
StoreFeaturesDocsShareSupportNewsAboutPoliciesSign UpSign In
Download
29548 views
1
2
3
4
5
STATE PLANNING CONFIGURATION STANDARDS Final Task Force Report
6
- Board Approved
7
November 2001
8
LEGAL SERVICES CORPORATION
9
10
11
STATE PLANNING CONFIGURATION STANDARDS
12
Final Task Force Report - Board Approved
13
14
I. PREFACE
15
This document-- Legal Services Corporation State Planning
16
Configuration Standards -- presents in one place a comprehensive
17
compilation of the standards LSC recipients and Designated State
18
Planning Bodies (DSPB's)1 should consider and that the Legal
19
Services Corporation will use in considering the configuration of a
20
state's legal services delivery system.2
21
Determination of the most appropriate configuration of programs
22
in a given state is a part of the broader state planning process
23
and cannot be divorced from consideration of the overall goals of
24
the state delivery system, the state's past performance, current
25
status, and progress towards and plans for achieving those goals.
26
The Legal Services Corporation expects its grantees in each state
27
and territory to work with one another and with a broad spectrum of
28
other equal justice stakeholders3 to develop comprehensive,
29
integrated statewide civil legal services delivery systems which
30
are responsive to the most compelling needs of eligible clients and
31
client communities, ensure the highest and most strategic use of
32
all available resources, maximize the opportunity for clients
33
throughout the state to receive timely, effective and appropriate
34
legal services in the present and in the future, and operate
35
efficiently and effectively.4
36
1 A "Designated State Planning Body" is an entity that has been
37
established and charged with responsibility for coordinating state
38
legal services delivery planning. Such planning entities are
39
generally composed of an array of civil equal justice delivery
40
stakeholders, including but not limited to representatives from the
41
state bar association, state IOLTA funding entity, staffed legal
42
services programs (LSC and non-LSC), the pro bono community, client
43
organizations, clients and others with an interest and commitment
44
to effective delivery of civil legal services to poor and
45
vulnerable people in the state.
46
2 For LSC's policies regarding internal review of configuration
47
recommendations, see Legal Services Corporation Reconfiguration
48
Review Process, September 21, 2001.
49
3 State planning processes, including the participants, will
50
vary from state to state, and LSC does not require the same process
51
or participation in each state. However, LSC continues to encourage
52
broad civil equal justice stakeholder participation at the state
53
level and expects its grantees to do the same.
54
4 For a fuller articulation of these goals, see LSC Program
55
Letters 98-1, 98-6, and 2000-7, and Strategic Directions 2000-2005,
56
adopted by the LSC Board of Directors on January 28, 2000.
57
While LSC will continue to utilize a variety of approaches, LSC
58
views service area configuration as a key structural component of a
59
comprehensive set of strategies employed to promote the creation
60
and sustainability of comprehensive, integrated state civil equal
61
justice communities. LSC has and will continue to require its
62
grantees and encourage DSPB's to critically examine the degree to
63
which the configuration of LSC grantees in any given state promotes
64
these ends.
65
The determination of the configuration that will best serve
66
clients throughout a particular state ultimately involves a
67
balancing of factors and the application of judgment to a host of
68
considerations. Each state is different, and in a number of states,
69
intra-state regions differ significantly as well. Some standards
70
relevant to decisions affecting configuration can, in context,
71
suggest different conclusions, depending upon the state or
72
geographic region involved. Each state's configuration must be
73
viewed on the totality of the circumstances.
74
LSC values the judgments of designated state planning bodies
75
that have addressed the question and will normally give great
76
weight to those judgments that have been developed through an
77
inclusive, thoughtful, and client-centered process. LSC will only
78
adopt a different configuration based upon good and substantial
79
reasons clearly articulated in writing and tied to the specific
80
standards enumerated herein.
