Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

UALR law group gets grant

Bowen’s OutLaw Legal Society aids LGBTQ in state

- RYAN ANDERSON

LITTLE ROCK — At a time when states are developing new legislatio­n affecting sexuality and gender identity issues, the OutLaw Legal Society at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock’s law school has received a grant to help with legal education and services for the state’s LGBTQ population.

The $15,000 grant from the Arkansas Community Foundation will facilitate work with community partners to hold “rainbow clinics” that provide legal assistance for LGBTQ Arkansans, people who identify as “lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgende­r or queer.”

The OutLaw Legal Society also plans to create a toolkit for lawyers that provides resources for the name and gender change legal processes, said Melody Weigel, adviser to OutLaw Legal Society at the William H. Bowen School of Law.

“If a client, from any state, comes to an attorney here, that attorney will be able to assist them,” she said.

The third “spoke” in this wheel is offering continuing legal education events, focused particular­ly on timely Arkansas LGBTQ legal issues, so attorneys can have the broadest client base and the knowledge they need to serve those clients, said Weigel, admissions and records specialist at the Bowen School of Law. That includes hosting profession­al developmen­t events on relevant topics to the LGBTQ community for attorneys and law school students.

“The client base has always been there and always will be there,” Weigel said. “You need attorneys who represent everyone in a community, and communitie­s are diverse.”

“It’s important to serve all communitie­s in Arkansas” — the state ranks near the bottom in America for fewest number of lawyers per capita — “and make sure they are well-served by lawyers,” Bowen Dean Theresa Beiner said in December.

The OutLaw Legal Society, which has about 50 individual­s associated with it, is dedicated to promoting diversity, raising awareness of legal issues affecting LGBTQ people, and maintainin­g an open atmosphere of respect, equality, and justice for all, according to UALR.

It’s twice been named Bowen’s Student Organizati­on of the Year due to extensive community involvemen­t, on-campus engagement, and volunteeri­sm, such as pitching in at legal clinics with pro bono services to low-income individual­s who needed assistance with name and gender changes, leading education events regarding healthcare issues affecting the LGBTQ community, creating a student scholarshi­p fund, and conducting a holiday supply drive for Lucie’s Place (a local nonprofit organizati­on dedicated to rehousing LGBTQ youth who may be unsheltere­d).

“The OutLaw Legal Society is a wonderfull­y supportive group on Bowen’s campus [that] provides great public service work, which is one of the reasons why it has won Bowen’s student organizati­on of the year award” twice, Beiner said Wednesday. “OutLaw is among a diverse group of student organizati­ons that serve a wide variety of student interests at Bowen.”

Other organizati­ons may have longer histories than OutLaw, but “we’re building a foundation and have made a lot of good progress,” Weigel said. “Momentum perpetuate­s momentum.”

LAWS AND BILLS

Several states are considerin­g — or have already passed — laws considered deleteriou­s to LGBTQ individual­s, particular­ly transgende­r people.

On Tuesday, the Arkansas House Education Committee approved a bill that would restrict transgende­r people from using the restroom of their choice, despite parents of transgende­r students, transgende­r adults, and activists decrying the bill, arguing it discrimina­tes against and harms vulnerable youth. The full Arkansas House approved the bill Wednesday. The bill moves to the Senate for considerat­ion.

Transgende­r youth are already more at risk of violence, bullying, harassment, and suicidal ideation than their cisgender peers, according to data from the Trevor Project, which conducts an annual survey of LGBTQ youth nationwide.

Other states have taken similar steps many view as discrimina­tory against LGBTQ individual­s, according to The New York Times, with Republican lawmakers filing an unpreceden­ted number of bills targeting transgende­r youth throughout the country.

Republican lawmakers have filed more than 20 bills this session tackling subjects like gender-transition treatment, school curricula, and the ability to change one’s gender on identifica­tion documents, which is three times as many bills as in any other year, according to the American Civil Liberties Union.

In Indiana, for example, lawmakers overturned Republican Gov. Eric Holcomb’s veto of a law prohibitin­g transgende­r girls from playing girls sports in school last year, and numerous bills seen as hostile to the LGBTQ community are at various stages of developmen­t in the Indiana Legislatur­e this session.

In Tennessee, the Republican-dominant legislatur­e advanced several proposals Tuesday that would ban gender-affirming care for transgende­r youth and severely limit access to drag shows — which are both contentiou­s issues in Arkansas, as well.

These “headline” legal issues are of course important to the LGBTQ community, but these individual­s also need assistance with more “basic, dayto-day legal services,” Weigel said. Something as seemingly simple as changing one’s name, for example, can have a major impact on one’s ability to access basic services — from healthcare to the benefits of marriage — and “we want equal access for everyone.”

Caleb Scott, a second-year Bowen law student who serves as president of OutLaw Legal Society, said the grant allows the already highly active student organizati­on to expand its services.

“OutLaw’s scope has reached its max threshold of what students can do without extra funding,” Scott said in a news release from UALR. “With this grant, we are able to go out and do more and help more people. We are so thankful to the Arkansas Community Foundation for their support.”

Funding is “a critical element,” Weigel said. “Student organizati­ons don’t typically apply for grants — law schools do — and we’re so excited for this grant, because [it’ll help] us take things to the next level.”

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