In the Volunteer Lawyers Program,
attorneys
spend hundreds of hours giving free legal
advice to low-income familes who
otherwise would not be able to afford it,
aiding about 3,400 people in
southern Arizona annually.
Dean
Christoffel is a pro-bono, or volunteer, lawyer spearheading
one of the Free
Divorce Clinics.
"We do
the petition, we fill it out, file it with the court", says
Christoffel.
The
group gathers to get answers and help in a free divorce
clinic. The
attorneys giving the help begin each
session with a brief introduction to divorce
procedures and client rights.
Jacqueline Henneman is a client of the Volunteer Lawyers
Program. She
explains what this legal helping hand
means to her.
"There's
a lot of women out there that don't get divorced and stay in
the
marriage because they don't know about
this. And if there's more attorneys out
there that would help, I think it would
go by a lot quicker and they would get
more groups going and that would help a
lot."
The
Southern Arizona Legal Aid Proram involves more than 1,200
lawyers
devoting their time to assisting people
in need. The State of Arizona doesn't
require attorneys to do free work. There
is an aspirational goal of 50 hours of
voluntary time a year, but that is not
mandated, so these attorneys are going
above and beyond the call of goodwill to
help in our community.
Luis
Ochoa an attorney and a member of the Board of Directors.
He
understands what this program means to
his clients:
"You
know you're already at a disadvantage; now you're walking in
by yourself
and you're probably dealing with a party
that has a lawyer and they're just gonna
be able to take anything they want from
people that can't afford to pay
anything."
The
agency also taps into more than 100 UA Law Students who can
help
clients, while also gaining real-world
experience.
Dawn
Aspacher is a second-year UA Law Student volunteering with
the
program. "It helps us too, because we
learn the paperwork as we go and
there's always an actual lawyer that we
can talk to, ask questions so we're
learning as much as the client at the
same time."
"People
are so happy that they're able to get those services that
the Volunteer
Lawyers Program provides, otherwise they
would not be able to get an attorney,
they would have to deal with it," says
Anna Ceder, a third year law student.
Volunteer Attorneys help in civil matters like divorce,
bankruptcy, debt,
consumer and landlord-tenant disputes.
For more information about the
program, or if you are in the legal profession
and would like to donate your
services, click on
www.VLPArizona.org.
If you are an attorney interested in
volunteering, please call Michelle Mirto at
623-9465.