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5 Legal Groups at 1 Locale To Serve the February 3, 2002
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Vulnerable
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Salt Lake City Tribune
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BY EDWARD MCDONOUGH
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Five independent Salt Lake organizations that provide legal
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services to the poor, ethnic minorities, seniors and people with
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disabilities have joined together to acquire a west-side downtown
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building where they will have their offices. The new Community
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Legal Center at 205 N. 400 West is a project of "And Justice for
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All," which, until this venture, has been a joint fund-raising
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campaign by an alliance of the non-profit providers of free legal
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services. "And Justice for All," which solicits donations primarily
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from Utah lawyers and foundations, was the first joint fund-raising
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campaign of legal services agencies in the country, and the
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Community Legal Center is the first joint office project of public
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service law groups.
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The Legal Aid Society of Salt Lake, the Disability Law Center,
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the Multi-Cultural Legal Center, the Senior Lawyer Volunteer
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Project and Utah Legal Services will share the new facility, and
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last Wednesday their board members were given a tour of the
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Community Legal Center hosted by staff members of the five
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agencies. All of the agencies can share the same reception area and
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client waiting room. The building is close in, across the street
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from West High and two blocks from the Gateway. It has its own
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parking, something that's hard to find downtown and which has been
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a problem for staff as well as clients. Owning and sharing the
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building and not paying rent times five will save the non-profit
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agencies about $375,000 each year. My assistant, Charity
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Christenson, pointed out that the shared facility will also be
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efficient for those needing legal services. No longer will a woman
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desperate for a protective order, for example, have to run all over
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town trying to find the right agency.
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After the tour, we found Jaye Olafson at the cookies and
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brownies reception on the first floor. Jaye and her husband, Erik,
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own Tomax Technologies and were the sellers of the building. Jaye
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explained how much of the renovation had been merely uncovering
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what was already there. The hardwood floors, wooden ceilings and
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brick and stone interior walls were all hidden behind coverings and
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old paint. She loves the building, and they only moved out because
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the business had outgrown the space. So they renovated the old
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Sweet Candy Company building for Tomax. The Olafsons are delighted
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with the new owners. The building had been like home, she
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explained, and so it was important who would be living there. I
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noted on the donor list that the couple, through Olafson Group, had
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become one of the major supporters of the project.
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Stewart Ralphs, the executive director of the Legal Aid Society,
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explained that the Community Legal Center Campaign still has a long
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ways to go, with a bit more than half of the $4 million projected
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cost received so far. There still needed to be furnishings and
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office equipment and such. He promised that they would be getting
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in touch with us later on the subject.
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