81
These standards shall guide the state planning process on
82
reconfiguration and shall serve as the criteria for decisions of
83
LSC. Under these guidelines, LSC will exercise its statutory
84
responsibility to insure that grants and contracts are made so as
85
to provide the most economical and effective delivery of legal
86
assistance to persons in both urban and rural areas.5
87
88
89
II. LSC's Statutory Responsibility
90
LSC operates under a statutory mandate to make funding decisions
91
that maximize the effective and economical delivery of high quality
92
legal services to eligible clients throughout the state within a
93
comprehensive, integrated delivery system. This duty can be
94
effectively carried out through a process that recognizes the
95
importance of creating enduring capacities at the state level to
96
support legal services delivery systems.
97
In some states, it may be possible to develop and implement
98
statewide initiatives to improve service delivery, increase
99
resources and enhance the
100
5 Legal Services Corporation Act, Section 1007(a)(3).
101
capacity of the system to meet the civil legal needs of
102
low-income people throughout the state without altering service
103
areas or historical relationships. In other states, the very
104
development and implementation of such initiatives may require
105
reconfiguration of organizational relationships and service
106
areas.
107
108
109
III. Configuration Standards
110
In making a determination as to whether the configuration of
111
LSC-funded providers set out in the state plan will maximize the
112
effective and economical delivery of high quality legal services to
113
eligible clients throughout the state within a comprehensive,
114
integrated delivery system, both in the present and in the future,
115
LSC will review the strategies outlined in the state plan against
116
the following standards:
117
118
1. The Configuration of LSC-Funded Program Will Maximize Access
119
for Clients Throughout the State
120
121
122
a.
123
Area of Inquiry--Does the configuration of programs
124
within the state facilitate the development and sustainability of a
125
delivery network that, within financial resources and subject to
126
appropriate priority decisions under 45 C.F.R. 1620, provides
127
low-income persons throughout the state, to the extent reasonably
128
possible, broad, prompt, and relatively equitable access to the
129
legal services it furnishes regardless of such obstacles as
130
physical or mental disability, age, geographical isolation, race,
131
gender, sexual orientation, culture, or language?
132
133
134
b.
135
Area of Inquiry--Does the configuration of programs
136
within the state take into account the socio-cultural and economic
137
affinities in place that are most relevant to the legal issues
138
facing low-income clients and client communities?
139
140
141
c.
142
Area of Inquiry--Does the configuration of programs
143
within the state take into account the geographic, physical, and
144
historical distinctions and affinities within the state or
145
territory of most relevance to clients and their
146
communities?
147
148
149
150
151
2. The Configuration of LSC-Funded Programs Will Maximize
152
Effective Legal Services to Clients Throughout the State.
153
a. Area of Inquiry--Does the configuration of programs within
154
the state, within financial resources and subject to appropriate
155
priority decisions under 45 C.F.R. 1620, promote relative equity in
156
the availability of the full range of client service capacities
157
necessary to meet the full continuum of client legal needs
158
regardless of where in the state clients live?
159
160
161
b.
162
Area of Inquiry--Does the configuration of programs
163
within the state enhance opportunities to attract attorneys and
164
paralegals who can provide expertise, skills, cultural relevancy
165
and cultural competencies necessary to address the most pressing
166
legal needs of clients?
167
168
169
c.
170
Area of Inquiry--Does the configuration of programs
171
promote the likelihood that all providers will have relatively
172
equal access to the resources, expertise, information and
173
experience necessary to provide high quality legal services
174
consistent with state and national standards of provider
175
performance?
176
177
178
d.
179
Area of Inquiry--Does the configuration of programs
180
facilitate the efficient statewide coordination of legal work and
181
provide an efficient means of establishing and maintaining a
182
statewide capacity to provide training, monitor developments,
183
disseminate relevant information and provide expert assistance
184
necessary for the delivery of high quality assistance?
185
186
187
e.
188
Area of Inquiry--Does the configuration of programs
189
within the state facilitate the ability of legal services providers
190
to coordinate their efforts to expand client access to the courts,
191
enhance self-help opportunities for low-income persons, and provide
192
effective, culturally relevant, systematic and comprehensive
193
outreach and preventive legal education and advice to the
194
client-eligible population in the state?
195
196
197
f.
198
Area of Inquiry--Does the configuration of programs
199
within the state take into account the location and configuration
200
of governmental, judicial, human services and other relevant
201
regional delivery planning areas in the state?
