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  • Stories from the Gulf

    Equal Justice Works | Aug 16, 2007 11:26 AM
    Harvard Law Students Helen Kim, Ehren Brav, Rita Lomio and Zach Clopton with NOLAC attorney Bernadette D'Souza. Photo courtesy of Helen Kim.
    As the Gulf Coast faces the second anniversary of the nation's worst natural disaster, we dedicate this edition of The E-Guide to the many thousands of pro bono lawyers and law students who have made and continue to make extraordinary differences in the lives of survivors of the devastation.

    The following essays come from four law schools in the affected region (University of Alabama, Loyola University New Orleans, University of Houston and Mississippi College) and from four of the more than 100 law schools from distant corners that sent volunteers to the Gulf—Fordham, Harvard, University of Maryland and University of Southern California. These are stories not just of assisting survivors in crisis, but also of the life-changing potential of public service and of providing legal services in the public interest. We've collected a few of these remarkable stories. Of particular interest to law school applicants will be the story of the Student Hurricane Network. Not since the Freedom Summer of 1964 have so many young people descended on the Deep South, changing themselves and the region in the process.

     

    Read first-person accounts from these law schools in the affected region: University of Alabama, Loyola University New Orleans, University of Houston and Mississippi College.

    The Writers:
    Tari Williams
    Director of Public Interest Law Programs and Public Interest Institute
    University of Alabama School of Law

    William P. Quigley
    Professor and Director of the Gillis Long Poverty Law Center and Loyola Law Clinic
    Loyola University New Orleans College of Law

    Rhonda Beassie
    Assistant Clinical Professor
    University of Houston Law Center

    Jim Rosenblatt
    Dean
    Mississippi College School of Law

     

    Read first-person accounts from four of the more than 100 law schools from distant corners that sent volunteers to the Gulf: Fordham, Harvard, University of Maryland and University of Southern California.

    Hillary Exter
    Director of Student Organizations and Publicity
    Public Interest Resource Center
    Fordham Law School

    Lee M. Branson
    Assistant Director
    Office of Clinical and Pro Bono Programs
    Harvard Law School   

    Briana Green
    Director, Judicial Clerkships, Public Interest & Government Programs
    University of Maryland School of Law

    Lisa Mead
    Associate Dean
    Office of Public Service
    University of Southern California Gould School of Law  

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  • Tari Williams

    Equal Justice Works | Aug 16, 2007 11:24 AM

    Tari Williams
    Director of Public Interest Law Programs and Public Interest Institute
    University of Alabama School of Law

     

    Like many other law schools, the University of Alabama School of Law community felt overwhelmed by the magnitude of Hurricane Katrina's impact on Alabama and the Gulf Coast. Searching for a way to help, in consultation with the Tuscaloosa Bar Association, we formed the Hurricane Katrina Legal Assistance Project (HKLAP). The HKLAP operated at the Law School's Public Interest Institute combining volunteer efforts of students and local attorneys.

    Through the HKLAP, more than 80 first, second, and third-year law students assisted Hurricane Katrina victims. The students met people who had lost everything, people who did not want to go back, and people who wanted to return to their homes but could not because there was nothing left. The students and volunteer lawyers handled FEMA problems, insurance coverage cases, housing issues, and family law disputes. The students learned as much about the courage and resiliency of the people impacted by the storm as they did about the law. Emily Hines, a second-year UA Law student and HKLAP volunteer, was struck by one of her client's plight. Months after Katrina hit, this man was still searching for his sister and her family. He didn't know where his sister was and he didn't know how to find her. Emily had trouble imagining where he found the strength and determination to rebuild his life and be reunited with his family.

    The University of Alabama School of Law's commitment to Katrina victims crossed our state's borders. A group of UA Law students and I went to Mississippi over spring break to assist the Mississippi Center for Justice with victims still reeling from the devastating affects of Hurricane Katrina. The Break for Public Service Program (BPSP), coordinated through the Law School's Public Interest Institute and the Student Hurricane Network, immersed students in a multitude of projects including housing preservation, collecting oral histories, and community development initiatives.

    I had not traveled to the Gulf Coast since Hurricane Katrina. I did not want to go just to see the destruction. I wanted to go in a capacity that would allow me to put my skills and experience to use. The spring break trip allowed me and the students to do that, contributing to rebuilding the lives and spirits of those most affected.

    Service learning opportunities such as the HKLAP and BPSP help law students discover the power of the law and the value of public service and empathy. They receive first-hand opportunities to examine the dimensions and urgency of poverty and other social issues that many will confront during their legal careers. They walk away from these experiences inspired and challenged to find avenues for continued community involvement and to work towards social justice and positive social change.

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  • William P. Quigley

    Equal Justice Works | Aug 16, 2007 11:20 AM

    William P. Quigley
    Professor and Director of the Gillis Long Poverty Law Center and Loyola Law Clinic
    Loyola University New Orleans College of Law

    In late August 2005, Katrina and its aftermath shut down New Orleans and the Gulf Coast, displacing all the faculty, staff and students of Loyola University New Orleans College of Law.

