91³Ō¹Ļ

Access to justice: Downtown Legal Services, 91³Ō¹Ļā€™s community legal clinic, celebrates 50 years

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Downtown Legal Services director Prasanna Balasundaram stands outside of the 91³Ō¹Ļ community legal clinic on Spadina Avenue (photo by Nina Haikara)

More than half a century ago, a group of students from the 91³Ō¹Ļā€™s Faculty of Law received funding for a summer project that would ultimately lay the groundwork for a free community legal clinic in Toronto.

Today, the Downtown Legal Services clinic offers free legal assistance to students and low-income members of the community in areas of law that include housing, family, employment, criminal, refugee and immigration.

Supervised by five staff lawyers and the clinicā€™s director, 100 student caseworkers and volunteers serve nearly 2,000 clients each year.

ā€œThat original spirit of improving access to justice carries on with the students who step into the clinic today,ā€ says Prasanna Balasundaram, director of the community legal clinic and clinical legal education program at the Faculty of Law.

Balasundaram, who was among the lawyers representing refugees who helped strike down the Safe Third Country Agreement in a federal court in 2020, moderated an anniversary panel discussion this week with student caseworker Nina Patti and former client Rossana Ibarra. The panel explored how law students at the clinic ā€œdevelop insights into the social reality of law and legal institutions while making a tremendous impact on the lives of clients,ā€ Balasundaram says.

Patti, a second-year law student, says being a caseworker in the clinicā€™s employment law division has been a highlight of her law school experience, giving her valuable, hands-on experience. That includes negotiating a settlement at a Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario mediation, as well as representing a client before the Ontario Labour Relations Board.

ā€œWithout DLS, most of my clients would not have been otherwise able to access legal help, and I am proud to be part of an organization that provides such a needed service,ā€ she says.

text reads Students' Legal Aid Society. Final report of the 91³Ō¹Ļ Students' Legal Aid Society (summer project)

ā€œA great University should concern itself with its neighbours,ā€wrote Charles F. Scott Jr. and Peter D. Quinn in a funding report.

The clinic has its roots in 91³Ō¹Ļā€™s Studentsā€™ Legal Aid Society (SLAS), which was established by 91³Ō¹Ļ Law students in 1969.

During its first years of operation, the student legal aid society was an entirely student-led initiative, supported by faculty advisers and volunteer lawyers, and was recognized under Ontarioā€™s then Legal Aid Act. The Studentsā€™ Administrative Council (now 91³Ō¹Ļ Students' Union) provided two rooms for the societyā€™s Campus Legal Assistance Centre (CLAC) on St. George Street. Ontarioā€™s legal aid, by way of the ā€œstudent defenderā€ office in Old City Hall, distributed suitable cases that could be handled by law students at 91³Ō¹Ļā€™s Faculty of Law and York Universityā€™s Osgoode Hall Law School.

"This is in keeping with the idea that a great University should concern itself with its neighbours and not be restricted in its involvement with those immediately connected to it," wrote Charles F. Scott Jr. and Peter D. Quinn, members of the 91³Ō¹Ļ Law class of 1972, in a report.

By the summer of 1971, the society also operated 16 community ā€œclinicsā€ in partnership with established social agencies, employing 23 law students who handled a total of 710 cases ā€“ from convictions to small claims court. After students petitioned  Emeritus Martin L. Friedland, then the law schoolā€™s dean, to integrate the clinic into the law schoolā€™s curriculum for course credit, the faculty hired its first supervising staff lawyer: 91³Ō¹Ļ Law graduate Richard ā€œDickā€ Gathercole.

Over the years, more than 5,000 alumni of the Faculty of Law have participated in the clinic, which is now housed in the Fasken building on Spadina Avenue.

They include 91³Ō¹Ļ Law alumna Barbara Jackman ā€“ one of Canadaā€™s eminent refugee and immigration lawyers ā€“ who says her clinic experience deeply influenced her career path.

ā€œI went into law school thinking I would be a labour lawyer. [At law school] I realized immigrants had no representation,ā€ she says. ā€œIt wasn't just me who went into immigration refugee law ā€“ a lot of people who went through this program stayed within ā€˜people law.ā€™ā€

University Professor Emeritus Robert Prichard, who served as the sixth dean of the law school in the late 1980s and 13th president of 91³Ō¹Ļ from 1990 to 2000, reflected on the clinicā€™s history as a former member of the SLAS executive in the early 1970s.

ā€œThe people involved in the SLAS were great. I remain very proud of my association with all of them,ā€ Prichard says.

Rachel Bryce, a recent graduate from the Faculty of Law who is practising refugee and immigration lawyer, says the Downtown Legal Services clinic ā€“ which is funded for Downtown Legal Services by Legal Aid Ontario, the Law Foundation of Ontario, 91³Ō¹Ļā€™s Faculty of Law, 91³Ō¹Ļ students and &²Ō²ś²õ±č;ā€“&²Ō²ś²õ±č;was a highlight of her law school years.

ā€œDLS is hands-down the best experience I've had at law school,ā€ she says. ā€œIt offers the perfect mix of advocacy, activism, client counseling and legal work ā€“ and that opportunity is unparalleled.ā€

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