Los Angeles Times

Legal aid for LAUSD families

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Re “State’s homeless pupils could fill Dodger Stadium 5 times,” Oct. 21

Your article on California’s youth homelessne­ss crisis quotes UCLA education professor Tyrone Howard as saying, “We have to take collective action,” and, “Schools for far too long have been asked to solve this problem all alone.” He is right, and with the help of “education- legal partnershi­ps,” schools don’t have to do this work alone.

Prior to the pandemic, “community schools” in the Los Angeles Unified School District emerged as effective resources for supporting students beyond their educationa­l needs. Also called “fullservic­e schools,” community schools forge partnershi­ps with outside bodies to provide primary medical care, dental and other services. This acknowledg­es the reality that families have more trust in schools and teachers than in other institutio­ns.

That should be extended to legal aid. The good news is, we already have examples of education- legal partnershi­ps in Los Angeles.

Bet Tzedek, a firm providing free legal services to low- income clients, hosts a UCLA School of Law postgradua­te fellow at the Immigrant Family Legal Clinic connected with L. A. Unified’s Robert F. Kennedy Community Schools campus. The fellow helps families with employment law issues, working alongside clinic attorneys who address a number of other issues, like eviction threats or food stamp benefits. The success of this partnershi­p has led us to explore a similar pilot program at a nearby campus.

This type of collaborat­ion may be novel in education, but it isn’t new to the legal profession. For example, Bet Tzedek has two attorneys at Harbor- UCLA Medical Center. The thinking behind this partnershi­p is simple: A patient’s health is often impacted by social and environmen­tal factors, and a doctor cannot help with those issues — but a lawyer can.

This concept extends to education, and local schools provide the perfect setting to ensure that families have access to the robust protection­s afforded to them by California law. Diego Cartagena and Nick Melvoin

Los Angeles Cartagena is president and chief executive of Bet Tzedek Legal Services; Melvoin is a member of L. A. Unified’s Board of Education.

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Residents of Mexican American communitie­s were evicted to make way for Dodger Stadium. They were forcibly removed from their homes.

How many people did the Dodgers cause to go homeless? Patrick Kelley

Los Angeles

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