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Lessons learned from the first 13 model approaches to legal services delivery

Lessons learned from the first 13 model approaches to legal services delivery. Presenters. Omar Valverde, U.S. Administration on Aging David Godfrey, ABA Commission on Law and Aging. Keith Morris, Legal Hotline for Michigan Seniors and Center for Elder Rights Advocacy

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Lessons learned from the first 13 model approaches to legal services delivery

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  1. Lessons learned from the first 13 model approaches to legal services delivery

  2. Presenters • Omar Valverde,U.S. Administration on Aging • David Godfrey,ABA Commission on Law and Aging • Keith Morris,Legal Hotline for Michigan Seniors and Center for Elder Rights Advocacy • Sue Wasserkrug,Senior Law Center

  3. Model approaches • Strategic Goal • To promote the creation of comprehensive, well integrated, and cost effective legal service delivery systems that target scarce resources to older adults in the most social or economic need • Tactical Application • Systems that function with the right legal entities, handling the right kinds of legal cases, at the right level of service

  4. Model approaches • Essential Features • Senior Legal Helplines • Needs and Capacity Assessments • Leveraging Low Cost Mechanisms • Integration with Aging network • Outreach and Targeting • Reporting Systems and Outcomes • Role of Legal Assistance Developer

  5. Model approaches • Needs assessment • Systems capacity • Collaboration with aging network • Training • Targeting services • Integration • Statewide reporting system • Leveraging resources • Outcomes

  6. a. Needs Assessments

  7. Needs Assessment • Understand before you improve • Legal Needs Studies examine the Demand side of the equation • Legal Needs vs Legal Wants • Benchmarking

  8. Many Models for Studies • Statistically valid sample • Targeted sample • Online • Paper • Multiple choice • Narrative • Interviews • Focus groups

  9. Look for conditions that place elders at risk: • Income, • Food • Shelter • Health care • Risks to autonomy • Risks of abuse, neglect, exploitation

  10. Look beyond the choir • Needs of those we know • Who do you never reach?

  11. b. Systems Capacity

  12. Supply side of the equation • What is the capacity of the system to meet the needs of the population • How can the supply be enhanced • How can the supply be better coordinated

  13. Look beyond the usual suspects • Traditional and non-traditional providers • Collaborations with new partners • Quantitative and Qualitative measures • How many • What issues • What level of service • Think of the full spectrum of legal assistance

  14. c. Collaboration with aging network

  15. Collaborations • Who else works with or helps your target population?

  16. What kind of collaborations • Reciprocal referral arrangements • Cross training • Communications sharing of resources • Collaborative funding • Private bar • Invite – invite – invite

  17. d. Training the project that never ends

  18. Training, training, and training… • Who to train? • Staff & volunteers • Other legal providers • Aging services network • Government staff, e.g., victim services

  19. Training • Topics • Our services & how to access them • Substantive legal issues • Issue spotting • Serving seniors • Capacity issues

  20. Training can be an opportunity… • To enlighten the general populations about seniors, their needs and vulnerabilities • To educate the aging services network about low-income issues • To inform about the importance of SLH’s • To create collaborations & coalitions • To find allies & advocates

  21. e. Targeting Services

  22. Targeting services • Most programs are still very numbers driven and have a hard time changing to impact driven work • Older Americans Act requires targeting to the most economical and socially needy • Cannot means test

  23. Targeting services • A struggle for hotlines because most are used to helping all eligible callers • Hotlines have been effective in helping target III-B programs by triaging all clients to identify ones with priority cases • Use the needs assessment to help you determine what types of services are most important to your target population

  24. f. Integration

  25. Integration • Goal is to create a seamless network of referrals and services, from the client’s perspective • Must include both legal and aging • Use formal agreements to cement relationships • Hard to overcome territorial feelings from some programs

  26. integration • Hotlines can play a major role in establishing this seamless program • Use of “warm handoff” is a great benefit to clients • Use technology, such as automated case transfer, to help client and providers • Survey clients to make sure there is no breakdown in the process

  27. g. State reporting system

  28. Statewide reporting system • How you tell if your efforts for targeting and integration are working • You have to be able to tell your story with an accurate picture • Identify trends and gaps in service • Must have buy-in from AAA because they control the contracts • A strong Legal Assistance Developer is crucial

  29. Statewide reporting system • Michigan’s model • Automated data extract of non-identifying client-level information • Statewide system that cross references all entries to create a uniform report • One source for all reports

  30. h. Leverage resources

  31. Sustainability • Who moved my cheese? • From Day One • New and innovative • Never done before • Share projects • Use legal needs and systems assessment to build the case for state and local funding • Involvement builds buy in • 50% of spending on Title III legal assistance

  32. i. Outcomes

  33. Outcomes • How did your work change the lives of clients? • Define it • Measure it • Report it • Qualitative vs. quantitative • Outcomes vs. outputs • Crucial for funding!

  34. Legal Service Delivery System

  35. Customer Centered vision • No wrong door • Improved access

  36. Resources • www.nlrc.aoa.gov • www.legalhotlines.org • Omar Valverde, omar.valverde@aoa.hhs.gov • David Godfrey, godfreyd@staff.abanet.org • Keith Morris, kmorris@elderlawofmi.org • Sue Wasserkrug, swasserkrug@seniorlawcenter.org

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