Report of The Summit on the Use of Technology to Expand Access to Justice

The “Report of The Summit on the Use of Technology to Expand Access to Justice” focuses on ways to use technology to provide all Americans some form of effective assistance with essential civil legal needs. The report presents a number of concrete recommendations to broaden and improve civil legal assistance through an integrated service-delivery system that brings the knowledge and wisdom of legal experts to the public through computers and mobile devices.

The national Technology Summit brought together more than 75 representatives of legal aid programs, courts, government, and business as well as technology experts, academics, and private practitioners convened at two sessions in 2012 and 2013. LSC hosted the summit, and formed a planning group to design it that included  participants from LSC’s grantees, the American Bar Association, the National Legal Aid and Defender Association, the National Center for State Courts, the New York State courts, the Self-Represented Litigation Network, and the U.S. Department of Justice’s Access to Justice Initiative.

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Background

This report proposes a national vision that must of necessity be achieved locally. The proposal is ambitious. It must overcome challenges not only of technology, but of leadership.

It has been widely estimated for at least the last generation that all the programs and resources devoted to ensuring access to justice address only 20%1 of the civil legal needs of low-income people in the United States. This is unacceptable in a nation dedicated to the rule of law and to the principle of justice for all.

The Legal Services Corporation (LSC) has found through its experience with its Technology Initiative Grant program that technology can be a powerful tool in narrowing the justice gap—the difference between the unmet need for civil legal services and the resources available to meet that need. Drawing on this experience, in late 2011, LSC decided to convene a summit of leaders to explore how best to use technology in the access-to-justice community. LSC formed a planning group with participants from its grantees, the American Bar Association, the National Legal Aid and Defender Association, the National Center for State Courts, the New York State Courts, the Self-Represented Litigation Network, and the U.S. Department of Justice’s Access to Justice Initiative to design the summit.

The group adopted a mission for The Summit on the Use of Technology to Expand Access to Justice
(Summit) consistent with the magnitude of the challenge:

“to explore the potential of technology to move the United States toward providing some form of effective assistance to 100% of persons otherwise unable to afford an attorney for dealing with essential civil legal needs.”

The planning group decided on a two-step process to accomplish this mission. In June 2012, LSC hosted the first session of the Summit with 50 participants (all participants are listed in the Appendix). This group was asked to explore a technology vision for expanding access to justice without regard to cost or practicality. In preparation for this first session, the planning group commissioned a series of white papers, six of which are available in the Harvard Journal of Law and Technology 2 and five more are available online.3 The participants in the first session identified 50 distinct technology activities that could be useful in improving access to justice.

The group attending the second session of the Summit in January 2013 was asked to develop a concrete plan for moving forward using the ideas developed in the first session. The second session had to consider factors such as cost, feasibility, and likelihood of adoption. In preparation for the second session, the planning group deployed a process called “Choiceboxing” to reduce the list of options. Using a website developed for this purpose, first session participants were given lists of 26 possible objectives and 50 possible technology activities and asked to identify their top 10 priorities from each list.

The planning group decided that the second session should focus on the top six activities identified in this process: (1) Document assembly for self-represented litigants; (2) better “triage”—that is, identification of the most appropriate form of service for clients in light of the totality of their circumstances; (3) mobile technologies; (4) remote service delivery; (5) expert systems and checklists; and (6) unbundled services.

The 51 attendees at the second session included 24 from the first session and 27 new participants (see Appendix). After an overview of the six areas of focus, the attendees divided into smaller groups to discuss strategies for overcoming obstacles and implementing the six areas of focus.

This report reflects the results of a process involving 75 leaders in legal services, the private bar, courts, libraries, IT development, legal academia, and other communities involved in providing access to justice; two one-and-a-half day working sessions; and preparation of numerous papers and analyses.

This report proposes a national vision that must of necessity be achieved locally. The proposal is ambitious. It must overcome challenges not only of technology, but of leadership, funding, and resistance to change. While the Legal Services Corporation has sponsored this process, from its inception the participants have recognized that the leadership necessary to implement the Summit’s recommendations must come jointly from a broad spectrum of entities involved in providing access to justice.


