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The Fort Worth Star-Telegram
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Grant to beef up legal aid reserves
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By Max B. Baker
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November 18, 2002
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A state foundation is giving West Texas Legal Services and the
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Fort Worth chapter of the NAACP more than $1 million to help
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provide civil legal services to the poor.
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The Texas Equal Access to Justice Foundation announced that the
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Fort Worth-based nonprofit groups will receive grants from funds it
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controls, including the Interest on Lawyers' Trust Accounts, or
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IOLTA, program.
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West Texas Legal Services, which works with clients in 106
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counties including Tarrant, Lubbock, Midland and Potter, will get
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about $1.03 million. The legal aid group cleared about 8,300 cases
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last year.
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"It is going to help us out tremendously with our program," said
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Kathy Duncan at West Texas Legal Services. "If it wasn't for the
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grant, we couldn't continue to do the work we are doing."
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West Texas handles such cases as divorces, protective orders in
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domestic violence cases and land-lord-tenant disputes. It has a
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staff of about 100 employees, including attorneys and support
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staff, in 10 branch offices.
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The NAACP's Fort Worth Justice Project will get $49,000.
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Officials from the group's legal assistance program were not
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available to comment.
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Created by the Texas Supreme Court, the Equal Access foundation
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has distributed about $8 million statewide. Besides the IOLTA
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program, the money comes from court filing fees and a state
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criminal victims assistance program.
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In Texas, 4.2 million people qualify for legal assistance
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because they make at or below 120 percent of the federal poverty
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guideline. In Tarrant County, 204,000 people are eligible for legal
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aid.
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The grants come at a time when funding for programs providing
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attorneys for the poor are in jeopardy from declining interest
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rates, cutbacks in federal funding and legal challenges.
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"It needs to be a whole lot more," said Betty Torres, executive
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director of the Austin-based foundation. "Although the poverty
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population in Texas has increased, statewide and federal funding
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for this vital work is in decline."
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About $4.9 million being distributed this year comes from the
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IOLTA fund, which is interest earned on money paid to lawyers as
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retainers or to cover court costs. The funds are held in trust
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accounts.
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Because of lower interest rates, foundation officials anticipate
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having only $3.3 million in that fund next year. To make the money
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go further, the group persuaded 25 banks to waive service fees of
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about $555,000.
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As part of a national overhaul of the Legal Services Corp., the
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nine legal aid groups in Texas are being folded into three,
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creating huge agencies handling cases in dozens of counties.
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On Dec. 31, West Texas Legal Services will merge with Legal
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Services of North Texas, which is in Dallas and covers eight
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counties. Renamed Northwest Texas Legal Aid, its headquarters will
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be in Arlington.
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Created by Congress in 1974, Legal Services Corp. is frequently
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a budgetary target. It has been requiring states to consolidate
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legal aid groups in an attempt to conserve money and improve
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services.
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The future of the IOLTA program is also in doubt.
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On Dec. 9, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments about the
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constitutionality of the IOLTA program in the state of
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Washington.
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Opponents say the interest earned on the trust funds belongs to
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the clients and cannot be diverted to charitable groups without
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compensating their clients or getting their permission.
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The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco ruled
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that the Washington fund is constitutional, while the 5th U.S.
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Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans last year ruled that Texas'
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fund was an improper taking of assets.
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