In response to the growing legal needs of ordinary Americans arising from the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic, the American Bar Association has created a nationwide task force of volunteer lawyers and judges from across the legal profession.
The Task Force on Legal Needs Arising Out of the 2020 Pandemic will include up to 20 representatives from top legal organizations in the United States.
The group will identify legal needs arising from the pandemic, make recommendations to address those needs and help mobilize volunteer lawyers and legal professionals for people who need help.
The task force will be chaired by James J. Sandman, former president of the Legal Services Corporation, the nations’ largest funder of civil legal aid for low-income Americans.
Sandman is also former managing partner of Arnold & Porter LLP and past president of the District of Columbia Bar.
“As the pandemic spreads, thousands of Americans will need help — not just with medical issues but also with legal issues including lost jobs, evictions, insurance claims, family emergencies and obtaining government benefits they need to survive,” ABA President Judy Perry Martinez said. “Those who come before our criminal justice system will face additional challenges as jobs are lost, the inability to pay fines and fees escalates and we face a greater risk of detentions.
“In times of crisis, lawyers help. With this task force, we will start by looking for where the need is greatest and where we can make the biggest difference for people in dire situations.”
The task force will include experts in disaster response, health law, insurance, legal needs of families to protect basic human needs such as food, shelter, medical and employment benefits, criminal justice, civil rights and social justice.
The group will include representatives from:
• The National Center for State Courts
• The National Association of Bar Executives
• The National Conference of Bar Presidents
• The Legal Services Corporation
• The National Legal Aid & Defender Association
• Sections and committees within the ABA
The panel will continue a decades-long tradition of lawyers and judges volunteering their expertise to address emergencies across the nation, Martinez said.
For example, the Disaster Legal Services Program of the ABA Young Lawyers Division has helped victims of 178 declared disasters in 44 states and four U.S. territories since 2007. It, too, will be a part of the task force.
“The ABA literally sets the standard for volunteer legal service in the United States,” Martinez said. “The ABA Model Rules of Professional Conduct recommend that every lawyer provide at least 50 hours a year of free service to people who are unable to pay. It is the highest calling of the legal profession, and with this pandemic, we are proud to offer our services again to our communities in need.”
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