    Once it became clear that New Orleans was not going to reopen, the University of Houston generously offered to host Loyola Law for the rest of the fall 2005 semester. Hundreds of law students, along with faculty and staff, moved to Houston to re-start the fall semester.

    One of the first priorities was to set up the Loyola Law Clinic in Houston to help provide legal assistance to the tens of thousands of Gulf Coast families who were temporarily living there.

    The clinic faculty and staff conferred and arranged for most to come to Houston, where the clinic set up a Katrina Clinic in the main Katrina/Rita Disaster Relief Center. Others stayed behind to track down incarcerated criminal defense clients and to work with the Louisiana State Bar Association to set up and staff an 800 number for civil advice and referrals.

    The Houston-based Loyola Katrina clinic faculty and students partnered with as many pro bono organizations and individuals locally and nationally as possible. Students and faculty directly assisted approximately 1000 people during the fall of 2005. Other organizations assisted thousands more. Loyola students and faculty helped people get copies of birth certificates, reinstate social security, restart child support, and assist with landlord-tenant and consumer problems. Faculty were also involved in major federal and state litigation to re-open the courts, address landlord tenant problems, voting issues, public housing, public education, trailer problems, and create due process reviews before home demolitions started.

    When Loyola moved back to New Orleans in January 2006, the need for the Katrina clinic increased. Loyola started a new worker justice clinic and hired two full-time Katrina staff attorneys while continuing its clinical work in family, immigration, and criminal defense.

    Law students and lawyers from across the country came to Loyola to join in and provide volunteer legal assistance with the Loyola Katrina Clinic. In all, nearly 3000 law students and representatives from every legal assistance organization in the country came to help out organizations across the gulf coast. This tremendous outpouring of support has been one of the true reasons for hope despite the adversities continued to challenge the people of the area.

    Loyola University New Orleans has made participation in the rebuilding of the Gulf Coast one of its institutional priorities. Law and undergraduate courses have concentrated on the effects of the disaster and the many challenges ahead. Clinical and service learning educational opportunities have involved thousands of students and continue to expand.

    Many obstacles remain for New Orleans and the Gulf Coast. Over 200,000 people have not returned to New Orleans alone. With continuing national and international assistance and solidarity, our communities will not just be repaired to pre-Katrina conditions, but will be rebuilt fairly and with more justice for all.

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  • Rhonda Beassie

    Equal Justice Works | Aug 16, 2007 11:10 AM
     

    Rhonda Beassie
    Assistant Clinical Professor
    University of Houston Law Center

     

    The buses are on their way. A lot of buses are on their way.

    While law schools across the country responded to the Gulf Coast disasters by providing legal assistance to victims through scheduled visits to the region, the University of Houston Law Center (UHLC) had the opportunity to help meet the most basic of human needs—shelter and sustenance. It began with the buses.

    For many Houston residents the impact of Hurricane Katrina became more than just horrifying television images with the arrival of busloads of evacuees. Our city became temporary shelter for a great number of Katrina victims housed initially in the old Astrodome and later moved to the George R. Brown Convention Center, hotels, and apartments.

    The school reacted swiftly. Several students and faculty members provided logistical support at the registration/housing centers. Student organizations staffed a joint hurricane relief effort collecting contributions of clothing, toiletries, non-perishable food, and cash. A Words of Encouragement Project invited students to stop in on breaks to write cards and letters to demoralized evacuees.

    Knowing UHLC survived flooding during Tropical Storm Allison through the support of our neighbors and friends, then Associate Dean Seth Chandler was especially motivated to help the New Orleans schools. Through his leadership and with the support and flexibility of our faculty, staff, and students, we hosted Loyola University New Orleans Law School's fall 2005 semester on our campus. The call for shelter came even closer to home when several members of our law school community prepared to share offices and even their homes with our Loyola friends during their time in Houston.

    Shortly before Loyola arrived on our campus, much of Houston experienced our own evacuation in expectation of Hurricane Rita. The hurricane shifted east in the 11th hour and few Houstonians experienced damage. However, our brush with Mother Nature and the destruction experienced in eastern Texas strengthened our resolve to help hurricane victims. With Rita sufferers joining Katrina evacuees, both the population and demand for social services, including legal services, swelled far beyond capacity.

    Professor Richard Alderman, known throughout our region as "the People's Lawyer," organized volunteers to staff a Hurricane Relief phone bank and a special People's Law School Program for hurricane victims to learn about their legal and rights. Many of our hurricane relief and education projects continue today, such as our resource bank for children in disasters and conference on Children and the Law after Katrina, both projects of UHLC's Center for Children Law and Policy.

    We could not meet all the shelter, sustenance or legal needs of the busloads of hurricane evacuees that traveled to Houston. However, we were fortunate to forge relationships with Loyola evacuees and experience the sense of purpose that comes through helping others. I think I speak for every member of the University of Houston Law Center community when I say we gained far more than we gave.

