Expungement Clinic Seeking Student Volunteers!

The Expungement Clinic helps low-income Akron residents seal the record of their criminal convictions.  A sealed record enables many people better access to jobs, housing, and volunteer opportunities.  Students will learn integral skills in the legal field including filing paperwork with the court, drafting motions, interviewing real clients, and communicating with clients both through the mail and over the phone. Students who are eligible for a legal intern certificate will have ample opportunities to appear in court and present an oral argument.

 

A student commitment to the Expungement Clinic can be for as few or as many hours as the student pleases.  These hours qualify as Pro Bono Limited Means.

 

There will be three training sessions next week.  These sessions are informational only, and students are welcome to attend simply for a brief overview of the law surrounding sealing of a conviction.  The trainings will be Tuesday and Thursday at 6:00 PM and Friday at 11:30 AM.

 

Students with any questions please contact Russel Nichols at russel.nichols@gmail.com.

Don’t Forget to Report Your Pro Bono and Community Service Hours from the Spring Semester!

All Certification of Supervisor Forms for pro bono and community service hours completed during your Spring semester must be submitted to Professor Joann Sahl or Alisa Benedict O’Brien no later than Monday, June 3rd. If you have any questions, please contact Professor Sahl at jsahl1@uakron.edu or Ms. Benedict O’Brien at ab139@uakron.edu. Thank you.

Hurricane Sandy Recovery – Summer Pro Bono Opportunities in New York

As a consequence of Hurricane Sandy last October, Long Islanders have been besieged by numerous legal problems: environmental, zoning and permit issues, FEMA appeals, insurance appeals, foreclosure matters, contractor fraud, consumer complaints, landlord tenant problems, unemployment and homelessness, just to name a few.

Starting this summer and going through the fall Touro Law Center is sponsoring a “boots on the ground” effort to survey the legal needs of hurricane survivors across Long Island.  In a two pronged approach we will be placing law students in community centers as well as having students going door to door, to try to learn how well government and other agencies have been able to meet the legal needs of individuals and families in the wake of Hurricane Sandy.  In addition to gaining an understanding of how legal services have been provided to date, the survey will seek out those who, whether because of age, disability or for other reasons are unable or afraid to access the help they may need.

While this is an enormous undertaking, it will also provide a valuable opportunity for students to see, in a very dramatic way, the importance of providing access to legal services for all segments of society.

Touro Law Center’s Hurricane Relief Team has dozens of pro bono opportunities.  In addition to our Survey Project, Research Bank, Resolved Cases Initiative and Disaster Clinic, Touro Law Center partners with local not for profit agencies across Long Island all of whom work to serve the largely invisible and underserved communities still reeling from the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy on Long Island.  The Nassau County Bar Association, Suffolk County Bar Association, Make the Road, Hofstra University Disaster Recovery Clinic, Nassau Suffolk Law Services, Community Development Center of Long Island,  EraseRacism, FEGS, Shearman & Sterling, New York Legal Assistance Group, Long Island Housing Services, Nassau County Attorney’s Office, Federal Emergency Management Agency,  New York Communities for Change, Sustainable Long Island, Health and Welfare Council of Long Island, Empire Justice, Long Island Voluntary Organizations Active in Disaster, Labor and Industry for Education.

For students who wish to be admitted in New York, a summer’s worth of pro bono would meet the 50 hour rule of the Office of Court Administration for admission to the bar.  For metro area law schools, we have year-round opportunities for students who wish to engage in pro bono hurricane relief work or who wish to be placed in for credit fellowships on Long Island.  Many of these can be performed on weekends or even during weekdays in addition to summer employment. For Akron Law Students, this work would satisfy your pro bono requirements.

If you are interested, please contact Deidre Byrne:

Student  Pro Bono Coordinator for

Hurricane Relief Efforts

TLC-HEART

Phone: 631-650-2311

Technology and the Future of the Law CLE – Friday, May 10th – Free for law students!

 

                                                              The Akron Bar Association

and The Women in the Law Section present….

Don’t Miss Out on this Informative Seminar!

Technology and the Future of the Law

 

Friday, May 10, 2013

Akron Bar Association

 

3.00 CLE Credits

 

Technology and the Future of the Law

Sponsored by the Women in the Law Section

3.00 CLE Credits

Friday, May 10, 2013

 

TOPICS:

  • iPad Tips and Apps for Lawyers

Bridget A. Franklin, Esq., Brouse McDowell

  • Working in the Cloud

Kyle Gaul, Esq., Brennan, Manna & Diamond, LLC

  • Social Media Marketing

Shon M. Christy, Christy Creative, LLC

 

TIME AND LOCATION

Registration 12:30 PM

Program 1:00 PM to 4:15 PM

At the Akron Bar Association

 

PRICING

$105.00 ABA Members

$140.00 Non-members

$75.00 Non-attorney, Paralegal

FREE Law Students

 

Law Students should email Paulaa@akronbar.org that they intend to attend.

Please register by May 4th.

 

Thank You!

 

 

Balancing the Impact of Regulation: The Case of the Foreign Corrupt Practice Act – Thurs. April 25th at 4:45 – Student Union Room 312 (talk begins at 5:15 PM)

Balancing the Impact of Regulation:

The Case of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act

 Presented by

William D. Manson, Deputy General Council

The Lubrizol Corporation

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Student Union, Room 312, The University of Akron

Reception: 4:45–5:15 p.m.; Talk will begin at 5:15 p.m.

The talk is free and open to the public.