One year ago this month, Illinois lost a legendary legal services leader. Joseph Bartylak was passionately devoted to the cause of equal justice, and he furthered that cause not just by his brilliant and dedicated leadership of Land of Lincoln Legal Assistance Foundation for 27 years, but as a state and national leader of legal services.
Pro bono
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August 16, 2011 |
Practice News
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July 6, 2011 |
Practice News
This month I hope to remind readers that, in addition to fulfilling ethical obligations, the act of performing pro bono work can be deeply satisfying and meaningful to the attorney who lends a hand.
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May 6, 2011 |
Practice News
By Ramona Sullivan
There may be treatment that would fully resolve a medical condition, but the patient will never get the treatment without access to medical care. If the condition is caused or aggravated by a problem in the home, perhaps something harmful in the water or the walls, treatment will not solve the medical condition if the problems in the home are not improved.
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March 29, 2011 |
Practice News
By Michael Fiello, ISBA Committee on the Delivery of Legal Services Barry Bloch is an in-house pro bono attorney with the Land of Lincoln Legal Assistance office in East St. Louis, Illinois. He received a BSBA degree from Drake University in 1970. After graduating he received a fellowship in labor economics at Cornell University and was planning on entering that program. That all changed when he received a notice to show up at Ft. Bragg for basic training. During what he describes as his “very short stint on active duty” he was accepted into a number of law schools and ended up at Northwestern University. He received his JD cum laude from Northwestern University in 1974. Before attending law school Barry did not have a specific idea of what type of law he wanted to practice. Barry told me that “the only thing I knew about the law was what I saw on the Perry Mason show.” Upon graduating, all of his job offers were for tax related jobs. He and his wife wanted to stay in Chicago so he accepted a job as a tax attorney at Jewel Companies, at the time a three billion dollar grocery, drug, and restaurant conglomerate headquartered in Chicago. That job was a planning position with occasional appearances before administrative bodies. All of Barry’s jobs since have been tax related. In addition to Jewel, he was also an attorney with the Regional Counsel of the Internal Revenue Service, and first a tax attorney and then Vice President for Employee Benefits with the Kimberly-Clark Corporation. After Kimberly-Clark, he worked for a private corporation for about 25 years where he very rarely became involved in legal matters. Although he worked at a legal aid office in St. Louis for one summer during law school, he was not involved in pro bono work during his career. He has been a pro bono volunteer with Land of Lincoln since June of 2010. Q: When did you retire from practice? A: It depends what you mean by practice. A lot of lawyers might say what I did was never really the practice of law. I never was in a “real” courtroom until my pro bono service with Land of Lincoln. I stopped my paid work in March 2009. Q: What made you decide to do pro bono work after you retired? A: About five or six years ago, while still working, I began to realize that my life was primarily self-centered. Other than making cash contributions to various charities, I had spent fifty plus years really ignoring the needs of others. I then started looking for things I might do. Luckily, my wife of thirty-eight years is a successful attorney so I had the freedom to consider options that other people might not be able to consider. One of the areas I looked at was volunteering as a non-compensated attorney at a non-profit. Q: Were you influenced by the new Supreme Court Rules about pro bono practice by retired attorneys? No, I wasn’t even aware of it until after I had reactivated my license and completed all my continuing legal education requirements. The ARDC should send out yearly letters about this to retired and inactive status attorneys. Q: How did you come to choose Land of Lincoln as the place to do pro bono? A: It’s not easy trying to work for free. Before I retired, I sent more than one letter to the Immigration Project in Granite City offering to work as a pro bono attorney. They never responded. After I retired, I wrote to the Midwest Pension Rights Project about working as a pro bono attorney. I never heard from them. I then wrote Legal Services of Eastern Missouri and volunteered to work as a researcher or paralegal since I am not licensed in Missouri. The only thing I received from them was a brochure or letter soliciting a contribution. I then called the assistant dean at Washington University’s law school, who is responsible for connecting students with pro bono projects. I left a message that, while I was not an alumnus, I hoped she could suggest some nonprofits where I might volunteer. I never heard from her. Finally, I wrote Land of Lincoln and received an email, snail mail, and phone call, all indicating that they were looking for volunteers. It’s a long story, but that is how I ended up at Land of Lincoln.