Legal Services Corporation, Documenting the Justice Gap in America: The Current Unmet Civil Legal Needs of Low Income Americans, 2009, p.13.

https://jolt.law.harvard.edu/ 

http://jolt.law.harvard.edu/symposium/

A Vision of an Integrated Service-Delivery System

Technology can and must play a vital role in transforming service delivery so that all poor people in the United States with an essential civil legal need obtain some form of effective assistance.

Technology can and must play a vital role in transforming service delivery so that all poor people in the United States with an essential civil legal need obtain some form of effective assistance.

The strategy for implementing this vision has five main components:

  1. Creating in each state a unified “legal portal” which, by an automated triage process, directs persons needing legal assistance to the most appropriate form of assistance and guides self-represented litigants through the entire legal process
  2. Deploying sophisticated document assembly applications to support the creation of legal documents by service providers and by litigants themselves and linking the document creation process to the delivery of legal information and limited scope legal representation
  3. Taking advantage of mobile technologies to reach more persons more effectively
  4. Applying business process/analysis to all access-to-justice activities to make them as efficient as practicable
  5. Developing “expert systems” to assist lawyers and other services providers

The vision for achieving this is:

  • Every state will create a statewide access portal that provides an easy way for a person to obtain assistance with a civil legal issue.
  • The portal will use an automated process to refer each requester to the lowest-cost service likely to produce a satisfactory result in her or his case.
  • The automated process will ultimately be informed by a sophisticated “triage” algorithm continually updated for each state by feedback data on the outcomes for persons who have previously sought assistance through the portal.4
  • The portal will support a broad variety of access-to-justice services provided by courts, the private bar, legal aid entities, libraries, and others who collaborate in implementing the initiative. The systems of all collaborating entities will exchange information automatically to support each other’s applications and to enable the accumulation and analysis of information on the functioning of the entire access-to-justice process.
  • The baseline service available in a state will be a website accessible through computers, tablets, or smartphones that provides sophisticated but easily understandable information on legal rights and responsibilities, legal remedies, and forms and procedures for pursuing those remedies.5 The statewide access portal will link a requester with the most appropriate section of the website.
  • All of the collaborating entities in a jurisdiction will employ the same document assembly application, which will generate plain-language forms through an interview approach. Litigants will use the application themselves, or with lay or legal assistance, to choose a legal form or forms appropriate for their personal objectives and to complete the form by entering all required information through an on-line interview process.
  • The document assembly application will employ automated “smart document” tags for the information entered by a requester so that the information can be reused by all access-to-justice entities without requiring re-entry of the information.
  • The document assembly application will be linked to:
    • the website for access to detailed information about the legal principles and terms underlying the form
    • legal services providers, court self-help centers, and libraries and other support entities for assistance that does not include legal advice
    • legal aid lawyers or private lawyers providing pro bono services (or private lawyers providing unbundled legal services if the requester is unable or unwilling to receive free legal services) for legal advice on some aspect of the requester’s legal situation
    • the court’s electronic filing and electronic payment applications
    • the access-to-justice entity’s case management application to store all tagged data for reuse
  • Forms generated by the document assembly application will be universally accepted by courts in the state.
  • All access-to-justice entities will employ a variety of automated and non-automated processes to make the best use of lawyers’ time to assist requesters with their cases, including:
    • conducting business process analyses to streamline their internal operations and their interactions with all collaborating entities
    • having clients/litigants perform as much data entry and handle as many of the functions involved in their cases as possible (given the nature of the case and the characteristics of the client/litigant)
    • having lay staff perform a broad range of assistance activities not requiring the expertise of a lawyer
    • having expert systems and checklists available to assist and save time for lawyers and lay service providers
    • maximizing the extent to which services are provided remotely rather than face- to-face, to save the time of both the clients/litigants and the service providers
  • The level of legal representation in a case will be guided by the state “triage” algorithm, which will be reviewed and revised regularly to make it as accurate as possible.
  • Persons seeking more extensive legal services will be linked to legal aid offices, pro bono attorneys, court self-help centers, or lawyer referral services.
  • Mobile applications will be deployed to assist requesters/clients/litigants.
  • Evaluative information will be generated by automated systems routinely, presented to all collaborating entities regularly, and assessed collaboratively to refine and improve the access-to-justice process.

