Previous
Page
The Face of Public Interest Law
Besides the supportive work environment, Joset points to another
key benefit of her job. "I've been running the legal
program here since I started," she notes. "It's
experience you wouldn't get in a large firm in your first
two years out of law school. You'd be buried in the library
doing somebody else's research. You wouldn't see clients
or a courtroom. So this is great experience."
Law partners Carol J. Brown Biermeier (right) and Alysia
E. La Counte (left) formed the Madison private practice firm of Brown & La Counte, which
exclusively practices Indian law. Jennifer Wertkin (center) works with the firm's public interest
clients and holds a Judicare contract to serve members of the Ho Chunk Nation in Dane and Sauk
counties. |
Plus, she knows she's giving clients what they couldn't
get anywhere else. "It's very difficult in our system
to file an action (against an abuser) without an attorney,"
Joset says. "When you can't afford to hire an attorney,
and you don't qualify for legal aid, you're left with
no options. You're stuck in a relationship that is emotionally,
verbally, physically, or sexually abusive with no way out."
The gratification for Joset is helping people find a way out.
She thinks about one of her recent clients, a severely physically
disabled woman who was regularly beaten by her husband. So was
their child. "The divorce will be finalized shortly,"
Joset says. "She and her son have gotten out. They're
able to live abuse-free lives, which otherwise they would not
have been able to do."
Practicing "real" law
Three hundred miles to the south, in Dodgeville, Chuck Kreimendahl
works on survival issues of a different sort as managing attorney
for Western Legal Services, where he's worked for 10 years.
His core areas of practice include housing issues, family law,
public benefits, and consumer law. "It's essentially
about keeping a roof over people's heads," Kreimendahl
says. "We cover six counties and have two attorneys."
Kreimendahl was drawn to public interest law even before he
enrolled in law school. With a science background, including
graduate studies, he initially did volunteer work in environmental
law for the Department of Natural Resources and Wisconsin Environmental
Decade as a law student. But a poverty law course at U.W. Law
School steered his interest to doing legal work for poor people.
He, too, had to wait to find the right position. After graduation,
he worked for a year in a small firm in Park Falls before landing
his current job.
"I have days probably all lawyers have when they wish
they weren't lawyers," Kreimendahl says. "But
to me there's a satisfaction in getting results for poor
people. They don't get evicted, or they get the public benefits
they're entitled to, or they resolve some sort of crisis
custody dispute."
He finds as much, or more, satisfaction in that as he would
landing a big client in a private firm. "There's this
chasing-the-big-dollar thing that's evident in law school,
in competing for jobs, and in law practice," Kreimendahl
says. "It's refreshing not to have to contend with
that kind of picture."
"And frankly," he adds, "this job offers opportunities
a lot of general practitioners in small firms don't get
a chance to do. We deal with elaborate, or at least interesting,
legal issues - constitutional issues - that have to
do with administrative law or public benefits."
"There's this chasing-the-big-dollar thing that's
evident in law school, in competing for jobs, and in law practice. It's refreshing not to
have to contend with that kind of picture" -- Chuck Kreimendahl |
Still, the attitude pervades the legal profession, say many
public interest lawyers, that they're not practicing "real"
law. Kreimendahl's response to that is two-fold. "First,
our clients see what we do as the practice of law, and they're
grateful," he says. "And the other thing is that if
you do this type of practice for a while, you find other
attorneys turning to you with questions they get. They don't
practice in the areas we practice in. Judges and hearing
examiners also see us as being somewhat expert in the fields
we handle. So that counteracts any general sense that we're
a different class of attorney."
The image of public interest lawyers as a separate breed is
understandable, says Cindy Haro of Wisconsin Judicare in Wausau.
"I'm not an attorney other lawyers see around the courthouse
very often," she points out. "When I go to a local
bar meeting or social function, they have no idea who I am or
what I do."
Not only does her work differ from what private practitioners
do, but public interest lawyers themselves have diverse jobs,
Haro says. "What I do in my job probably bears little resemblance
to what an attorney for a mental health project in Madison does,"
she says. "I doubt our days are much alike at all."
Nonetheless, Haro values her connection to colleagues through
the Bar's Public Interest Law Section. By meeting other
public interest attorneys, she sees commonalities between the
problems of her clients, who live on rural Indian reservations,
with those of people living in urban areas.
For eight years, Haro has worked in Judicare's Indian
law office, serving 10 reservation communities in 33 counties.
