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Tribal advocates keep up legal pressure for fair political maps; 12-member jury sworn in for Trump's historic criminal trial; the importance of healthcare decision planning; and a debt dilemma: poll shows how many people wrestle with college costs.

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Low-Income New Yorkers Face Legal Woes... Due to Senate "Inaction"

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Tuesday, July 21, 2009   

ALBANY, N.Y. - Inaction by the state Senate means Legal Aid services across New York are short millions of dollars. For the first time ever, the Senate approved the civil legal services funding, but then recessed without voting to authorize actual spending of the funds.

Legal aid offices in every part of the state were counting on that new money to start coming in back in April to meet growing demand for help from low-income New Yorkers coping with everything from evictions to domestic violence.

Kristen Brown Lilley, the director of legal advocacy for the Empire Justice Center, says the situation is bad.

"We're talking approximately four million dollars; with the unprecedented increase in need that we are seeing, our providers are desperate for this money."

Because of all the time lost when it was unclear which party controlled the Senate earlier this year, the leadership is now trying to determine which priority items it will try to take action on before the end of the session. Brown Lilley says she has received assurances that legal aid is one of those priority items, but she says the clock is ticking and each day more New Yorkers are going without the help legal aid could be providing them.

"We are calling on the Senate to come back as quickly as possible, so they can take action to put this money out on the street, so we can start serving more people at risk of losing their homes to foreclosure, to eviction, and help people who have lost their jobs. "

Brown Lilley says that right now the money for this and other key programs is just sitting in a lump sum in Albany. The Senate needs to pass a joint resolution that would allocate the 4.4 million dollars to legal aid groups across the state before it can be spent.


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