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Federal agency asserts claim to buildings
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Sunday, September 22, 2002
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By Herb Frazier
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A congressional agency that funds legal services for low-income
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Americans is battling Charleston lawyers over control of buildings
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that once housed legal assistance programs in Charleston,
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Georgetown and Conway.
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At stake is prime real estate in the coastal cities, including a
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Charleston building in the heart of upscale commercial development
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on upper King Street.
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The Washington-based Legal Services Corp. wants the buildings
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transferred to the S.C. Centers for Equal Justice, said LSC
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spokesman Eric Kleiman.
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The LSC was once the funding agency for the Neighborhood Legal
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Assistance Program Corp. in Charleston. In January, the LSC funding
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went to the Greenville-based equal justice centers.
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In an Aug. 21 letter to NLAP board chairman Gerald A. Kaynard,
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LSC president John N. Erlenborn said: "If NLAP fails to effectuate
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these transfers by Aug. 31, LSC will take all necessary steps to
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protect its interest in these properties."
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Kaynard did not return repeated phone calls from The Post and
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Courier.
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As part of its funding agreement, the LSC requires property
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purchased with government funds be returned to the nonprofit
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corporation if a local agency loses its grant, Kleiman said. In
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August, the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld that requirement in
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a lawsuit LSC filed in a property dispute with a legal services
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program in Big Stone Gap, Va.
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Kleiman said, "We will continue to work with NLAP to work out an
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orderly transfer of the property. We hope this can be resolved
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amicably." Last year, NLAP lost its federal grant with a nationwide
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consolidation of legal aid programs. In January, the federal agency
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awarded a $4.4 million grant to the Centers for Equal Justice,
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which has a Charleston area office and sites in 11 other South
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Carolina cities.
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With a budget of $329 million, LSC provides civil legal
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assistance to low-income people in every county in America, Kleiman
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said. NLAP was created in 1968. A decade later, the agency used a
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$50,000 LSC grant to buy a building at 438 King St. in Charleston
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and $33,000 to buy a building at 201 King St. in Georgetown,
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according to Erlenborn's letter to Kaynard. In 1980, NLAP used
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$63,000 in LSC funds to buy property at 607 Main St. in Conway, the
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letter said.
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On Nov. 14, 2001, NLAP transferred title of the King Street
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building in Charleston to the Charleston County Bar Association,
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according to county property records.
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The local bar paid $5 for the building, which sits between a
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redeveloped office building and an antique shop. The local bar said
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it would maintain the building for "legal services to indigent
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residents of Charleston County and coastal South Carolina," the
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records said. The King Street building appears to be vacant.
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Notices at the entrance direct visitors to the equal justice center
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on West Montague Avenue in North Charleston.
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E. Douglas Pratt-Thomas, president of the local bar, was not
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available for comment.
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Charleston County has not appraised the King Street property
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because it is tax-exempt. But Randall Goldman, managing partner of
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Patrick Properties, which owns buildings from 440 to 456 King St.,
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said he estimates 438 King St. would sell for between $700,000 and
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$900,000. "That building, which was purchased solely with federal
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legal aid dollars, should be used to provide legal services for
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poor people in South Carolina," Kleiman said.
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LSC wants the title to go to the equal justice center in
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Charleston or "we want 100 percent of the proceeds from the sale of
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the building to stay in Charleston. We are not contemplating taking
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that money out of South Carolina," he said. Kleiman said if the
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neighborhood legal program in Charleston "had honored their
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obligation, this would not be an issue."
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