She came to Judicare after running a similar program in northern
Minnesota for more than four years. "One of the good things
about a public interest law career," she says, "is
that it's easier to find role models and mentors. And you
get immediate experience. In the part of our office that does
regular poverty law, if you want to go to court the first month
you're on the job, the supervisor will make that happen
for you. And work with you."
Haro's attraction to public interest law predates law
school, back to when she was working as a claims processor for
the Social Security Administration. "I saw that clients
who had attorneys tended to get better results at their hearings,"
she says. "When I was trying to figure out what else to
do with my life, I decided to go to law school and work for legal
services." While a law student at the University of Montana
Law School, she worked in the Indian Law Clinic. "That solidified
my career choice," she says.
It's a choice she's never regretted, even though
she says on this particular day she's had one of those "bureaucracy
mornings," her least favorite part of the job. Much of her
time goes into special projects, such as setting up a training
program for tribal court advocates, or developing a tribal-specific
juvenile justice system - "infrastructure building,"
as she calls it. "But I always make sure I also have at
least a small client caseload," she says, "because
that reminds me why I went to law school and why this is a great
job. I would definitely do it all over again."
Going private
Jennifer Wertkin always knew she would be in public service
someday, but she thought it would be as a social worker. After
earning a master's degree, she took a social work job in
Philadelphia. "I saw a lot of people's rights being
infringed upon," Wertkin says, "and I had no ability
to advocate for them legally because I was part of the system.
I decided to go to law school to become someone who could advocate
for people who didn't have a voice."
After graduating from U.W. Law School in December 1997, Wertkin
set her sights on a legal services career and sent out "a
million resumes all over the country," she says. She ended
up, however, in private practice, working in a Madison firm that
exclusively practices Indian law. Much of Wertkin's work
is with the firm's public interest clients, plus she holds
a Judicare contract to serve members of the Ho Chunk Nation in
Dane and Sauk counties.
Now with a year of experience under her belt, Wertkin acknowledges
that a major portion of her paycheck goes to repay law school
and graduate school loans. Has that stirred second thoughts about
pursuing a public interest career? "Nope," she says
emphatically. "Not in a million years would I want to work
in a large firm. I can't imagine being comfortable in that
environment. I don't want to burn out."
Granted there's a certain burnout factor, too, in struggling
to repay student loans while holding down a lesser paying job.
"But," Wertkin maintains, "I enjoy what I do.
That's the big difference." Even as a first-year lawyer,
she's able to plunge into hands-on legal work and deal directly
with clients. "I knew when I got out of law school that
any job I took would have to involve a lot of client contact,"
she says. "One of my strengths is working individually with
people, making a connection, and helping people feel that things
aren't hopeless."
Like Wertkin, Darcy Haber aimed for a public interest law
career when she graduated from U.W. Law School in 1995. But,
thanks to Congressional cuts in legal services funding, job options
were slim. "Not only were there no jobs," Haber says,
"but some of my friends who'd graduated the year before
were being laid off."
Instead of seeking a legal services position, Haber set up
a sole private practice right after law school, emphasizing consumer
and tenants' rights law. "I try very hard not to turn
anybody away on the basis that they can't pay," she
says.
Haber knew many fellow law students who felt drawn to public
interest law careers. "But I can't name a handful who
are doing it now," she says. The primary obstacle? Heavy
debt load from loans for law school, perhaps also for college.
The lower salaries in public interest law scare off many new
lawyers who face loan repayment bills of several hundred dollars
a month. "That's why," Haber emphasizes, "we
need loan forgiveness programs,"
in which students get a portion of their loans repaid in return
for entering public interest law work.
As for Haber, she says she was lucky to graduate without building
up debts. Otherwise she may have abandoned her chosen career.
"I wouldn't have been able to sleep at night not knowing
if I was going to be able to pay an extra $500 a month in loans,"
she says. "Your sense of security goes right out the window."
Fortunately, Haber didn't face that dilemma and was able
to pursue her passion for public interest law. She says she can't
imagine doing anything else. "I remember why I'm in
this," she says, "when I get another attorney on the
phone and say I'm representing so-and-so. They say, 'What?!'
They never expected this person to get an attorney. Then I think,
'Okay, I'm doing the right thing.'"
Editor's Note: Members interested in joining the Public
Interest Law Section can do so simply by checking the appropriate
area on the State Bar dues statement, to be mailed in June. For
more information about the section, please contact Bob Peterson,
chair, at (608) 264-6950; or State Bar staff liaison Jennifer
Roethe Kersten at (800) 444-9404, ext. 6171.
Dianne Molvig operates Access Information
Service, a Madison research, writing, and editing service. She
is a frequent contributor to area publications.
|