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January 20, 2011 |
Practice News
By Julie K. Katz
Have you ever thought about how many legal issues arise when there is a natural disaster? No one ever thinks that a catastrophe will occur to him or to loved ones but, unfortunately, disasters strike without warning and no one is immune. For that reason, the ISBA’s Standing Committee on Delivery of Legal Services is preparing a disaster assistance handbook that will help victims of catastrophic occurrences with the legal problems that inevitably result from them.
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November 1, 2010 |
ISBA News
The Illinois State Bar Association’s Standing Committee on Delivery of Legal Services is currently seeking nominations for the 2010-2011 ISBA John C. McAndrews Pro Bono Service Award. The ISBA has established the John C. McAndrews Award to honor the extraordinary commitment of individuals, bar associations, or law firm/corporate legal departments to providing free legal services to the income eligible in Illinois or expanding the availability of legal services to the income eligible in Illinois. Presentation of the awards will take place on Friday, June 17, 2011, at the ISBA Annual Meeting Awards Luncheon at the Abbey Resort in Fontana, Wis. The ISBA Committee on Delivery of Legal Services is also excited to announce that the Illinois Bar Foundation will award a $1,000 grant in honor of each John C. McAndrews Award recipients to the Illinois not-for-profit legal aid organization through which the awardee provides pro bono legal services. The Illinois Bar Foundation, in partnership with the Illinois State Bar Association, seeks to enhance the recognition of this prestigious award as part of the Foundation’s effort to encourage and acknowledge pro bono legal work. Nominations are due by March 18, 2011. Nomination forms and criteria are available at www.isba.org/awards/mcandrews
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October 25, 2010 |
Practice News | ISBA News
One of our nation's guiding principles is "Justice For All". But for many of our fellow Americans, the promise of equal access to justice has not been fulfilled. In an effort to bridge the "Justice Gap", ISBA President Mark Hassakis is encouraging ISBA members to consider performing some Pro Bono work. If you can’t afford to donate the time, consider donating money instead. There is no better time to start than during National Pro Bono Celebration Week, which kicks off today. The ISBA Standing Committee on Delivery of Legal Services has a wonderful website where you can learn more - www.isba.org/probono. In addition, ISBA is providing members the opportunity to learn pro bono basics and earn CLE credit on a variety of topics including family law and juvenile justice.
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September 22, 2010 |
Practice News
The first annual National Pro Bono Celebration took place in the fall of 2009. The ABA Standing Committee on Pro Bono and Public Service has scheduled the second annual Pro Bono Week for October 24 through October 30, 2010. The ISBA Standing Committee on Delivery of Legal Services is asking individual lawyers, law schools, and bar associations throughout Illinois to participate in this coordinated, national effort.
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September 22, 2010 |
Practice News
The following tribute to Joseph R. Bartylak appeared in the NLADA Update, Vol. 12, Number 12, September 3, 2010.
Joe Bartylak, long time former executive director of Land of Lincoln Legal Assistance Foundation (LLLAF) and a national leader in the legal services community, died on August 26, 2010. Bartylak led the Project Advocacy Group (merged with NLADA in 1999) in the mid-1980s during tenuous times when the existence of federal funding for legal services was under attack and many legal aid programs were fighting to survive. Joe was essential to the efforts to preserve the Legal Services Corporation from its many hostile attacks during the decade of the 1980's.
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July 19, 2010 |
Practice News
Working in partnership, Illinois Legal Aid Online (ILAO) and the Public Interest Law Initiative (PILI) developed the Pro Bono Case Pairing and Mentor Matching System now available at www.IllinoisProBono.org. The system was developed with the assistance of PILI’s Pro Bono Opportunities Team and the Illinois State Bar Association’s Standing Committee on the Delivery of Legal Services and Standing Committee on Mentoring with support from the Illinois Bar Foundation.