Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The Benefits Of A Coordinated And Focused Pro Bono Program

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • The Benefits Of A Coordinated And Focused Pro Bono Program

    THE BENEFITS OF A COORDINATED AND FOCUSED PRO BONO PROGRAM
    Dana Ferestien, Williams Kastner

    The Metropolitan Coporate Counsel
    http://www.metrocorpcounsel.com/current.ph p?artType=view&artMonth=August&artYear=200 9&EntryNo=9987
    Aug 5 2009

    Dana Ferestien is a Member in the Seattle office of Williams
    Kastner and a part of the firm's business litigation practice
    group and insurance team. A trial lawyer and counselor, Mr
    Ferestien focuses on insurance coverage and complex business
    litigation. He frequently writes about developments in insurance law
    at www.northwestinsurancelawblog.com.

    -------------- -------------------------------------------------- ----------------

    Most law firms and legal departments support pro bono work in some
    way. Williams Kastner has long encouraged and supported pro bono
    work. Historically, our attorneys have each pursued projects and
    causes of their own choosing. A few years ago, however, our firm
    made a decision to focus our collective pro bono efforts by forming a
    strategic relationship with the Northwest Immigrants Rights Project
    (www.nwirp.org), a non-profit organization devoted to helping low
    income immigrants and refugees. This decision has led to a much
    more effective pro bono program-one with greater impact and rewards
    for Williams Kastner, the Northwest Immigrant Rights Project and
    its clients.

    The NWIRP refers clients to Williams Kastner for assistance with either
    an affirmative asylum application or defensive removal proceedings
    initiated by the United States Citizenship and Immigration Service
    (USCIS). Over the past 36 months, our attorneys have helped immigrants
    from all over the world to obtain asylum. The clients referred to us
    by NWIRP have included people from Haiti, Kenya, Burma, Azerbaijan,
    Eritrea, Afghanistan, Gambia, Venezuela and Ethiopia. Many of these
    immigrants fled their countries after having been kidnapped, tortured
    and in some cases imprisoned as a result of their political beliefs
    and their efforts to effect peaceful change in their countries.

    Our clients' stories are difficult for most Americans to comphrehend or
    imagine. One vivid example is a Haitian client who was kidnapped after
    he spoke out on the radio against the government. His kidnappers beat
    him with a baseball bat. He was released only after his family paid a
    large ransom, and then he needed emergency surgery to repair a rupture
    in his stomach wall caused by the repeated severe beatings. Atrocities
    such as these are fairly common among the immigrants who come to the
    NWIRP seeking relief and a road to a safe harbor.

    Many of the women from Africa who come to the NWIRP for assistance
    were subjected by their own families to genital mutilation and forced
    plural marriage. One young woman from Gambia fled to the United States
    at the age of 20 because she had been repeatedly whipped and beaten by
    her father, uncles and cousins for her refusal to become the third wife
    of a 70-year-old man. Her father had arranged for the plural marriage
    and insisted that she marry this man even though she loved a young man
    whom she had met on her own. Our clients are victims of societies where
    the fundamental concepts of freedom and human rights do not apply.

    Another NWIRP client our lawyers worked with and were able to help
    is from Azerbaijan - he had repeatedly suffered ethnically motivated
    attacks due to his Armenian ancestry. Our client fled Azerbaijan
    in the late 1980s when the Soviet Union came apart and the ethnic
    Azerbaijanis sought to wipe out the large ethnic Armenian population
    in Baku, the capital city of Azerbaijan. He initially moved to the
    Ukraine, but he did not find any better conditions; he and his family
    were repeatedly attacked by Neo-Nazis.

    All of these people came to the United States in search of safety,
    dignity and peace. Representing them for no fee is the right thing
    to do for the simple reason that it allows Williams Kastner and our
    attorneys to contribute to our community and to be personally rewarded
    by helping those in genuine desperate need to start a better life. Our
    lawyers utilize considerable legal and litigation skills to make
    an enormous difference in the lives of these people. I will always
    remember a client suddenly hugging me at the end of his hearing, when
    the immigration judge told him that he was granting asylum. With tears
    in his eyes, the client told me, "Thank you! You have saved my life."