The term “triage” is placed in quotations because its use here is different from its source meaning in battlefield and other medical emergency situations, where a large number of casualties are sorted into groups to make the most effective use of limited treatment resources in medical circumstances. One of the groups is people whose wounds are so grievous that they are abandoned. This initiative, by contrast, has as its mission ending the current practice of abandoning (i.e., providing no service to) large numbers of poor people with essential civil legal needs. We use the term “triage” as it is commonly used today, including in the access-to-justice community, to characterize a range of strategies for allocating scarce resources most effectively.

Such websites are already in place in every state. The initiative will ensure that they are accessible through smartphones and tablets as well as computers.

Components of the Integrated System

This section sets forth a detailed vision and implementation outline for each of the five main components. Many of the strategies will require funding and are therefore contingent on finding the resources to implement them. We have no current commitments to fund any of the strategies suggested. Securing financial support will be part of the hard work needed to make the vision a reality.

The key to this portal will be an integrated system of resources, rules, and recommendations through which users can be matched with available services.

1. Statewide Legal Portals

The Vision

Each state now has multiple websites providing information on the courts, legal services, and private bar resources. The variety of choices can be confusing for the user and wasteful of scarce resources when multiple entities are providing information on the same topics. The better approach would be a single, statewide mobile web access portal in each state to which a user will be directed no matter where he/she comes into the system. The portal will support computers, tablets, and smartphones.

When an access-to-justice portal is implemented:

  • Information will be available anywhere, any time to every person seeking assistance.
  • Assistance from a person—lawyer or otherwise—will be available anywhere, if resources are available.
  • The portal will use methods such as branching logic questions and gamification6 to generate information on the capabilities of an inquirer, which will be part of the referral logic.
  • The portal will generate information on the legal needs of persons within the state, aggregate it, and provide it regularly to all participating entities.

The key to this portal will be an integrated system of resources, rules, and recommendations through which users can be matched with available services. The site will apply branching logic to users’ responses to questions and direct them to the most appropriate resource, considering factors such as case complexity, litigant capacity, strength and representation of the opponent, the importance of the litigant’s stake in the case, and the availability of the resource (updated in real time).

All access-to-justice entities in a state (including legal aid entities, courts, the organized bar, interested law firms and lawyers, law schools, libraries, pro bono legal services support entities, and other interested community entities) will develop the portal and will receive appropriate referrals from it. If a referral proves inappropriate, the entity to which the referral was made may make a different referral. The confidentiality of information provided by an inquirer will be preserved.

Service options will include:

  • Link to a specific section of a website for substantive and procedural information and access to document assembly forms
  • Connection to a legal services, court, or library staff person for information and navigation assistance (including a personal assessment of the capability of the service requester)
  • Connection to a self-help center or legal services attorney
  • Connection to a lawyer providing unbundled services on a pro bono or compensated basis (if the client is able to pay)

If the inquirer is connected to a person, that person will have the capability to change the referral. Responses from a person will take the initial form of an email, text message, or live chat. Escalation can take the form of a phone call or video conference.

An essential function of the portal will be the accumulation of data on how cases progress and, based on outcome data, the relative efficacy of various service delivery mechanisms. The goal is to employ technology that is smart enough to refine referrals based on the data collected, but human review will be essential to the evaluation process.

It is unrealistic to propose that every referral be reviewed, but the system designers will build in a statistically valid system of review that will spot-check referrals and help to improve their efficacy. After the initial portal implementations are evaluated, the model will be modified as necessary, and the template will be provided for other states interested in replicating the process.

Implementation Plan

LSC will work with others to secure funding to develop portals in up to three pilot jurisdictions, selected competitively. The pilot portals will be designed for maximum potential reuse in other states. Although LSC currently requires its grantees to have a statewide website for each state, and although many court websites have good information for self-represented litigants, the portal will be a new site that (1) aggregates the resources already available, (2) delivers new resources to fill any gaps that exist, and (3) provides the new functionality envisioned by the triage and expert systems.

To compete for the pilot program, jurisdictions should demonstrate that the portal will be created and supported as a collaborative effort of the major access-to-justice entities within the state and that they are committed to sustaining funding for the portal after the grant.

