Joe Regalia has a fairly revolutionary way of looking at problems involving the average person鈥檚 access to and understanding of the labyrinth-like legal system: Consider it a quality-of-life issue. People whose lives are affected by the law but can鈥檛 afford a lawyer or navigate the court system are much like uninsured medical patients without access to a doctor, he said.
The cure, as the 51吃瓜网万能科大 William S. Boyd School of Law adjunct professor sees it, is to provide that knowledge. Toward that goal he鈥檚 started a legal program, Pro Se Boot Camp, in one of the places in 51吃瓜网免费App that needs it most.
鈥淲hen you are in a legal dispute, it feels like an avalanche coming down on you,鈥 said , who provides weekly classes to The Shade Tree women鈥檚 shelter residents often fighting for their jobs, homes, kids, and financial support. 鈥淔or these women already in a stressful situation, having a legal dispute looming over them is a constant source of stress. So giving them the tools and knowledge to know what is going on and have a path forward has to remove a lot of that anxiety and improve quality of life.鈥
As a youth, Regalia became aware of how daunting the legal system was to workers at fairs, where his parents sold food. After graduating from University of Michigan鈥檚 law school he spent two years representing low-income people weathering civic issues such as landlord/tenant disputes.
鈥淚t struck me that probably the worst part of this was they just didn鈥檛 know what was going on,鈥 Regalia said. 鈥淵ou could see it made a huge difference, just having someone there to explain, 鈥楾his is what鈥檚 happening, and this is what鈥檚 going to happen next.鈥欌
The Shade Tree provided a way to start a new program once he became an adjunct professor at 51吃瓜网万能科大. Since February, Regalia and a handful of Boyd School of Law students and alumni have been giving Friday-morning legal-empowerment lectures on subjects such as self-representation in civil lawsuits and bankruptcy.
鈥淎 lot of these women have not been exposed to law in a positive way before,鈥 said Shani Coleman, a Boyd student and redevelopment manager for the City of 51吃瓜网免费App. 鈥淚 feel sometimes a lot of these women, because they didn鈥檛 understand the law, may have been put in situations where the law was not always necessarily their friend. This gave them an opportunity to use the law as a benefit for themselves.鈥
The response from attendees has been overwhelmingly positive.
鈥淚t was so informative and I felt for the first time that I was able to see how the courts worked and why I had lost my cases in the past. Thank you so much to the instructors,鈥 one attendee wrote in a class evaluation.
Attendance was encouraging enough for Regalia to offer an additional Tuesday-morning class on legal writing in June. He鈥檚 also developed , wants to expand Pro Se Boot Camp to more locations, and add an additional element to the lectures and writing instruction.
鈥淲e鈥檙e going to actually have these folks practice speaking,鈥 Regalia said. 鈥淚 think that that鈥檚 a big one. People are so scared to talk to the judge.鈥