Lawyers Giving Back looks at a side of lawyers you don’t hear too much about—the side that gives back…pays it forward..and shares the love. We’ve found quite a number of attorneys who log non-billable hours helping others—simply because they believe it’s the right thing to do. Their stories are inspiring, and hey, who knew lawyers were so…good? If you’ve got a story to share about an attorney who’s doing the right thing, let us know—we’d love to let others know, too. Today, we’re talking with Michigan attorney Bertram Marks…
If the career combination of Baptist minister and attorney sounds like an oxymoron, don’t bother to mention it to Bertram Marks. “Oh yes, I have heard that one before,” says Marks with a gentle laugh.
Marks is the lead partner in a full-service law practice in Farmington Hills, Michigan, where he combines his ecclesiastical and legal training to the maximum. “It is not really as dichotomous as one might think,” he says. “If you have an interest in community justice and integrity, the two just go hand in hand.”
Marks, who is also Pastor at the First Community Baptist Church, says he “can’t think of a time there weren’t at least 3 or 4 pro bono cases” on his docket. “A lot my work is in the area of economic justice, civil rights labor,” says Marks, “So I bundle all that up to deliver real help to people.”
And people in Michigan have some very real problems these days. Many people have been rocked back on their heels by industry shutdowns, lost jobs and sinking house prices.
“There is a huge wave of pain out there,” says Marks.
Just keeping the heat on during a long Detroit winter is a challenge for thousands of people. Financial assistance is available but many people either don’t know to access it or are simply too proud to admit they need it. Aware that it would be in the uncomfortable position of cutting of service to thousands of families, DTE Energy executives came to Marks in 2007 and asked for his help.“
“We found people were so turned off by the utility company when they got a shut-off notice they just kind of shut off, too,” says Marks. “There’s a feeling of hopelessness and going into a utility service office was the last thing they wanted to do.”
“I was able to convince the utility if we could base these support centers in faith-based Read the rest of this entry »
Lawyers Giving Back looks at a side of lawyers you don’t hear too much about—the side that gives back…pays it forward..and shares the love. We’ve found quite a number of attorneys who log non-billable hours helping others—simply because they believe it’s the right thing to do. Their stories are inspiring, and hey, who knew lawyers were so…good? If you’ve got a story to share about an attorney who’s doing the right thing, let us know—we’d love to let others know, too. Today, we’re talking with Las Vegas attorney Bruce Flammey…
Bruce Flammey is definitely not a publicity hound—but several weeks ago, the straight shooting Nevada lawyer decided to jump into a local news story after heard about the Trueblood family and its dispute with a local home owners’ association (HOA) in Las Vegas.
“It offended my sense of right and wrong,” says Flammey.
In early December, just before the holidays began, the Tara Villas HOA ordered the water be cut off at Deena Trueblood’s home after she had bounced a check to a collection agency.
“I thought, this is crap,” says Flammey who once served on a HOA board and in fact now does legal work for HOA boards in Las Vegas.
Flammey immediately got in touch with the reporter working the story and offered to provide the family with free legal help. “I said if Deena Trueblood needed any help with this or wanted to talk to a lawyer about this, I would be happy to do so. And literally within hours I got a phone call back.”
The HOA had not only ordered the water cut off, it had ordered that the pipe be cut outside the Trueblood property line to discourage an attempt to have the water reconnected.
When Flammey connected with Deena Trueblood the facts of the case made him even more determined to get everything put right again. Deena and her son by this time had been weeks without water despite the fact that she made good on the bounced check way back in December.
“In fact, it was more like a clerical error than a bounced check,” explains Flammey.
“She was back on solid ground with the collection agency and as far as it was concerned everything was okay—and had been for weeks,” says Flammey.
One Call Does it All
Flammey picked up the phone and called the HOA’s lawyer. “He said he wasn’t actually their lawyer,” says Flammey, “but he would call the HOA and explain how asinine this was.”
And within 48 hours, after almost six weeks in dry-dock, the water was once again flowing in the Trueblood household.
It might seem like a small gesture, but to the family with no running water, fighting a bureaucracy—it was magic.
“This, in my opinion, involved a colossal level of amount stupidity on a number of interlocking levels,” says Flammey.
“I would have told this HOA under no conditions do we turn off the water to peoples’ homes,” says Flammey. “If I had been their lawyer they never would have ended up on the news.”
“It might have been legal, but in my view it wasn’t a good idea.”
Bruce Flammey is an attorney with a strong sense of justice. He is in solo practice at Flammey Law in Las Vegas, Nevada. He handles legal work for multi-family housing units and home owner association boards.
