- Posted September 26, 2011
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Senate budget plan would cut legal aid funding by millions if approved
The Daily Record Newswire
Funding for the Legal Services Corporation, the nonprofit provider of civil legal aid for low-income Americans, would be reduced by $8 million in a plan approved by a Senate committee.
The $396 million proposed Senate budget for fiscal 2012 would represent a 2 percent cut to the organization, which also received funding from private sources. Under a House plan, funding to the organization would be cut by 26 percent to $300 million.
LSC officials said the proposed funding cuts come just as the need for legal aid services is increasing, given the growing number of cases involving foreclosure, unemployment, landlord-tenant disputes, domestic violence and other civil legal matters related to the slow economic recovery.
"We seem caught in a perfect storm," LSC Board Chairman John G. Levi said in a statement after the Senate committee's proposal. "The Congress faces a tough budget environment. The poverty population is growing. Requests from low-income Americans for civil legal assistance are increasing. Other sources of legal aid funding are declining. Legal aid offices are stretched thin and laying off attorneys and staff because of funding shortfalls."
Published: Mon, Sep 26, 2011
headlines Jackson County
headlines National
- Judge orders SCOTUSblog founder Goldstein to home confinement until sentencing
- Plaintiff testifies about addiction in trial against social media companies
- EEOC reverses course on transgender workers’ right to choose restrooms
- Amazon sues review-selling websites, alleging fake online reviews
- Police identify employee at assisted living facility in murder of philanthropist attorney
- New directory of private lending options created as student loan regulations shift