2. Document Assembly

The Vision

Plain language forms will be produced through plain language interviews for all frequently used court and legal forms (e.g., a consumer letter). Users will answer questions regarding their legal matter, and the intelligent forms system will use the information to generate the appropriate form and display it for review. The forms will be translated into all locally appropriate languages (but produce English language forms for filing). The systems will employ “smart form” XML tagging7 to deliver information in the form for recording and reuse in court and other entity case management systems. The document assembly system will provide “just in time” legal information (such as the definition of legal terms used in the form, as questions in the interview are reached), links to fuller discussions of legal options and implications, and links to unbundled legal advice providers to enable users to obtain professional assistance with specific issues at affordable rates.

Documents in process will remain on the system for a limited time to allow users to complete them in multiple sessions. Completed documents may be e-filed and filing fees paid through the system using a credit card. Court orders and notices will be generated using the tagged information and the same document assembly process (augmented by court workflow systems). Document assembly/e-filing systems will deliver filed documents electronically to process servers for service.

Implementation Plan

Unlike some other parts of this plan, document assembly is a relatively mature process in use by many access-to-justice entities. The biggest challenge is not a technological one, but the lack of uniform court forms in most states. The access-to-justice entities in each state must make the development of uniform statewide forms a priority, but that undertaking is outside the scope of this report.

Document assembly technology can benefit from additional development. For example, there is still a need for XML tagging standards for the data elements used in “smart forms,” for compliance with or expansion of the National Information Exchange Model (NIEM) data model for those data elements, and for the cooperation of the courts, legal services providers, and vendors to implement support for those data standards in document assembly, e-filing, case management, and other types of applications and products. These standards are essential so that the various data systems used by legal services providers and the courts can share information without the need to reenter it. Creating links from document assembly to limited scope legal assistance requires the cooperation of unbundled legal services providers and, in many states, state or local bar associations or other legal referral entities.

To support our vision, we encourage those funders that provide resources to implement document assembly within a jurisdiction to make that funding contingent on commitments to:

  • Implement the “full scope” document assembly vision described above
  • Create a collaborative structure involving at least legal services organizations and courts that will ensure the system is developed and used by all access-to-justice entities within the jurisdiction
  • Adopt court rules that will ensure universal acceptance of forms generated by the system by the courts within the jurisdiction
  • Obtain extensive input from court users and from staff with the most frequent interaction with users, and from access-to-justice providers, in developing interviews and forms

Document assembly funding should cover:

  • Technical support
  • Support for a full-time internal position to manage the development and deployment process and to promote use of the application by staff and clients/litigants
  • Resources for ongoing maintenance and support of document assembly applications, not just for their initial development and deployment

It should be possible to reuse interviews and forms developed in one state or jurisdiction by adapting them to the laws and requirements of other jurisdictions.

Much of the information needed to evaluate the effectiveness of a document assembly application should be built into the system itself—obtaining evaluative information from users and as a by-product of system operations, such as assessing the understandability of particular parts of an interview based on the likelihood that users change the information they enter, take longer than usual to complete an interview part, activate help functions, or seek in-person staff assistance.

Websites will be redesigned for easy access by, and interaction with, mobile devices by providing information in smaller, simplified sections that are readable on a smartphone screen.

3. Mobile Technologies

The Vision

Access-to-justice services will be location-independent and accessible using smartphones, tablets, and other mobile devices. Because the US population is becoming accustomed to remote delivery of banking, shopping, information retrieval, and support services, access-to-justice service providers may also need to adopt remote service delivery approaches. Use of computers, tablets and, increasingly, smartphones is becoming the expected medium for accessing services of all kinds. Eighty-six percent of adults earning less than $30,000 per year own cell phones, and 43 percent own smartphones.8

Implementation Plan

Information websites will be redesigned for easy access by, and interaction with, mobile devices by providing information in smaller, simplified sections that are readable on a smartphone screen. The new statewide legal portal and other automated systems should automatically detect the nature of a querying device and deliver information in the format appropriate to the device.

