Monday, June 8, 2015

NYC Office of Civil Justice


New York City is one step closer to having a new Office of Civil Justice. On Tuesday, the City Council's Committee on Courts and Legal Services unanimously passed a bill that would create the office, to be tasked with assessing, coordinating, and helping reform the civil legal services available to low-income New Yorkers. Among the most pressing concerns are ensuring legal representation for immigrants facing deportation and tenants facing eviction.

The bill, Intro. 736, has Council Member Mark Levine and Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito as its lead sponsors and is expected to sail through the full City Council Wednesday and be signed into law by Mayor Bill de Blasio in the coming weeks. It is a significant step in work being done by both sides of City Hall to reform the city's justice system, whether criminal or civil, with focus on equity and consistency.

The office will be headed by a civil justice coordinator appointed by the mayor, and will assess the efficacy and capacity of existing civil legal provider programs. The city currently allocates tens of millions of dollars to provide civil legal services for those who cannot afford counsel. The civil justice office would also develop a five-year plan to ensure low-income New Yorkers have the access to the civil legal services they need.

Though defendants navigating the criminal court system must be provided an attorney by law, indigent New Yorkers engaged in civil proceedings currently do not have a right to counsel and are often left without legal representation.

"Civil proceedings cover life changing events, including child custody, deportation and the loss of housing," said Council Member Rory Lancman, chair of the Courts and Legal Services Committee. "Establishing an Office of Civil Justice, headed by a Civil Justice Coordinator appointed by the mayor, would centralize our effort to understand, analyze and identify the legal representation needs of New Yorkers, and oversee the effectiveness of our civil legal services funding."

The bill leaves it up to the mayor to determine where the new office is created. Lancman expects that de Blasio will place it under the purview of the city's Human Resources Administration (HRA), led by Commissioner Steven Banks. Banks, who worked at the Legal Aid Society for 33 years prior to his appointment to HRA, testified in support of the bill and suggested the office be placed at his agency at an April 15 hearing.

Mark-Viverito has been a vocal and active advocate in matters of civil and criminal justice, especially this year, proposing in her State of the City address to expand the use of summonses and desk appearance tickets for minor offenses in lieu of arrests. She also has called for an expansion of the size of the New York police force and the creation of a city-wide fund to help non-violent offenders who can’t afford bail access to the funds needed for release.

The push for an increase in civil legal services has also appeared at the state level. In 2010, Chief Judge of the New York State of Appeals Jonathan Lippman created the Task Force to Expand Access to Civil Legal Services. At the task force’s recommendation, the new state budget allocated $85 million for indigent civil legal services, an increase of $15 million from the previous fiscal year, the Wall Street Journal reported.











NYC Wins When Everyone Can Vote! Michael H. Drucker Technorati talk bubble Technorati Tag in Del.icio.us Digg! StumbleUpon

No comments: