History

[Note: Legal Aid of North Carolina (LANC) is a statewide, nonprofit law firm that began operations on July 1, 2002 as a result of a consolidation of multiple, legal services (nonprofit) law firms, each with a 25+ year history of serving low-income people in North Carolina.  These law firms had been established to provide legal services in civil matters to low-income people, so that they could have equal access to justice in North Carolina.  Below is a brief history of the development of legal aid programs in North Carolina.]

In the 1960s, our nation responded to a call to service and justice that had been articulated by such leaders as President John F. Kennedy and the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King. Grants were offered by the federal Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO) to help fund operation on nonprofit law firms that could offer legal assistance in civil matters to low-income people. In North Carolina, members of the NC State Bar and other citizens in Forsyth, Guilford Mecklenburg and Durham counties demonstrated their commitment to equal justice under the law by establishing legal aid organizations to assist people living in poverty to protect their rights in civil cases.

In 1962, the Forsyth County Junior Bar Association won the Harrison Tweed Award for opening “Legal Aid Society of Northwest North Carolina” (later renamed the “Legal Aid Society of Northwest North Carolina ”, LASNNC) on February 1 of that year; by 1965 it was receiving federal Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO) funding.  In 1966, the Mecklenburg County Bar and the Charlotte Area Fund raised local matching funds to qualify for an OEO grant, and on September 1, 1967 opened the “Mecklenburg County Legal Aid Society” (later renamed “Legal Services of Southern Piedmont”, LSSP). Also in 1966, the Greensboro Bar Association established “Central Carolina Legal Services” to serve low-income people in the Guilford County area. In 1968, the Duke University Center on Law and Poverty opened a downtown office, which it called the "Durham Legal Aid Clinic" (later know as “North Carolina Legal Assistance Program”, NCLAP) and by 1971, the clinic had OEO funding of its own and an established identity as a community legal assistance program.

In 1974, the U.S. Congress created the Legal Services Corporation (LSC) to take over the legal assistance activities of the OEO and operate as a private, nonprofit corporation that promotes equal access to justice and provides grants for high-quality civil legal assistance to low-income Americans. LSC recognized that the nation’s (including North Carolina’s) legal aid system was a patchwork of programs focusing primarily on urban areas, i.e., many regions were not served at all.  Therefore, LSC actively promoted (and supported with federal grants) the establishment of legal aid entities throughout the nation.

Subsequently, through the support of local law bars, the North Carolina Bar Association and individual attorneys, 11 additional LSC-funded legal services law firms were founded and expanded in North Carolina, including the following:

Legal Aid Program Year Established
East Central Community Legal Services
(Raleigh area)
1974
Western North Carolina Legal Services
(Sylva area)
1974
North State Legal Services
(Hillsborough area)
1976
Legal Services of the Lower Cape Fear
(Wilmington area)
1976
Lumbee River Legal Services
(Pembroke area)
1978
Pisgah Legal Services
(Asheville area)
1978
Legal Services of the Coastal Plains
(Ahoskie area)
1979
Legal Services of the Blue Ridge
(Boone area)
1979
Catawba Valley Legal Services
(Morganton area)
1979
Eastern North Carolina Legal Services
(Wilson area)
1980
Pamlico Sound Legal Services
(New Bern/Greenville area)
1981


Each of the legal aid programs assumed responsibility to serve specified counties and received the LSC funding allocated to by counties.  By 1981, the 15 LSC -funded legal aid programs collectively served all 100 counties of North Carolina.

Meanwhile, Legal Services of North Carolina (LSNC) was created as the result of a lengthy and careful study by the NC Bar Association’s Special Committee on Indigent Legal Services Delivery Systems.  The Committee studied the legal needs of the poor and the alternative delivery systems available to fulfill those needs.  In 1976, at its annual meeting, the NCBA approved the recommendation of the Special Committee to establish a statewide institution that would serve the legal needs of the poor.  LSNC received its incorporation on May 19, 1976.

