208 General Counsel and Chief Legal Officers from the Largest U.S. Corporations Signed a Letter Urging Congress to Increase Legal Aid Funding
颁辞苍迟补肠迟鈥赌赌&苍产蝉辫;
Carl Rauscher鈥&苍产蝉辫;
Director of Communications and Media Relations鈥&苍产蝉辫;
谤补耻蝉肠丑别谤肠蔼濒蝉肠.驳辞惫鈥赌鈥&苍产蝉辫;
202-295-1615鈥&苍产蝉辫;
奥础厂贬滨狈骋罢翱狈鈥擜 by 208 general counsel and chief legal officers, many of whom represent the largest corporations in America, urges Congress to strengthen its investment in equal justice by increasing funding for the 成人抖阴 (LSC).
In their letter, the business leaders draw attention to the current crisis in civil justice, as well as LSC鈥檚 unique ability to respond to this crisis. According to the recent , low-income Americans do not receive any or enough legal help for 92% of their civil legal problems, and currently half of people who seek help from an LSC grantee are turned away. As the single largest funder of civil legal aid for low-income Americans, LSC provides grants that resource 132 civil legal aid organizations that serve people in every congressional district across the country.
The business leaders show their concern for civil justice for all American families. The letter describes how legal aid plays an important role in creating financial stability for families that 鈥渇orms the foundation of a resilient middle class and healthy consumers,鈥 and also develops and maintains 鈥渢he strength of the American workforce on which [their] companies rely, by resolving barriers to employment, occupational licenses, and educational programs.鈥
Signatories include executives from Comcast, Merck & Co, The Walt Disney Company, U.S. Bancorp, NBCUniversal, Amazon, IBM, Microsoft, American Express, McDonald鈥檚, Est茅e Lauder, Uber, Goldman Sachs, Delta Airlines, Ford Motor Company, AT&T, Hewlett Packard, Hyatt Hotels and Cisco.
Read the complete letter and see the full list of 208 signatories .
Similar letters in support of increasing funding for LSC have been authored and signed by , in all 50 states and the presidents of the .
On March 9, LSC submitted its FY 2024 budget request to Congress requesting an appropriation of $1.5 billion. LSC鈥檚 reasoning for the requested increase is to address the projected rise in demand for civil legal services due to the persistent impact of COVID-19 on low-income Americans, and to allow funding to catch up with the pace of population growth and inflation in the face of the widening justice gap. The White House budget requests $800 million for LSC.