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Patrick sends the wrong message with civil legal aid cuts

Read the Boston Globe’s editorial of December 26 2014 online here on why Governor Deval Patrick is sending the wrong message to the incoming administration by advocating for across-the-board spending cuts for such vital social services as civil legal aid. The text follows below.

The program applies to people involved in civil suits, not criminal cases. In criminal cases, the US Constitution guarantees legal representation for all defendants. Civil suits, on the other hand, include cases of foreclosure (resulting in homelessness), child custody, and protection against domestic violence. The BBA report found that only one in three people who qualified for help received it, and called for an actual increase in aid by $30 million over the next three years. Instead, the governor has asked for 1.5 percent in cuts from the aid program’s $15 million budget.

On the face of it, 1.5 percent does not sound like a lot. But the results of the cuts would be devastating. According to the Massachusetts Legal Assistance Corporation, which is charged with administering the funds, the cuts would result in laying off full-time attorneys, and affect 1,344 individuals who will not get aid they would have otherwise received. In a state with a roughly $36 billion budget, the governor should not be nickel-and-diming vital social services with a cut that amounts to $225,000. It’s also worth repeating another one of the task force’s findings: every dollar spent on legal aid to keep people in their homes saves the state $2 in homeless benefits. That’s not only equitable social policy, but sound fiscal policy.

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