Access-to-justice entities should record user communication preferences and use them for sending reminders or alerts (e.g., email or text message). They should take advantage of smartphone capabilities by developing applications such as:

  • A courthouse map application to find the right courtroom
  • Use of a QR code (which can be saved on a smartphone) to link to location-specific information, to access a user’s case and schedule information, or to add information to a user file when an access-to-justice professional has a client contact in the field
  • Credit card transaction payments for court services using mobile devices
  • Checklists of documents needed for interview or court appearance
  • Smartphone scanning for document submission (e.g., pay stub or tax return)
  • Video capability for court appearances, interviews, hearing preparation, and explanations of information
  • Automated translation capabilities
  • Linkage to court scheduling
  • Use of geo location to provide resources
  • Preventive information and tools

The Legal Services Corporation has already funded several mobile technology projects. It will assess existing projects and identify those that can be reused or replicated by other access-to-justice entities.

The implementation strategy for the vision should identify funding for three types of mobile technology projects and choose the projects competitively:

  • Redesign of websites for mobile access
  • Replication of successful current mobile projects
  • Development of new applications such as those listed above

Once funding is obtained, LSC will negotiate one (or a few) national support contract(s) for mobile technology services to redesign websites and to develop mobile applications and mobile web applications for the specific jurisdictions selected in the competition. Support contracts should be awarded to jurisdictions based on the comprehensiveness of applications, including cross-entity collaboration. Each contract should be negotiated so that any access-to-justice entity that does not qualify through the competition can still procure services under its rates, terms, and conditions.

Individuals and small organizations now have the resources and capability to develop sophisticated mobile applications. “Hackathons” and other “crowdsourcing” means should be used to stimulate creativity and individual initiative in developing useful mobile apps for access-to-justice purposes. For instance, a state could challenge students to develop courthouse map apps for every courthouse in the state.

To ensure that poor people do not miss important, time-sensitive information provided by mobile applications, the initiative should undertake a campaign to convince telecommunications carriers to exclude specified access-to-justice addresses from the computation of chargeable usage counts— both minutes and data.

4. Business Process Analysis

The Vision

Business process analysis involves the disciplined “mapping” of how a task or function is performed, using standard conventions for depicting different aspects of the process. The process is often led by an outside expert in the use of the analysis, but it engages enough members of the organization to ensure a complete understanding of how the task or function is performed at all levels of the organization.

Application of business process analysis enables the participants to:

  • Better understand the work they do in specific case types
  • Simplify and improve their own processes and improve coordination with processes of other relevant entities
  • Identify new processes that can improve case handling and provide additional capabilities
  • Assign appropriate tasks to clients/litigants and to staff other than lawyers
  • Apply the best available technology to substitute for or augment the work of staff and lawyers
  • Increase understanding of, engagement with, and adoption of best practices and technology through the analysis process itself, which is inherently collaborative across staff and stakeholders
  • Reduce costs, handle more cases, and meet the needs of more clients/litigants by ensuring that each case is handled efficiently

When the business process analysis is conducted with participants from multiple entities (such as courts, legal services providers, private lawyers, libraries, etc.), the benefits expand to include:

  • Analyzing the optimal roles that each entity can perform in providing access-to-justice services (in particular, identifying where and how private lawyers can make the best contribution on both volunteer and fee-generating models and how to create incentives for the increased participation of the private bar)
  • Maximizing the systemic impact of process improvements, rather than confining the improvements to a single entity
  • Minimizing the duplication of effort across entities
  • Expanding provider knowledge of others’ processes

Process analysis can be conducted on a statewide basis to maximize the return on the participants’ involvement. For instance, all of the legal services providers within a state could analyze the process for a particular case type, because the laws governing the process are the same (although how cases are handled by the courts may vary from county to county).

The purpose of business process analysis is not to identify one “best way” for handling a type of case. Rather, it provides a method by which individual programs, jurisdictions, and states can identify the process that will best meet the needs of the stakeholders in that place and time, given the existing legal and organizational structures and resources available. Knowledge about process, represented as process map templates in standard formats, can be shared across the access-to-justice community. It takes less time to modify an existing map to reflect local practices than to create one from scratch. Reusability can be maximized by:

  • Using a single technical standard, such as Business Process Modeling Language, for documenting business process analyses
  • Documenting the legal and organizational context for each analysis
  • Recording the identities and contact information of the authors of such analyses to facilitate reuse of expertise

Implementation Plan

Implementation starts with a pilot project or projects: States will be invited to apply to create process map templates in several of the most common areas of poverty law practice. Applicants must commit to implementing and evaluating these business process results.

