Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Beyond Elite Law
- Foreword
- List of Contributors
- Overview
- Overview
- PART I CURRENT STATE OF ACCESS TO LEGAL SERVICES
- PART II SOURCES OF LEGAL SERVICES ASSISTANCE FOR WORKING AMERICANS
- 10 Evolution of Legal Services in the United States: From the War on Poverty to Civil Gideon and Beyond
- 11 The Effect of Contingent Fees and Statutory Fee-Shifting
- 12 The Market for Recent Law Graduates
- 13 Clinical Legal Education and Access to Justice: Conflicts, Interests, and Evolution
- 14 Loan Repayment Assistance and Access to Justice
- 15 Federally Funded Civil Legal Services
- 16 New York's Lawyer Referral Services
- 17 Growth of Large Law Firm Pro Bono Programs
- 18 Institutionalizing Pro Bono
- 19 Pro Bono as a Second Career
- 20 Employer-Provided Legal Services for Employment Claims
- 21 Company-Provided Legal Services
- 22 Individualized Justice in Class and Collective Actions
- PART III FASHIONING A REFORM AGENDA
- PART IV CREATING A CULTURE OF SERVICE
- Index
16 - New York's Lawyer Referral Services
from PART II - SOURCES OF LEGAL SERVICES ASSISTANCE FOR WORKING AMERICANS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 May 2016
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Beyond Elite Law
- Foreword
- List of Contributors
- Overview
- Overview
- PART I CURRENT STATE OF ACCESS TO LEGAL SERVICES
- PART II SOURCES OF LEGAL SERVICES ASSISTANCE FOR WORKING AMERICANS
- 10 Evolution of Legal Services in the United States: From the War on Poverty to Civil Gideon and Beyond
- 11 The Effect of Contingent Fees and Statutory Fee-Shifting
- 12 The Market for Recent Law Graduates
- 13 Clinical Legal Education and Access to Justice: Conflicts, Interests, and Evolution
- 14 Loan Repayment Assistance and Access to Justice
- 15 Federally Funded Civil Legal Services
- 16 New York's Lawyer Referral Services
- 17 Growth of Large Law Firm Pro Bono Programs
- 18 Institutionalizing Pro Bono
- 19 Pro Bono as a Second Career
- 20 Employer-Provided Legal Services for Employment Claims
- 21 Company-Provided Legal Services
- 22 Individualized Justice in Class and Collective Actions
- PART III FASHIONING A REFORM AGENDA
- PART IV CREATING A CULTURE OF SERVICE
- Index
Summary
For well over 75 years, local bar associations have connected Americans of average means to reputable, affordable legal services through lawyer referral programs. This chapter describes the experience of one of the oldest programs in the country, New York City's Legal Referral Service (LRS). Looking at data collected over a ten-year period, from 2003 to 2013, Allen Charne, the former long-time executive director of LRS, examines the legal needs of clients who called in for help and the actual legal fees they paid. He also describes the competitive selection process for the LRS attorney panel.
ABA-approved lawyer referral services provide basic legal information, explain what lawyers do, help the client understand whether a problem is actually a legal problem, and help identify the right legal resource to respond to legal problems through a telephone hotline and internet communications. These clients include people who do not qualify for free legal services, or who have legal needs that are not served by free legal aid. Many callers have no previous experience with lawyers. Others had disappointing experiences with lawyers and seek a recommendation from a reliable source. The referrals can be to attorneys in private practice who specialize in addressing a particular legal issue, government and private agencies, or various pro bono programs depending on a person's ability to pay.
This chapter focuses on the work of New York City's Legal Referral Service (LRS) program, one of the oldest programs in the country. To accomplish this, the referral service develops selective attorney qualification standards and procedures that help provide the public with competent, ethical, and responsive legal service. This chapter describes the types of legal needs that LRS responds to, the legal fees collected by these cases over a period of 10 years, and the process for selecting attorneys for its approved attorney panel.
A BRIEF HISTORY OF LRS
In 1946 two leaders of the New York legal profession, Harrison Tweed, president of The Association of the Bar of the City of New York (the City Bar), and Joseph Proskauer, president of the New York County Lawyers’ Association, joined forces to create the Legal Referral Bureau (now the Legal Referral Service) in New York City.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Beyond Elite LawAccess to Civil Justice in America, pp. 261 - 269Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2016