202
203
204
g.
205
Area of Inquiry--Does the configuration of programs
206
within the state facilitate the ability of legal services providers
207
and other civil equal justice partners to coordinate their research
208
and their efforts to stay abreast of developments in the delivery
209
of legal services?
210
211
212
h.
213
Area of Inquiry--Does the configuration of programs
214
within the state facilitate efforts to secure new funding for, and
215
where appropriate allocate current funding to new projects and
216
experimental models for serving clients or strengthening system
217
capacities?
218
219
220
i.
221
Area of Inquiry--Does the configuration of programs
222
within the state facilitate uniform and consistent approaches to
223
accountability to clients, client communities and
224
funders?
225
226
227
228
229
3. The Delivery System Will Be Designed and Configured to Make
230
the Highest and Best Use of Available Resources.
231
232
233
a.
234
Area of Inquiry--Does the configuration of programs
235
within the state facilitate the coordination of resource
236
development efforts to maintain existing resources and to generate
237
and leverage additional resources, including such efforts as
238
unified approaches to major potential public sources, liaison with
239
and maintenance of existing statewide resources, and coordinated
240
technical assistance for local fundraising?
241
242
243
b.
244
Area of Inquiry--Does the configuration of programs
245
within the state provide, to the extent reasonably possible,
246
relative equity in the investment of civil equal justice resources
247
(federal, state, private, and in-kind/pro bono) throughout the
248
state?
249
250
251
c.
252
Area of Inquiry--Does the configuration of programs
253
within the state facilitate the coordination of efforts and a
254
capacity to utilize new and emerging technology to promote
255
efficiency, coordinate and collaborate with other entities, improve
256
quality and expand services to clients regardless of where they
257
reside or other access barriers they experience?
258
259
260
d.
261
Area of Inquiry--Does the configuration of programs
262
within the state maximize the potential for effective and efficient
263
administration and minimize the potential for duplication of
264
capacities, services, systems and/or administration?
265
266
267
e.
268
Area of Inquiry--Does the configuration of programs
269
within the state facilitate strong coordination and collaboration
270
with, and a high degree of involvement in services to low-income
271
clients by, the private bar throughout the state? Will it maintain
272
and enhance state and local bar relations? Will it promote, where
273
appropriate, the sharing of urban-based private capacity with the
274
needs of rural and isolated clients?
275
276
277
4. The Delivery System Will Be Designed and Configured to
278
Respond Effectively and Efficiently to New and Emerging Client
279
Needs and Other Changes Affecting the Delivery of Legal Services to
280
the Poor.
281
282
283
a.
284
Area of Inquiry-- Does the configuration of programs
285
within the state enhance the likelihood of achieving the intended
286
goals and objectives of a comprehensive, integrated and
287
client-centered legal services delivery system including, but not
288
limited to service effectiveness/quality; full range of legal
289
services to address most pressing legal needs of eligible clients;
290
efficiency; equity and ease in terms of client access; greater
291
involvement by members of the private bar in the legal lives of
292
clients; and client-community empowerment?
293
294
295
b.
296
Area of Inquiry--Does the configuration of programs
297
within the state facilitate efficient, ongoing assessment of
298
demographic trends, changes in laws and public programs affecting
299
low-income persons?
300
301
302
c.
303
Area of Inquiry--Does the configuration of programs
304
within the state operate to ensure that there is a regular review
305
of system capacities and resources throughout the state and
306
adjustments in their deployment to respond to new and emerging
307
client needs, legal trends and other changes affecting the delivery
308
of legal services to the poor?
309
310
311
d.
312
Area of Inquiry--Does the configuration of programs
313
within the state operate to ensure within available resources that
314
all components of the delivery system have sufficient resources and
315
support to adjust to changes in client needs, staff or
316
funding?
317
318
319
e.
320
Area of Inquiry-- Does the configuration of providers
321
within the state promote the system's ability and capacity to
322
develop, nurture, promote, recruit and retain strong and effective
323
staff and leaders who are diverse and culturally
324
competent?
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333