Lawyers Giving Back looks at a side of lawyers you don’t hear too much about—the side that gives back…pays it forward..and shares the love. We’ve found quite a number of attorneys who log non-billable hours helping others—simply because they believe it’s the right thing to do. Their stories are inspiring, and hey, who knew lawyers were so…good? If you’ve got a story to share about an attorney who’s doing the right thing, let us know—we’d love to let others know, too. Today, we’re talking with Florida attorney Michael Blickensderfer…
A quiet spoken attorney with a very loud and clear commitment to the community around him, Michael Blickensderfer made a decision to open his wallet and open it wide. Although the Blick Law Firm may do a bit of legal work for free from time to time in the classic pro bono definition, Blickensderfer, a former prosecutor and public defender in New York and Florida, decided he’d step to the plate with cold, hard cash.
The firm contributes up to 10 percent of its annual income to charity. “It varies,” says the very modest Blickensderfer, “a tithe is 10 percent, we are not always faithful to that amount, but we try to be consistent.”
After 25 years in public service and a brief turn at private practice in three other Florida firms, Blickensderfer went out on his on own two years ago. Together with his wife as the office administrator and his daughter as the marketing and community liaison, the Blickensderfers have established their own very personal way doing things.
The Blick Law Firm has established relationships with about a dozen organizations, from the St. Jude’s Hospital for Children to a Christian motorcycle riders association to a suicide prevention organization. “These are groups we have connected with sometimes out of personal relationships with some of their members, sometimes people come to us or perhaps it is through a client,” says Blickensderfer. “We discuss as a family where we can best put our resources and make a difference.”
Primarily a personal injury practice, Blickensderfer provides a range of other legal services from bankruptcy law to real estate. They regularly reach out to organizations and participate in community events. “Sometimes we hear about a needy family through some of these organizations,” says Blickensderfer, who is a committed Christian. “It touches your heart, you feel compassion and just you feel the need to reach out and help.”
“On New Year’s day we went to the Christian Motorcycle Riders Association event,” says Blickensderfer. “We just showed up and gave them a donation. We didn’t think we did that much but they were so grateful.”
“We were just putting a little gas in their tanks; they really go out and do all the hard work. They’re out there with their ‘tanks on fire’ ready to do things and we were pleased to able to help them,” Blickensderfer says.
Although Blickensderfer, who is also a former US Marine, says there are a lot of lawyers out there who volunteer their time he prefers to go the ‘donation’ route. “A lot of lawyers at other firms do a lot of pro bono work,” he adds. “I don’t do that much in the classical sense of pro bono.”
The firm is developing a bit of a reputation around Tampa for its generosity but Blickensderfer says people still seem surprised to see him arrive with a check in hand. “We just want to help the best way we can,” he says. “I think people are surprised in this day and age when anyone goes out of their way to help.”
“You think they are small or unimportant donations, and you don’t realize the impact that will have on others,” he adds.
“I wish we could do more,” says Blickensderfer. “We have a lot to be thankful for and I count my blessings when I look at others and see how many people are in need.”
“I thought I had problems,” says Blickensderfer with a smile and a bit of humor in his voice.
Lucky for Tampa Bay, Blickensderfer came to town with his check book.
Michael Blickensderfer has a degree in business administration from Ohio State University and earned his J.D. at the Seton Hall University School of Law in New Jersey. The Blick Law Firm, based in Tampa, FL, handles personal injury litigation, bankruptcy law, wrongful death lawsuits, medical malpractice cases, as well as other areas of law.
Lawyers Giving Back looks at a side of lawyers you don’t hear too much about—the side that gives back…pays it forward..and shares the love. We’ve found quite a number of attorneys who log non-billable hours helping others—simply because they believe it’s the right thing to do. Their stories are inspiring, and hey, who knew lawyers were so…good? If you’ve got a story to share about an attorney who’s doing the right thing, let us know—we’d love to let others know, too. Today, we’re talking with Florida attorney Spencer Aronfeld…
Attorney Spencer Aronfeld has a dream. He wants Lawyers to the Rescue to be known around the world as an army of attorneys ready to provide pro bono legal services wherever they’re needed to help people caught up in epic events.
“My vision is that Lawyers to the Rescue becomes an organization like Doctors without Borders,” says Aronfeld who has been a personal injury and medical malpractice lawyer in Miami for over 20 years. “Maybe we can’t save lives like doctors, but lawyers can change and improve people’s lives in times of crisis.”
