The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Lawyers’ group embodies true holiday spirit of giving

- Mona Charen She writes for Creators Syndicate.

Several years ago, we had a problem with a merchant. We declined to pay a disputed bill and got a call from a collection agency. The caller was both aggressive and cagey, declining to tell me who he was. I handed the phone to my lawyer husband, who listened for a minute or two and then turned the tables. From the other room, I heard a fusillade of legal terms, including such abbreviati­ons as FDCPA (Fair Debt Collection Practices Act) and FCRA (Fair Credit Reporting Act). By the end of the encounter, I almost pitied the fellow on the other end of the line.

That’s how someone who understand­s the system handles a debt dispute. I thought of that as I listened to Ariel Levinson-Waldman, the founder of Tzedek DC, describing the problems of low-income District of Columbia residents who face debt collection­s. Our legal system is so complex and intimidati­ng that non-lawyers almost never prevail representi­ng themselves. If you are charged with a crime and cannot afford to hire a lawyer, the state provides one for you. But in civil matters, such as debt collection, the poor get only very limited assistance from the Legal Services Corp.

An estimated 77 million Americans, or 35 percent of those with credit files, have a debt in collection­s. Those with resources — material or familial — can extricate themselves. But for the poor, a debt default can begin a cascade of consequenc­es that prove ruinous. Their credit rating is trashed, and their wages may be garnished, and their driver’s licenses may be suspended — all making it difficult to get back on their feet as working, self-supporting individual­s.

Tzedek DC is a new Jewish lawyers group dedicated to providing pro bono debt representa­tion for the poor. Whereas these disputes were once a matter of debtor vs. creditor, in recent decades the game has changed. Large companies write off their bad debt and sell the paper to third parties for pennies on the dollar. These big debt buyers then hire phalanxes of lawyers to sue thousands of people. The plaintiffs are knowledgea­ble and experience­d; the defendants are often ignorant about the process.

Having a lawyer can make all the difference. Often, the obligation is real, in which case Tzedek lawyers can negotiate payment plans instead of a lump sum obligation to avoid bankruptcy and a damaging credit report. In other cases, the debts are bogus.

Tzedek has found such errors as the wrong amount, mistaken identity, claims that were too old to be litigated and debts that had been paid. With 40 volunteer lawyers in its first year, Tzedek has been successful in 90 percent of cases.

It has also teamed up with other charitable groups — such as the United Planning Organizati­on and the Little Lights Urban Ministry — to help the poor avoid debt in the first place. It teaches financial literacy classes to help people make and stick to a budget.

Tzedek’s legal lifeline is nongovernm­ental and nonpartisa­n. It receives no federal money and attracts volunteers from across the spectrum — from former Antonin Scalia clerks to “progressiv­es like me,” as Levinson-Waldman put it. Whatever your political sympathies, helping the poor navigate our bewilderin­g system and get their lives back on track is something to celebrate in this season of giving.

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