We contemplate that expert services will be provided to successful applicants pro bono by consulting firms, law firms, or legal services providers that have already gone through the process and learned its techniques and nomenclature. The legal services community will develop a cadre of expert support available at little or no cost to each program. These experts will not only examine existing practices but also endeavor to identify new capabilities that would benefit the systems.

The expectation is that the pilot projects will clearly demonstrate the benefits of business process analysis, both with increased access and a positive return on investment, so that other states join in these efforts. The National Center for State Courts is already working with state court systems and individual courts to conduct similar analyses. The leaders of the initiative will strive to encourage collaborative process analysis efforts at the state and local level.

LSC will create a website to collect completed process maps and to organize them for review by other entities beginning their analysis of a process.

5. Expert Systems and Intelligent Checklists

The Vision

Expert systems use information provided by a client to create personalized legal information tailored for her or him or the advocate/assistant. Such systems can be envisioned for a wide variety of topics, including benefits eligibility, identification of necessary forms and procedures, alternative approaches to problem solutions, and preventive law.

Intelligent checklists guide clients and advocates through the steps in processes, such as initiating or responding to court actions and dealing with government agencies.

Implementation Plan

The strategy to achieve the vision should include the development of a generic tool or tools that use the alternative types of logic needed for effective expert systems and checklists.

As access-to-justice entities conduct business process analyses for specific case types in their jurisdictions, they may identify a specific expert system or intelligent checklist application that would help deploy a revised business model for providing services. They could seek help for identifying existing tools experts capable of developing an application appropriate for their needs and funding for pilot efforts that could then, if successful, be publicized and reused elsewhere. Development of high-level expert systems will be governed by a state’s rules governing the practice of law.


6 Computer games use various techniques such as competition and rewards to keep users engaged. Similar tactics are being introduced into other software and websites to encourage users to complete the tasks and thus maximize their learning. This technique is called “gamification.”

7Data “tags” are standardized notations identifying the nature of the data in a particular data field so that the data can be exchanged among different computer systems—e.g., so that information concerning “apples” in one application can be placed into the location for “apple” information in another application.

8As of May 2013, according to Pew Internet & American Life Project, http://pewinternet.org/Commentary/2012/February/Pew-Internet-Mobile.aspx

Next Steps for Reaching the Vision

Create a Steering Committee to Provide Leadership for Achieving the Integrated System

LSC will reconvene the group that planned the Summit to discuss how to achieve the goals identified in this document. It is anticipated that this group will present the vision for an integrated system to other national organizations supporting access-to-justice entities, urging their endorsement and asking for their support and guidance.

Activities for the steering committee may include designating:

  • A small group to provide day-to-day direction to the initiative
  • An appropriate supporting entity that can receive and administer funding raised to support the effort
  • A more detailed action plan and timeline for the initiative revised on at least an annual basis
  • A plan for generating and dispensing the funding that will be necessary to implement the initiative

Develop an Ongoing Outreach Process

It will be essential for the steering committee to communicate with the national organizations that represent access-to-justice stakeholders. The committee must reach out to, and obtain the support of, Access to Justice Commissions in every state in which they exist. These entities are natural allies, because they invariably have cross-organizational memberships and missions.

The steering committee must inform the trial court community of the vision to develop a general level of acceptance and to prepare a receptive environment for overtures from local legal services programs and bar associations to participate in pilot program activities. The Steering Committee must also engage with representatives of the joint committees on Access, Fairness and Public Trust of the Conference of Chief Justices and the Conference of State Court Administrators, with the National Center for State Courts, and with the National Association for Court Management to develop a strategy for reaching a significant part of the courts community.

This vision calls on legal services organizations to rethink a service delivery model that has been in place for more than a generation. LSC will need to reach out to and work closely with legal services leaders to obtain their input and assistance.