    Many of the associates from Williams Kastner who have invested their
    time and skills in the NWIRP pro bono project have similar stories to
    share about the successes achieved on behalf of their clients. The very
    tangible results of our work with these clients make us all very proud
    to be attorneys and members of a firm such as Williams Kastner. This is
    particularly important at a time when many law firms around the United
    States are struggling to attract and retain talented, qualified and
    diverse associates. Interesting and challenging pro bono work like
    this can be one of the non-economic factors critical to attorneys
    looking for an organization to join. The personal fulfillment and
    professional growth associates gain through a firm's commitment to
    community service in pro bono projects is incomparable.

    Williams Kastner's work with the NWIRP has been beneficial in many
    other ways in large part because the firms has supported it through
    a collective effort that has involved everyone from the firm's most
    senior members (partners) to its youngest and newest attorneys. Earlier
    this year, a 35-year member of the firm took on his first NWIRP
    client. The senior member worked with his daughter who had just
    graduated from law school to represent, and obtain asylum for, an
    Ethiopian man who had been jailed for his activities as a political
    organizer. While this senior member has done other pro bono work in
    the past, it was our established program with the NWIRP that created
    this rewarding and interesting opportunity.

    Many of Williams Kastner's first- and second-year associates, as
    well as our summer associates, have teamed up with members and senior
    associates to represent our NWIRP clients. We have purposefully staffed
    files this way to promote mentoring and collegiality, and to allow
    newer attorneys to develop their client relations, file management
    and oral advocacy skills with guidance and input from more experienced
    attorneys. It has also ensured that young attorneys become active in
    pro bono work early in their careers.

    Asylum clients often present significant challenges in our work due
    to language and cultural barriers and challenges - English is rarely
    a primary language and much of our work is aided by translators. In
    addition, these clients have endured hardships rarely, if ever,
    encountered in the United States. By learning to manage these client
    relationships, our young attorneys are "ahead of the curve" on key
    practice and client relationship skills. Similarly, these engagements
    have allowed our newest attorneys to conduct trials in their first year
    of practice. In most law firm settings, this would not be possible
    because most clients require that more senior attorneys conduct any
    trials and hearings on their behalf.

    When Williams Kastner established this strategic relationship with the
    NWIRP, our firm had only a few attorneys with significant immigration
    law experience. We quickly changed this and learned the fundamentals
    and nuances of immigration law through a training program, presented
    to us by the NWIRP. We secured this initial resource and assistance
    by committing to take multiple cases - we now have more than a dozen
    attorneys who have successfully represented clients in immigration
    proceedings. For new attorneys joining the firm and becoming involved
    in the pro bono program, we have experienced attorneys who serve as
    an in-house training resource in the area of immigration law.

    Williams Kastner has also received greater recognition for
    our pro bono work because our efforts are more concentrated and
    coordinated. Last year, after having obtained asylum for nearly a
    dozen clients, the NWIRP presented Williams Kastner with its Amicus
    Award for "extraordinary contributions" to the organization. The award
    validated our attorneys' efforts, and we now have more lawyers than
    ever representing NWIRP clients.

    Most law firms have lawyers who pursue and support pro bono work in
    their communities. Williams Kastner has found that a more coordinated
    and focused pro bono program yields enormous results for the law
    firm as well as the organization it supports. Whether the pro bono
    cause chosen involves immigration, landlord-tenant disputes, child
    protective services or some other cause, the benefits that such a
    program offers include:

    1. increased early opportunities for new attorneys to develop key
    practice skills and to gain experience in court and working directly
    with clients;

    2. wider participation of attorneys across the organization;

    3. high attorney morale by allowing attorneys to work together to
    support a cause in which they believe;

    4. additional resources for attorney education and training regarding
    the substantive areas of law involved;

    5. more interaction, mentoring and collaboration between senior and
    junior attorneys;

    6. the ability to make a greater difference through a focused and
    coordinated effort which, in turn, is likely to lead to greater public
    recognition for the attorneys' pro bono efforts.

    The appreciation earned for saving a life exceeds any fees ever
    earned. An effective pro bono program can yield enormous rewards.
Working...
X