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| Third-year law student Angela
Caldwell worked for the Legal Aid Justice Center in
Charlottesville. |
Posted Oct. 1, 2003 PILA Grantees Report Rewarding Summer Job
Experiences Where PILA Grantees Worked, Summer 2003
Nine of the students who spent their summers
working in public service law, supported by grants from the Law
School’s Public
Interest Law Association, recounted their experiences at a lunch
meeting Sept. 23 designed to spark others’ interest in emulating
them next summer.
“It was just awesome," said Katie Bagley, who
spent her summer with the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Coeur d’Alene,
Idaho, where she worked on cases with the FBI and ATF and assisted
in an appeal before the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit.
Angela Caldwell described working for the Legal
Aid Justice Center in Charlottesville, where she worked on
children’s Medicaid issues. “We’re considering a lawsuit over
children’s access to dentistry,” she said. She enrolled in the
Housing Clinic this fall in order to “stay up with” the clients she
began helping over the summer.
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| Katie Bagley |
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| Pat Lavelle |
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| Miles
Roberts |
Miles Roberts worked for the Department of Justice
in Washington in its computer crimes division. He wrote reports
trying to forecast new crimes people might use computers for.
Pat Lavelle worked with the garment workers union
in New York City, ghostwriting a paper due for presentation to the
American Bar Association and on a case being brought in Japan
against Levi’s clothing. He said he got his job through
persistence.
David Thomas worked for the Albemarle County
Commonwealth’s Attorney’s office, which has only five prosecutors on
staff. “They’re so swamped they rely on you,” Thomas said, “The only
downside was I had to wear a suit. I spent half my time in court. I
wrote all the appellate briefs. I enjoyed it so much I’m working
there part-time now.”
Kieran Brenner was in Dacca, Bangladesh,
experiencing the monsoons and associated power shortages while
working for the Asia Foundation. “I wrote an assessment of the
transparency, efficiency, and accountability of the Bangladesh
government,” he said. “I had incredible access to people in the
government to interview. I worked seven days a week. There was less
law to it—except that they need to repeal about five articles in
their constitution.” Brenner said he found the job through the Conference
on Public Service and the Law last spring.
Rachel Doughty worked on forest management plans
for five national forests across the Southeast for the Southern
Environmental Law Center in Charlottesville. “I worked with
attorneys from across the Southeast. I put together fact sheets for
use by congressmen, wrote an administrative law brief, and worked on
an air-quality case in North Carolina. I met a whole lot of people,”
she said.
Jim Hicks worked for the District Attorney of San
Francisco. “I recommend that you just go get what you want,” he
said. “You’re free help to them. That brings a lot to the table.” He
called the San Francisco office “huge, and it feels disorganized.”
He wrote briefs, worked in the parole program and saw “horrendous
cases, more horrible than fiction.” Hickson, who has also worked for
the Charlottesville District Attorney’s office, advised students to
“take charge and take responsibility for your education. It’s up to
you to make it what you can.”
Karen Pogonowski worked for the New York State
Attorney General’s office on lawsuits brought against its state
parks. “I was involved with the ones we wanted to settle because the
state was wrong,” she said. “One thing I had to find out is how much
a broken nose is worth." She called the job “a great experience and
I’m really glad I did it.”
Bagley suggested that students interested in
public service jobs for next summer write letters to prospective
employers in early December and offer to be available for interviews
over the winter break.
PILA President Carmen Elliott said the
organization awarded $143,000 in summer grants last year, 19 to
second-year students and 16 to first-years. Second-years are awarded
$5,000 and are allowed to earn another $3,000 from their jobs before
being required to return part of the grant. Awards to first-years
are for $3,000 with a $2,000 earning limit.
“How much we can grant is dependent on how well
fund-raising goes,” said Elliott. The PILA auction generates the
largest share of the budget, with additional support from a pledge
drive and the Law School Foundation, which matches every dollar
raised by students with another 50 cents. Elliott said that in
selecting grantees, PILA considers whether the applicant seems to
want a public service career and has a history of volunteering. A
second factor is financial need. PILA does not give grants to
students intending to work on political campaigns, on clerkships, or
to volunteer at for-profit organizations. In a typical year about 25
percent of applicants receive awards.
WHERE PILA GRANTEES WORKED, SUMMER
2003
| FEDERAL |
| FDA Office of Chief Counsel |
Rockville, MD |
| Office of Senator Joseph Biden, Senate Judiciary
Committee |
Washington, D.C. |
| Office of the Legislative Counsel |
Washington, D.C. |
| U.S. Attorney's Office |
Boise, ID |
| U.S. Attorney's Office |
Portland, ME |
| U.S. Attorney's Office |
Washington, D.C. |
| U.S. Department of Justice, Computer Crime Section |
Washington, D.C. |
| U.S. Department of Justice, Criminal Division |
Washington, D.C. |
U.S. Department of Justice, Criminal Division, Office
of International Affairs |
Washington, D.C. |
| STATE |
| Attorney General's Office |
Utica, NY |
| California Attorney General's Office, Criminal Division
|
CA |
| Commonwealth's Attorney's Office, Albemarle County |
Charlottesville, VA |
| Commonwealth's Attorney's Office, Arlington County |
Arlington, VA |
| District Attorney's Office |
Texas |
| District Attorney's Office, Denver |
Denver, CO |
| District Attorney's Office, Los Angeles |
Los Angeles, CA |
| District Attorney's Office, San Francisco |
San Francisco, CA |
| Office of the General Counsel, U.Va. |
Charlottesville, VA |
| Public Defender Service, District of Columbia |
Washington, D.C. |
| Public Defender, Charlottesville |
Charlottesville, VA |
| Public Defender, Ft. Myers |
Ft. Myers, FL |
| Public Defender, Miami |
Miami, FL |
| INTERNATIONAL |
| Asia Foundation |
Bangladesh |
| Center for Economic Development and Human Rights |
India |
| Human Rights Centre, University of Pretoria |
South Africa |
| NON-PROFIT
ORGANIZATIONS |
| Appalachian Research & Defense Fund, Inc. |
Prestonsburg, KY |
| Elder Law Center, Coalition of Wisconsin Aging Groups |
Madison, WI |
| Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights of the Bay Area |
San Francisco, CA |
| Legal Aid Justice Center |
VA |
| Legal Assistance Foundation of Metropolitan Chicago |
Chicago, IL |
| Legal Services of New Jersey |
NJ |
| New York City Legal Aid Society, Juvenile Rights Division
|
New York, NY |
| Prairie State Legal Services |
IL |
| Rappahannock Legal Services, Inc. |
Culpeper, VA |
| Rutherford Institute |
Charlottesville, VA |
| Southern Center for Human Rights |
Atlanta, GA |
| Southern Environmental Law Center |
Charlottesville, VA |
| Trial Lawyers for Public Justice |
Oakland, CA |
| UNITE (a union-side labor organization) |
New York, NY |
• Reported by M.
Marshall

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