Develop a Funding Strategy

The steering committee will conduct an analysis of the costs associated with developing, deploying, and maintaining the pilot projects proposed. This analysis will produce an estimate sufficient to provide the basis for developing a funding strategy.

The committee will develop a funding strategy to seek financial support from multiple sources with the goal of leveraging congressional appropriations through additional private funding, including:

  • LSC’s Technology Initiative Grant program for essential initial activities, provided TIG funds are within the framework of the TIG program and awarded using the existing competitive process
  • The State Justice Institute
  • State legislatures and courts
  • IOLTA programs
  • Private foundations
  • Corporate sponsors
  • Individual donors
  • Private venture capital investment in supportive applications that involve lawyers in the provision of unbundled legal services.

The strategy should include periodic meetings of all entities that supply financial support for the initiative to provide them with progress reports.

Develop a Replication Strategy

Even if all of the pilot projects prove successful, the initiative might fail unless the pilots are replicated in other jurisdictions. It is unrealistic to expect any funding strategy to find enough new money to do this replication. The pilots should be able to demonstrate not only that they improve access to justice, but that they are cost-neutral or result in savings. Therefore, a component of each pilot’s evaluation needs to be a study of the return on investment for the project. To be most effective, these pilots will need an evaluation strategy that establishes the business case for their replication with hard data.

Develop a Communications Process

The initiative will need a communications program to provide progress reports on projects and to keep the access-to-justice community (both IT specialists and legal practitioners) informed concerning emerging best-of-breed applications, technology trends and developments, and strategic analyses of the implications of larger technology trends for the initiative and for the access-to-justice community more broadly.

Conclusion

The Summit resulted in a blueprint for using technology to provide some form of effective assistance to 100% of persons otherwise unable to afford an attorney for dealing with essential civil legal needs. We look forward to working with the broader legal services community to implement the Summit’s vision for an unprecedented expansion of access to justice in the United States.

Appendix-List of Attendees

Attendees from the First Session of the Summit

Name

Title

Company

City

State

IV Ashton

President & General
Counsel

LegalServer

Chicago

IL

Jorge Basto

CIO, Judicial Council of Georgia

Administrative Office of the Courts

Atlanta

GA

David Bonebrake

Program Counsel

Legal Services
Corporation

Washington

DC

James Cabral

Senior Manager

MTG Management
Consultants LLC

Seattle

WA

Abhijeet Chavan

CTO

Urban Insight, Inc

Los Angeles

CA

Thomas Clarke

Vice President, Research & Technology

National Center for
State Courts

Williamsburg

VA

Lisa Colpoys

Executive Director

Illinois Legal Aid
Online

Chicago

IL

Leonard DuCharme

Chief Strategy Officer

HotDocs Corporation

Lindon

UT

Fern Fisher

Deputy Chief Administrative Judge NYC

New York State
Unified Court System

New York

NY

Eric Fong

IT Supervisor

Legal Assistance
Foundation of Chicago

Chicago

IL

Jeff Frazier

Senior Director

CISCO

RTP

NC

Jamie Gillespie

Director of Operations, Odyssey

Tyler Technologies

Plano

TX

Richard Granat

President

DirectLaw, Inc.

