Clarifying Misconceptions About the Legal Services Corporation

By Ronald S. Flagg
 President, Legal Services Corporation
 On behalf of the Legal Services Corporation

Recent commentary has misrepresented the Legal Services Corporation (LSC) and the work of our grantees—conflating unrelated organizations, mischaracterizing our mission and overlooking the strict legal boundaries under which we operate. For policymakers and the public alike, setting the record straight is essential.

LSC is a nonpartisan, congressionally chartered organization, created in 1974 to ensure access to civil legal aid for low-income Americans. Each year, we fund legal aid providers in every state to help individuals resolve serious legal problems—issues that affect housing, family safety, economic stability and lawful employment. These are not abstract causes. They are practical problems solved through lawful means—a cornerstone of stability and personal responsibility.

We are not—and by law cannot be—what our critics claim.

We do not fund the organizations in question.

Some groups recently cited in criticism, including the Michigan Immigrant Rights Center, are not LSC grantees and receive no LSC funding. In fact, LSC dollars cannot be used for immigration advocacy or most immigration representation. Suggesting otherwise reflects a basic misunderstanding of how our funding works and what the law permits.

Our grantees are bound by federal law—and closely monitored.

LSC grantees are legally prohibited from:

  • Filing class action lawsuits

  • Engaging in lobbying or legislative advocacy

  • Participating in most immigration-related work

  • Engaging in political or electoral activity

These restrictions are not discretionary. They are embedded in federal statute and enforced through rigorous oversight—including program audits, regular compliance reviews and monitoring by an independent Inspector General. LSC’s work is a textbook example of a federal investment with strong guardrails and accountability.

Broad support is a sign of consensus, not ideology.

Some have pointed to bipartisan support as evidence of a hidden agenda. In fact, it’s the opposite. LSC enjoys strong backing from lawmakers across the political spectrum because its mission is both narrow and vital: to ensure that low-income Americans can resolve legal disputes in a lawful, orderly way. That’s not progressive or conservative—it’s a basic guarantee of fairness under the law.

Civil legal aid helps families avoid crisis, veterans access earned benefits and working Americans keep what they’ve earned. It strengthens personal responsibility and reduces the burden on courts, shelters and social services. In short: it helps people get back on their feet—not onto a government program.

Shared space isn’t shared mission.

Some have argued that appearing on the same legal panels or in professional networks implies alignment. But proximity is not partnership. LSC grantees must follow strict rules about collaboration, advocacy and program integrity. Legal aid organizations that receive LSC funds are independent and carefully monitored—not extensions of any other group’s mission or message.

Responding to the “Zombie Agency” Myth

LSC has been labeled a “zombie program”—a term that suggests we operate without oversight or congressional accountability. That characterization could not be further from the truth.

LSC is subject to annual appropriations by Congress, meaning lawmakers have full discretion over our funding every single year. We also undergo frequent audits, program evaluations and oversight by our own Inspector General. If anything, LSC is one of the most closely monitored grantmaking entities in the federal system.

There’s a big difference between stability and inertia. The reason LSC continues to receive support—on both sides of the aisle—is because the work is effective, efficient and grounded in law.

One or two anecdotes don’t reflect hundreds of thousands of cases.

LSC grantees handle over 750,000 cases each year, most of which involve core civil legal needs: eviction defense, custody and guardianship, wage disputes and domestic violence protection orders. These cases are legal lifelines, not political statements. And resolving them early—through the courts—helps prevent larger problems for families, communities and the public sector.

Conclusion: Clarity, Not Controversy

LSC’s mission is clear, limited, and constitutional. We fund civil legal services—not political activity. And we do so with transparency, bipartisan oversight, and a 50-year track record of helping communities uphold the rule of law.

At a time when public trust in institutions is fragile, civil legal aid is one of the few tools that still works—quietly, effectively, and without fanfare. That’s something every American can be proud of.

Legal Services Corporation (LSC) is an independent nonprofit established by Congress in 1974. For more than 50 years, LSC has provided financial support for civil legal aid to low-income Americans. The Corporation currently provides funding to 130 independent nonprofit legal aid programs in every state, the District of Columbia, and U.S. territories.