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2009 News Articles › 4ALL Efforts Garners National Awards
4ALL Efforts Garners National Awards
Article Date: Tuesday, August 04, 2009
The North Carolina Bar Association and the NCBA Foundation
received two national awards on Friday, Aug. 1, in recognition of
their efforts to provide legal services to the poor through the
4ALL Campaign.
The awards were presented in Chicago in conjunction with annual
meetings of the American Bar Association, the National Conference
of Bar Presidents, the National Association of Bar Executives and
the National Conference of Bar Foundations.
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| Janet Ward Black and Gene Pridgen display national honors. |
The Harrison Tweed Award, given annually by the ABA's Standing
Committee on Legal Aid and Indigent Defendants and the National
Legal Aid and Defender Association, was presented to the NCBA.
The National Conference of Bar Foundation's Excellence in Public
Service Award was presented to the NCBA Foundation.
Past-President Janet Ward Black of Greensboro accepted the Tweed
Award on behalf of the NCBA. President-Elect Gene Pridgen of
Charlotte, who previously served as chair of the Development
Committee, accepted the Excellence in Public Service Award on
behalf of the NCBA Foundation.
The Harrison Tweed Award was created in 1956 to recognize the
extraordinary achievements of state and local bar associations that
develop or significantly expand projects or programs to increase
access to civil legal services for poor persons or criminal defense
services for indigents.
"I am excited for all of the volunteers who worked so hard to
make this program a success," said Black in regard to an effort
that was the centerpiece of her term as president in 2007-08. "I am
particularly pleased that this recognition would give us an
opportunity to talk about what North Carolina has done through the
4ALL program so that we can provide that information to others and
allow them to make use of what we have created."
It is a creation of many parts, all of which point in the
direction of lawyers providing service and support to those who
need it the most and can afford it the least. Those lawyers include
the countless hundreds who have served in leadership and volunteer
capacities throughout the existence of the 4ALL endeavor, from the
chairs of the 4ALL Task Force working groups to the attorneys,
paralegals and law students who staffed call centers on the
Statewide Service Day.
It also includes the staff attorneys of Legal Aid of North
Carolina and other legal services providers who toil daily to
provide counsel to a growing segment of this state's population who
live in poverty, and the firms and individual lawyers who have
contributed almost $900,000 to the LANC Fund.
"The fact that the foundation and the association are both being
recognized for the same program says a lot about the
comprehensiveness of the program," Black added. "In addition to
legislation and education, we have had an increase of almost 20
percent in the endowment on behalf of Legal Aid of North Carolina,
part of which will go toward the repayment of student loans for
legal aid attorneys.
"And we also witnessed the single largest volunteer effort in
bar association history."
The NCBF Award for Bar Foundation Excellence in Public Service
Programming, recognizes a bar foundation for an innovative,
imaginative program and/or grant award for public service projects
in the legal arena. The award honors a bar or law foundation for
its creative response to important societal issues.
"The Excellence in Public Service Award was appropriate
recognition of our Bar Foundation's significant part in
supporting the 4ALL program," Pridgen said. "The 4ALL program
was a wonderful example of how our Bar Foundation can be used to
provide funds to worthy law-related programs."
The example has not been lost on other states, many of which are
considering aspects of the 4ALL approach in their own efforts to
provide legal services to the poor. Just this spring the Tennessee
Bar Association adopted the entire 4ALL concept, logo and all, in
launching its first statewide service day.
"These are good works that deserve recognition," Black
concluded, "and we hope it will be a model for the rest of the
country."