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  • Jim Rosenblatt

    Equal Justice Works | Aug 16, 2007 11:06 AM
     

    Jim Rosenblatt
    Dean
    Mississippi College School of Law

     

    The Mississippi College School of Law is located in the State Capital of Jackson some 150 miles inland from the Mississippi Gulf Coast. We watched the Hurricane Katrina weather reports the weekend before she was scheduled to make landfall. We kept the Law School open for classes on Monday, August 29, 2005 not knowing how the winds might dissipate as the hurricane traveled inland. Many of our students with families on the Gulf Coast had already returned home to assist with evacuation efforts.

    As winds became increasingly strong, by noon we cancelled classes and sent everyone home. That night Hurricane Katrina roared through Jackson with fierce winds that blew trees over, tore roofs off and snapped utility poles. Electric and telephone service was lost. On Tuesday morning amidst the clear skies that follow a hurricane, we inspected the Law School and found our only damage to be a shredded American flag and a downed hackberry tree sprawled out on our parking lot.

    Not knowing when electric service would be restored, we cancelled classes for a week. Knowing we'd narrowly escaped a similar fate, my administration agreed we would offer to take in Tulane and Loyola law students. Late on Thursday with electric service back and communication with the outside world restored, we were amazed to discover that law schools all over the country had already extended the same offer. Though late in the game, we posted our invitation and eventually gave free classes to one Tulane and four Loyola law students for the fall semester. Our students and administration rallied around these students and made them a part of our community. Our Law Review published two notes from Tulane students.

    After classes resumed, our law students volunteered at the Mississippi Bar where the Mississippi Young Lawyers Division coordinated the provision of legal services to Hurricane victims. The outpouring of support from lawyers and law students across the United States was overwhelming, and our students helped organize this support and staffed call centers. MC law professors offered training sessions for out-of-state lawyers who arrived to volunteer. Our alumni raised funds for law students and graduates who lost so much during the hurricane. We collected and donated professional furniture to Gulf Coast lawyers who lost their offices. Our students provided food and clothing to classmates whose families had lost their homes. Many members of our law school community traveled to the Mississippi Gulf Coast to assist with cleanup and rebuilding. We provided replacement diplomas to our graduates whose diplomas were lost or damaged during the storm.

    To make the connection between the tragedy and the law, we offered a fully subscribed Katrina seminar and marked the one-year anniversary with a Katrina Symposium hosted by the Mississippi College Law Review, published in a volume of the Law Review dedicated to the storm's victims. Today, our students and graduates continue to provide legal services on the Gulf Coast to assist people in reclaiming their lives.

    As I reflect on the two years since Katrina's wrath, I am reminded that we also saw humanity at its best!

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  • Hillary Exter

    Equal Justice Works | Aug 16, 2007 10:52 AM

    Hillary Exter
    Director of Student Organizations and Publicity
    Public Interest Resource Center
    Fordham Law School


     

    The impact of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita has been a defining moment for law students at Fordham Law School and nationally.  It opened eyes to enormous institutional failure, systemic problems, poverty, inequality, and racism.  Facing this reality, an extraordinary group of law students mobilized in the aftermath of the storms and formed the Student Hurricane Network to provide critically needed legal assistance and advocacy on behalf of people and communities in the Gulf Coast.

    "On August 29, 2005, I had sat, transfixed, in front of the television as the news networks reported the devastation of Hurricane Katrina. The shock that overcame me in those initial moments quickly gave way to the gut reaction that I had to do…something," said Melissa Rasmussen, '08, who began Fordham Law only a week before the levees broke. "I went down to New Orleans because I felt like it was something terrible happening here in America and that I could help," said Jeremy Pfetsch, '07, who joined three of Fordham's delegations.  Janos Marton, '09, "made the decision to attend law school after spending a year doing Katrina relief, seeing the legal obstacles people faced during the recovery," and has been a part of the last two Fordham delegations.  

    "Right after the storm a group of Fordham students along with students from other schools in the country got together and came up with the idea of sending law student volunteers to the Gulf Coast to not only bear witness but also just help out in any way that they could," said Anamaria Segura, '07, who has been a part of each winter and spring delegation.

    Fordham's students, faculty and administrators have worked with many legal and grassroots organizations, including the Advancement Project and the Peoples' Hurricane Relief to stop the bulldozing of lower Ninth Ward homes without notice to the homeowners and outreach to immigrant workers doing clean-up and rebuilding in often illegal working conditions, with the Orleans Parish Public Defenders and the Louisiana Capital Assistance Center on criminal justice issues,  with NAACP-LDF on a voter protection project, with New Orleans Legal Assistance Corporation to assist homeowners unable to access government benefits to rebuild, with the Gert Town Revival Initiative on neighborhood rebuilding plans, and with the People's Organizing Committee on a housing conditions documentation project.  

    Our experiences are transformative. "What leads you to go down is different than what you take away from it.  You're drawn in by the magnitude of the tragedy and the overwhelming significance of what has happened," explained Jeremy. "But on the ground it becomes about the people, the individuals you have the chance help. There is still much to do."

    The passion, commitment, dedication and love that students at Fordham and nationwide have put into the work has been truly inspiring.  "Those newest to our profession are really setting the standard for the rest of us," said Ian Weinstein, Professor and Director of Clinical Education. 

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