It all started last year when Aronfeld was sitting on the tarmac in Miami aboard a private jet waiting to fly out to work on a Chinese Drywall case. He looked out the window of the plane and saw a group of tired and frightened earthquake refugees arriving from Haiti and he desperately wanted to help.
Within a few days, Aronfeld and his wife Dina had raised thousands of dollars for the Haiti relief fund. But the Aronfelds thought there must be a way for lawyers to do more than raise money.
They kicked Lawyers to the Rescue in gear and soon began offering free legal help to the homeless at a shelter in downtown Miami.
When the BP Oil spill happened, a Texas doctor friend asked if Lawyers to the Rescue could come to a little village outside New Orleans, where a group of Vietnamese and Cambodian shrimpers were wondering how in the world they would support their families with the Gulf waters swimming in oil.
“They were living in these FEMA trailers left over from hurricane Katrina,” says Aronfeld, “and they spoke absolutely no English.”
“BP was going to have these men go out there in their little shrimp boats and try to clean up this Read the rest of this entry »
Lawyers Giving Back looks at a side of lawyers you don’t hear too much about—the side that gives back…pays it forward..and shares the love. We’ve found quite a number of attorneys who log non-billable hours helping others—simply because they believe it’s the right thing to do. Their stories are inspiring, and hey, who knew lawyers were so…good? If you’ve got a story to share about an attorney who’s doing the right thing, let us know—we’d love to let others know, too. Today, we’re talking with attorney Jay Lefkowitz…
A news story about a determined group of parents petitioning for school reform in an impoverished California school district recently caught the eye of high profile internationally known attorney Jay Lefkowitz. No ordinary mortal, Lefkowitz has had a notable career in public service, including an assignment as a special envoy to Korea and also White House advisor to both George H.W. Bush and Bush the younger. Now a partner with Kirkland & Ellis in New York City he is often approached to do pro bono work. “If I think it is an appropriate case, I often say yes,” says Lefkowitz.
“In this case, I literally read the article, then picked up the phone and let the parents know I was available to help them. I was just so taken by the power of what they had organized to do.”
Lefkowiitz has a long established interest in education reform—he fought for the right of parents to direct public tax dollars to private education in Florida in 2006 in the school voucher wars—and won.
In the California story he saw another group of parents fighting a system, he says, that “has long empowered teachers, but not parents. I was attracted to their story and told them I would represent them pro bono.”
A mostly Latino school in an impoverished Los Angeles neighborhood, McKinley Elementary is one of the lowest ranked schools in the district of Compton. Unwilling to continue to tolerate a substandard education for their children, a group of parents is using the power of petition under California’s new Parent Empowerment Act to demand reform.
“Mckinley is ranked 22 out of 24 elementary schools in Compton and of course Compton is lowest performing school district in the whole state,” says Lefkowitz, “so if any school deserves to have a shot at reform it’s McKinley.”
The so-called ‘Parent Trigger Act’ requires school boards to make changes when presented with a petition signed by at least 51 percent of parents. But the McKinley parents demand that the school be turned into a charter school that would give them more control over the administration or staffing—and they’re meeting strong resistance from teachers and school board members.
“What we have here are parents seeking to really take control of the educational destiny of their children and a school board that has been really extraordinarily heavy-handed in trying to deny the effect of the law,” says Lefkowitz.
The school board demanded that every person who signed the petition come in person to present photo i.d.—something that the Parent Trigger Act does not stipulate.
“Placing requirements in terms of an in-person photo i.d. requirement would have had a chilling effect on the parents themselves,” says Lefkowitz, who recently obtained a temporary restraining order barring the school from demanding photo i.d.
On February 3, Lefkowitz and another partner from Kirkland & Ellis filed a class action against the Compton Unified School District in Los Angeles.
“We are obviously hoping that the school board will back down and stop threatening the parents,” he adds. “We didn’t want to have to file a lawsuit,” says Lefkowitz, who has a reputation as a hardnosed litigator. “We were hoping that the school board would accept the petition that the parents signed, follow the law and allow the school to become a charter school.”
Lefkowitz admits there could be countless more pro bono hours to come if the board doesn’t retreat. He doesn’t sound too worried about that.
Jay Lefkowitz is a partner with Kirkland and Ellis in New York City. With more than 1,500 lawyers, the firm provides service to clients around the world in the areas of complex litigation, corporate and tax and intellectual property. Lefkowitz has appeared in courtrooms in at least 30 states and won numerous multi-million dollar verdicts and settlements. He is also an adjunct professor at the Columbia School of Law.