From 1976-1998 (twenty-two years), LSNC existed as a confederation of 12, separately incorporated, geographically based, nonprofit legal services organizations (covering 83 of the 100 counties in North Carolina), which included a "Central Office" (administrative office) and a statewide board of directors—the only legal services program in the country to have ever been constituted as a confederation. [LASNNC, LSSP and NCLAP were not part of the LSNC confederation, but did receive LSC funding for their respective regions and continued to collaborate with the LSNC local programs.]

In 1998, upon the recommendation of the NC Commission on the Delivery of Civil Legal Services and as required by LSC, LSNC was reorganized as a single corporation on the model of the University of North Carolina (UNC) system at midnight, December 31, 1998.  The local offices were allowed to retain the names of their previous programs.  The LSNC statewide board of directors was expanded to include representatives from each of the local programs.  The central board of directors existed to provide the ultimate governance that LSC required, but it was also required to delegate to the local boards of trustees the powers the local boards had enjoyed previously:  to set local case priorities, develop and submit budgets, hire staff, and to raise and retain all local funds in the local community.  Pisgah Legal Services (which serves six counties: Buncombe, Henderson, Madison, Polk, Rutherford and Transylvania counties) became an independent (and non-LSC-funded, i.e., “unrestricted”) program, and LSNC created the "Appalachian Legal Services" office (located in Asheville) to serve those respective counties.  LSSP (Charlotte), LASNNC (Winston-Salem) and NCLAP (Durham) also chose to remain as independent programs, but continued to accept LSC (“restricted”) funding.

Ultimately, LSC desired to have only one LSC-funded legal aid program in North Carolina.

In January and February 2001, the board of directors of each of the four LSC-funded programs adopted a resolution endorsing the creation of a new, statewide program to apply for LSC funding for 2002 and beyond and endorsing the immediate creation of a new, 501(c)(3) corporation, governed by a “Transition Board” (composed of attorneys and clients by each of the four current LSC-funded program Boards) to design and create the new statewide, LSC-funded program.  The “Transition Board”, composed of four representatives (two attorneys and two client representatives) from each program, was established to develop the basic organizational structure and governance policies of the new program, which was named “Legal Aid of North Carolina” (LANC).  NCLAP consolidated its operation with LANC LSSP (Charlotte), LASNNC (Winston-Salem) and Pisgah Legal Services (Asheville) decided to remain independent, non-LSC-funded organizations (and not part of the new LANC firm).  LANC offices were established in 2002 in Charlotte and Winston-Salem.  All LANC offices were renamed to include the new name "Legal Aid of North Carolina" (e.g., "Legal Aid of North Carolina - Wilmington Office").

Full approval of the consolidation plan by all four boards of directors took place in May 2002.  Legal Aid of North Carolina began operations as a new nonprofit law firm on July 1, 2002, to provide legal services in civil matters to low-income people in all 100 counties of North Carolina through 32 geographically located offices, so that low-income people (those at or below 125% of the federally established poverty level) throughout North Carolina could have equal access to justice and to economic opportunity.

In 2004, the LANC-Hillsborough office was moved to Pittsboro to provide a more central location to serve clients.  The office was renamed the "Legal Aid of North Carolina-Pittsboro Office.

In 2007, the Legal Aid Society of Northwest North Carolina (LASNNC) -- the first legal aid program in North Carolina -- consolidated it operations with the LANC-Winston-Salem Office.

 


Disclaimer

The materials contained on this website are for information and educational purposes only and do not constitute legal advice.  Also please note that Legal Aid of North Carolina does not provide legal assistance by E-mail. Contact your Legal Aid of North Carolina office or a private attorney if you need to speak to an attorney regarding your particular situation.
See our complete disclaimer.

Mission Statement

Legal Aid of North Carolina is a statewide, nonprofit law firm that provides free legal services in civil matters to low-income people in order to ensure equal access to justice and to remove legal barriers to economic opportunity.

 

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