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Contact: Lise Bang-Jensen Director, Media Services & Public Affairs lbang-jensen@nysba.org
518/487-5530
Attorney General’s Press
Office: New York City 212-416-8060
Albany 518-473-5525
December 1, 2011
A.G. SCHNEIDERMAN AND NYS BAR ASSOCIATION PRESIDENT
DOYLE LAUNCH
PROGRAM TO MATCH NONPROFITS IN NEED WITH VOLUNTEER ATTORNEYS
“Charity Corps” to Provide Counsel to
Nonprofits, Improve Governance and Legal Compliance
Volunteer Attorneys Will Help Nonprofits Continue
Critical Work in Time of Financial Uncertainty
NEW YORK -- Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman and New York State Bar
Association President Vincent E. Doyle III today announced the launch of
a joint initiative to match volunteer attorneys with nonprofit
organizations in need of legal counsel. The innovative partnership,
called “Charity Corps,” will help improve governance and
legal compliance by assisting nonprofits that cannot afford legal
counsel.
Charity Corps attorneys will help ensure that nonprofits fulfill
their responsibilities and continue to provide critical services through
difficult economic times. The Attorney General’s Charities Bureau
will support the initiative by providing training and guidance to
volunteer attorneys and nonprofits. The Charities Bureau is responsible
for supervising charitable organizations to protect donors, and ensure
funds and other property devoted to charitable purposes are properly
used. Charity Corps will be administered by the New York State Bar
Association.
“Nonprofits are vital to our local communities and state, and
we are committed to ensuring that they continue their important
work--especially at a time when their services are most in need,”
Attorney General Schneiderman said. “Charity Corps will provide
nonprofits with the necessary legal counsel they otherwise could not
afford, helping to improve compliance while also providing the means to
carry on with their missions. I want to thank President Vincent Doyle
and the New York State Bar Association for their partnership and support
of this initiative on behalf of New York’s nonprofits and the
people they serve.”
“The State Bar Association is pleased to partner with the
Attorney General’s Office to promote voluntary legal services that
help nonprofits better realize their missions,” President Doyle
(Connors & Vilardo LLP) said. “New York’s attorneys
stand ready to serve our important charitable sector-- housing, shelter
and youth programs, mental health and crisis intervention clinics, high
school dropout prevention programs, relief and development assistance,
civil rights organizations, veterans’ assistance groups and
others--by helping them with their governance and legal compliance
needs. By facilitating pro bono relationships with nonprofits that
cannot afford lawyers, the State Bar Association helps do the public
good.”
Charity Corps will recruit and train volunteer attorneys to provide
legal advice on issues like board governance, fiduciary
responsibilities, and nonprofit law compliance. The new program will
fill in gaps in coverage so that a broader array of organizations
throughout the state are served. It will also work to maximize available
resources by matching existing legal service providers with nonprofits
in need of pro bono counsel. Organizations that serve the needs of
indigent people will receive priority in the program.
Charity Corps will begin as a pilot program, serving up to 50
nonprofits in its first year. Ultimately, the program is expected
to assist substantially more underserved nonprofits across New York
State. To be eligible, an organization must have a 501(c)(3) nonprofit
status. It must also lack in-house counsel and be unable to afford
outside counsel. Organizations interested in participating in the
program must file their applications by December 31, 2011. For
additional eligibility information, including applications and volunteer
attorney forms, please visit www.nysba.org/CharityCorps.
Charity Corps will be administered by the New York State Bar
Association. The Attorney General’s Charities Bureau, led by
Bureau Chief Jason R. Lilien, will support the initiative by providing
training and guidance to volunteer attorneys and nonprofits. Charity
Corps will be overseen by a Leadership Committee chaired by Lesley
Rosenthal, VP General Counsel & Secretary of Lincoln Center for the
Performing Arts and author of the forthcoming book, Good Counsel:
Meeting the Legal Needs of Nonprofits.
The Leadership Committee also includes:
• Marnie Berk, New York Lawyers for the Public Interest,
Inc.
• Miriam Buhl, Weil, Gotshal & Manges
• Susan Chase, Legal Aid of New York
• Sean Delany, Lawyers Alliance for New York
• Stephen Falla-Riff, Legal Aid of New York
• Lisa Frisch, Legal Project, Albany
• Richard S. Hobish, Pro Bono Partnership
• Deirdre Hykal, Willkie Farr & Gallagher
• Tony Lu, Pro Bono Net
• Mark O’Brien, Pro Bono Net
• Ken Perri, Legal Assistance of Western New York, Inc.
• Michael Rothenberg, New York Lawyers for the Public
Interest, Inc.
• John Sare, Patterson Belknap Webb & Tyler
• Douglas Sauer, New York Council of Nonprofits
• Michael Schachter, Willkie Farr & Gallagher
• Stacey Slater, Nixon Peabody
• Ronald J. Tabak, Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher &
Flom
• David Watson, New York Council of Nonprofits
Charity Corps will draw on the expertise and networks of pro bono
activity already in place at the New York State Bar Association,
including the President’s Committee on Access to Justice, Pro Bono
Coordinators Network, and others.
Attorney General Schneiderman has made improving nonprofit governance
and compliance a priority for his office. Earlier this year, he formed
the Leadership Committee for Nonprofit Revitalization, a task force of
leaders from New York’s nonprofit, business and labor communities
charged with developing proposals to strengthen nonprofit governance and
accountability, while also modernizing the state’s nonprofit
regulatory program to reduce burdens on nonprofits.
The 77,000-member New York State Bar Association is the largest
voluntary bar association in the nation. It was founded in
1876.
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