UW School of Law > Public Service > Pro Bono Honors Program

Pro Bono Honors Program

What is the Pro Bono Honors Program?

The Pro Bono Honors Program, a program of the Center for Public Service Law, encourages law students, faculty and staff to provide pro bono legal assistance to low-income communities; connects students to pro bono resources and opportunities; trains students on vital topics such as professionalism, cultural and cross-difference competency and secondary trauma/compassion fatigue; recognizes student pro bono work beyond the 60-hour public service graduation requirement; and promotes a culture of public service in the life of the law school and in the legal profession.

In addition, standard 302(b)(2) of the ABA Standards for the Approval of Law Schools requires all ABA approved law schools to offer "substantial opportunities for . . . student participation in pro bono activities." Student pro bono work further demonstrates our law school's long standing commitment to public service.

IF YOU ARE A LOW INCOME PERSON IN NEED OF PRO BONO ASSISTANCE: This program does not provide legal assistance to individuals in need of advice or representation. Here is resource information to assist you:

  • Outside King County: Call the CLEAR line at 1-888-201-1014 weekdays from 9:15 a.m. until 12:15 p.m. CLEAR works with a language line to provide interpreters as needed at no cost to callers. If you are deaf or hard of hearing, please call 1-888-201-1014 using your preferred TTY or Video relay service.

  • King County: Call 211 for information and referral to an appropriate legal services provider Monday through Friday from 8:00 am – 6:00 pm. 211 works with a language line to provide interpreters as needed at no cost to callers. Deaf and hearing-impaired callers can call 1-800-833-6384 or 711 to be connected to a relay operator at no cost, who will then connect them with 211.

  • Persons 60 and Over: Persons 60 or over may call CLEAR*Sr at 1-888-387-7111, regardless of income and regardless of what county you live in. Low-income seniors may call the CLEAR line at 1-888-201-1014, from 9:15 a.m. - 12:15 p.m.

For more information see the Northwest Justice Project

“As an intern with the Northwest Justice Project’s Veterans Project, I’ve not only learned and advanced my own professionalism, but I’ve refined my ability to train future interns more effectively than I was trained and helped my current supervising attorney to more effectively train her future interns. I believe that the conscious cultivation of this cyclic profession and professional development in public interest law is an essential ingredient in gaining the critical mass in public interest law that will elevate public interest law from the calling of too few to the dominant purpose of most legal professionals.”

-Leo Flor, Class of 2013: Northwest Justice Project’s Veteran’s Project

“I am quickly confronted with poverty, addiction and suffering, plain and simple…I want to have the skills and the knowledge necessary to make tangible difference in combating basic human misery…Many of our clients [at Open Door Legal Services/Union Gospel Mission] are residents at the men’s shelter down below. These people have often suffered, many from serious additions, domestic violence and the plights of American style capitalism (wealth disparity and concentration). Despite receiving such bad hands, these people have endured and many are looking to start new lives.”

“Typically I am paired up with a licensed attorney and assist in client consultation. In practice, I help with intake and I make myself available for any questions that arise. I am asked to look up statutes, attorney information, directions, etc. Because I work with a variety of attorneys I am in a good position to evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of each attorney vis-à-vis dealing with individual clients. This observational role grants me an invaluable opportunity to incorporate and evaluate my own client interactions (present and future), hopefully molding myself into something better than I was the day before.” “Essentially, this is why I ended up at UW, this is why I ended up at Open Door Legal Services/UGM, and this is why I think we fundamentally exist—to make tangible differences.”

-Matthew R. Berry, Class of 2012: Open Door Legal Services/ Union Gospel Mission

Last updated 5/22/2013