Pro Bono News

Arkansas justice advises realigning parent legal-aid program. (AK)

Wednesday, August 03, 2016

"A state program providing attorneys for poor families who have lost custody of their children is hampered by perceptions of collusion with judges and is in need of new oversight, Arkansas Supreme Court Justice Rhonda Wood told lawmakers Tuesday.

Absent legislation separating the Parent Counsel Program from the Juvenile Division of the Courts, Wood said, the Supreme Court will examine whether it has the authority to appoint an independent committee to supervise the program. The Juvenile Division is under the Administrative Office of the Courts.

Wood's comments came at a joint meeting of the state House and Senate Judiciary Committees, where she presented a report on the program by the high court's Commission on Children, Youth and Families.

The Parent Counsel Program hires attorneys on a contract basis to provide legal representation to indigent families in dependency and neglect cases. The Attorney Ad Litem Program, which hires attorneys to represent the children removed from their parents' custody in those cases, is also under the umbrella of the Juvenile Division.

"The basic gist of the conflict is that people believe the juvenile judges have a direct link to the attorneys that are with the families in the field," Parent Counsel Program Director Brian Welch said.

The program works with 63 field attorneys who are hired on a part-time contract basis. Their most recent caseload totaled 2,665 families, the report said."

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