LSC Board Elects Chairman, Vice Chair

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Washington, DC -- Six presidential appointees to the Legal Services Corporation's Board of Directors were sworn in to office this morning and at their inaugural Board meeting elected John G. Levi, a partner in the Chicago office of Sidley Austin, as Board chairman and Martha Minow, dean of the Harvard Law School, as vice chair.

The oath of office was administered by Supreme Court Justice Anthony M. Kennedy during a ceremony at The Eisenhower Executive Office Building that was attended by family members and friends of the appointees.

In addition to Levi and Minow, the new Board members are Sharon L. Browne, a principal attorney in the Pacific Legal Foundation's Individual Rights Practice group and a member of the foundation's senior management; Robert J. Grey Jr., a former president of the American Bar Association and a partner in the Richmond, Va., and Washington offices of the Hunton & Williams law firm; Charles N.W. Keckler, a professor at Pennsylvania State University's Dickinson School of Law; and Victor B. Maddox, a partner in the Louisville, Ky., law firm of Fultz Maddox Hovious & Dickens.

LSC is the single largest provider of civil legal assistance to the poor in the nation. Funded by Congress, LSC operates as an independent 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation that promotes equal access to justice and provides grants for high-quality civil legal assistance to low-income Americans. The grants currently go to 136 nonprofit legal services programs across the country.

In addition to Justice Kennedy, speakers at the swearing-in ceremony included LSC Board Chairman Levi, Vice Chair Minow, outgoing LSC Board Chairman Frank B. Strickland, LSC President Victor M. Fortuno, Daniel Meltzer, principal deputy White House counsel to the President, and Harold Hongju Koh, legal adviser at the State Department.

Levi, in his remarks, said, "Today, LSC funding, now over $400 million annually, is an essential part of our country's effort to provide civil legal aid for the poor, and we take our Board positions at a time when our nation's poor desperately needs that aid."

Requests for help with foreclosures, unemployment benefits and consumer issues are rising at LSC programs, Levi said. But "even as the need for LSC services increases, the funding resources necessary to make it happen are dwindling," he said, adding that "we will need to find ways to make our dollars go further while seeking even greater financial support."

Download the full text of Chairman Levi's remarks.

Download the full text of Vice Chair Minow's remarks.

Legal Services Corporation (LSC) is an independent nonprofit established by Congress in 1974. For 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.