Northwestern Legal Services, in partnership
with the Erie County Bar Association (ECBA), takes pride in
their commitment to pro bono representation for low-income
people in Erie County. The Legal Aid Volunteer Attorney
Program, or LAVA, has been recognized as a model for other
pro bono projects around the county. In 2002, the
Pennsylvania Bar Association awarded LAVA the Louis J.
Goffman Award as an organization whose commitment to pro
bono “has enhanced the delivery of legal services to
Pennsylvania’s poor or disadvantaged, making a critical
difference in the lives of those in need of legal
representation.”Since its inception in 1982, over 7,000
low-income clients have received free representation and
counsel from members of the Erie County Bar Association. In
2004 alone, LAVA attorneys closed more than 80 cases for
indigent clients in Erie County, and donated nearly 150
hours of legal work on their behalf.
In addition to the direct legal representation offered by
the pro bono project, LAVA attorneys in the area of family
law also serve as instructors for a pro se divorce clinic in
Erie County. We are also proud of the fact that court
reporters have volunteered their pro bono services to aid in
the representation of eligible clients.
LAVA is a success because of the close cooperation
between the ECBA and Northwestern Legal Services. A NWLS
staff attorney who is also an ECBA member coordinates the
LAVA program, and an intake screener in the NWLS Central
Intake Unit checks potential clients for income and asset
eligibility, case acceptance criteria, and conflicts of
interest. The LAVA coordinator matches eligible clients with
ECBA attorneys, and oversees the administrative details of
the process from intake to case closing.
Since 1982, it is estimated that over 10,000 pro bono
hours of legal representation and counsel have been given to
impoverished individuals and families in Erie County by
LAVA. This translates into well over $1 million in free
legal services to the poor and disadvantaged over the last
two decades.
In addition to the pro bono representation in Erie,
attorneys in other counties within the NWLS service area
(such as Venango County) provide pro bono assistance on
occasion. They are called on for help when a conflict of
interest prevents NWLS from assisting a particular client,
or when the type of case lies outside the program priorities
and case acceptance framework. |
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