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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- University of Alabama School
of Law students
and volunteer lawyers in the Tuscaloosa area have formed a unique
joint project to provide free legal assistance to persons affected
by Hurricane Katrina.
Under the Hurricane Katrina Legal Assistance Project, volunteer
law students interview evacuees at the Red Cross's disaster relief
center or over the phone to get basic information about their legal
problems. The student is then paired with a volunteer lawyer to
research the evacuee's problem and provide legal assistance.
The project is operated at the law school through the school's
Public Interest Institute and Clinical Law Program. More than 80
first-year, second-year, and third-year law students have volunteered
for the project. Attorney Cooper Shattuck of the law firm of Rosen,
Cook, Sledge, Davis, Shattuck and Oldshue in Tuscaloosa is coordinating
the efforts of the volunteer attorneys. This local program is in
addition to other efforts of the Alabama State Bar to provide legal
assistance to persons affected by Hurricane Katrina.
“Law students have been eager to help in any way possible
since the hurricane hit and are enthusiastic about helping with
legal assistance for displaced hurricane victims. The response
from students has been amazing -- we have students from all classes
excited to lend a hand,” said Alane Breland, president of
the law school's Public Interest Institute Student Board.
Tamara Watson, the student volunteer coordinator, shared her
experience in interviewing evacuees: “It was extremely rewarding
to help those who are in need and to see the relief in their faces
when they found someone that could provide some help.”
Professor Bob Kuehn, the law school supervisor of the project,
noted the unique nature of the program. “To our knowledge,
nowhere else in the country have law students and lawyers volunteered
together to provide legal assistance to victims of Hurricane Katrina.
We hope that the special training and knowledge of law students
and lawyers can provide much needed comfort and useful legal assistance
to the many people in the area whose lives have been so dramatically
affected by the storm,” he said.
Cooper Shattuck praised the efforts of local attorneys. “Our
bar members are regularly involved in charitable organizations
throughout the community and have been involved individually and
collectively in assisting those affected by the Hurricane in a
number of ways,” Shattuck said. “This program offered
them an opportunity to put their legal skills to use, on a pro
bono basis, providing a direct benefit to those here locally who
are in need of legal assistance. The response from our local lawyers
has been tremendous. I am not the least bit surprised that Tuscaloosa's
lawyers have stepped up to the plate.”
The Hurricane Katrina Legal Assistance Project operates intake
tables at the Red Cross's disaster relief center at Skyland Boulevard
Baptist Church in Tuscaloosa Monday through Saturday until 2 p.m.
or can be reached at 205/348-8302 or pii@law.ua.edu.
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