Palm Beach
Gardens

FL

John Greacen

Principal

Greacen Associates, LLC

Regina

NM

Pamela Harris

Court Administrator

Montgomery County
Circuit Court

Rockville

MD

Steven Hollon

Administrative Director

Conference of State
Court Administrators

Williamsburg

VA

Bonnie Hough

Managing Attorney

Administrative Office of the Courts

San Francisco

CA

Molly Jennings

Outreach Editor

Harvard Journal of
Law and Technology

Cambridge

MA

Bill Jones

Technology, Information
& Content Coordinator

American Bar Association
Center for Pro Bono

Chicago

IL

Stephanie Kimbro

-

Kimbro Legal Services, LLC

Wilmington

NC

Marcia Koslov

Executive Director

LA Law Library

Los Angeles

CA

Lisa Krisher

Director of Litigation

Georgia Legal Services
Program

Atlanta

GA

Karen Lash

Senior Counsel

US Department of
Justice

Washington

DC

Marc Lauritsen

President

Capstone Practice
Systems

Harvard

MA

Susan Ledray

Pro Se Services
Manager

4th Judicial District
Court, MN

Minneapolis

MN

Lora Livingston

District Judge

Travis County

Austin

TX

Andrea Loney

Executive Director

South Carolina Legal
Services

Columbia

SC

David Maddox

Assist. IG for Management & Evaluation

LSC/OIG

Washington

DC

Phil Malone

Clinical Professor of Law

Harvard Law School

Cambridge

MA

Ed Marks

Executive Director

New Mexico Legal Aid

Albuquerque

NM

Michael Mills

CEO

Neota Logic

New York

NY

Mark O'Brien

Executive Director

Pro Bono Net

New York

NY

Snorri Ogata

Chief Technology Officer

Orange County Superior
Court

Santa Ana

CA

David Otte

CIO

Sidley Austin LLP

Chicago

IL

Alison Paul

Executive Director

Montana Legal Services
Association

Helena

MT

James Pierson

Director Center for
Innovation, PeaceHealth

PeaceHealth

Bellingham

WA

Laura Quinn

Executive Director

Idealware

Portland

ME

Glenn Rawdon

Program Counsel for
Technology

Legal Services
Corporation

Washington

DC

Linda Rexer

Executive Director

Michigan State Bar
Foundation

Lansing

MI

Jane Ribadeneyra

Program Analyst

Legal Services
Corporation

Washington

DC

James Sandman

President

Legal Services
Corporation

Washington

DC

Maria Soto

Sr. VP Operations

NLADA

Washington

DC

David Tait

Professor

University of Western
Sydney

Picnic Point

-

David Tevelin

-

Tevelin Consulting Group

Arlington

VA

James Waldron

Clerk of Court

United States Bankruptcy
Court

Newark

NJ

Paul Wieser

-

Nunc Software LLC

Boardman

OH

Richard Zorza

Founder

Self-Represented
Litigation Network

Washington

DC

Attendees from the Second Session of the Summit

Name

Title

Company

City

State

IV Ashton

President & General
Counsel

LegalServer

Chicago

IL

David Bonebrake

Program Counsel

Legal Services
Corporation

Washington

DC

Kevin Bowling

Court Administrator

20th Circuit Court

West Olive

MI

Kevin Burke

District Court Judge

Hennepin County
District Court

Minneapolis

MN

Peter Campbell

CIO

Legal Services
Corporation

Washington

DC

Alan Carlson

CEO

Orange County (CA) Superior Court

Santa Ana

CA

Thomas Clarke

Vice President
Research & Technology

National Center for
State Courts

Williamsburg

VA

Lisa Colpoys

Executive Director

Illinois Legal Aid Online

Chicago

IL

Jane Curran

Executive Director

The Florida Bar
Foundation

Orlando

FL

Dina Fein

Judge

Massachusetts Trial
Court

Springfield

MA

John Greacen

Principal

Greacen Associates, LLC

Regina

NM

Pieter Gunst

Founder and COO

LawGives

San Francisco

CA

Jeff Hogue

Supervising Attorney

LawNY

Geneva

NY

Will Hornsby

Staff Counsel

American Bar Association

Chicago

IL

Bonnie Hough

Managing Attorney

Administrative Office of the Courts

San Francisco

CA

Ronke' Hughes

Intake Managing
Attorney

LSNV

Fairfax

VA

Bill Jones

Technology, Information
& Content Coordinator

American Bar Association

Chicago

IL

Mark Juhas

Judge

Los Angeles Superior
Court

Los Angeles

CA

Stephanie Kimbro

-

Burton Law LLC

Wilmington

NC

Karen Lash

Senior Counsel

US Department of
Justice

Washington

DC

Marc Lauritsen

President

Capstone Practice
Systems

Harvard

MA

Susan Ledray

Pro Se Services
Manager

4th Judicial District
Court, MN

Minneapolis

MN

Jon Levy

Justice

Maine Supreme Judicial
Court

Portland

ME

Phil Malone

Clinical Professor of Law

Harvard Law School

Cambridge

MA

For further information

Legal Services Corporation
3333 K Street, NW Washington, DC 20007
202.295.1617
www.lsc.gov

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