Vermont Bar Journal, Vol. 40, No. 2 VBA Journal, Winter Issue, Vol. 41, No. 4 | Page 40

Spotlight Vermont Immigrant Assistance Project Soon after establishing the CF! Project, the Clinic developed another pro bono en- terprise for a different Vermont population in need of essential legal services. Found- ed in 2003, the VIA Project aims to provide civil and administrative legal assistance to Vermont’s growing community of non-cit- izens. Staff attorneys Erin Jacobsen and Arthur Edersheim represent non-citizens in wide array of humanitarian immigration cases. With the assistance of student clinicians, Jacobsen and Edersheim represent immi- grants and their family members in asylum proceedings; assist individuals who have been subjected to domestic violence with Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) self- petitions; work to obtain U-Visa status for non-citizens who are victims of crime; ap- ply for T-Visa status on behalf of trafficking victims; and help immigrant children who have been abused, abandoned, or neglect- ed obtain Special Immigrant Juvenile Sta- tus. Jacobsen and Edersheim are always looking to expand legal services to Ver- mont’s immigrant population, and the two regularly mentor attorneys who are inter- ested in doing these kinds of cases on a pro bono basis. Since its creation, VIA has assisted peo- ple from all over the world — 64 countries from Afghanistan to Zambia— and who have since taken up residence in nearly ev- ery county in Vermont. From July 1, 2015 to June 30, 2016, Jacobsen and Edersheim represented 40 clients in 43 cases. In ad- dition, they handled forty-four significant requests for legal information providing research and consult, assistance in filling out immigration forms, and help collecting supporting documentation. For nearly 14 years, VIA’s work has helped hundreds of vulnerable Vermont immigrants find safety and stability in their new homes. Impact of Funding from the Vermont Bar Foundation Through your donation to the Vermont Bar Foundation and your participation in the VBF’s “I Bank on Justice” program you can ensure that these and the other wor- thy projects funded by the VBF can con- tinue into the future. To learn more about the South Royalton Legal Clinic, go to their website 3 where you can find information and statistics about the core civil practice areas and other programs aimed at help- ing low income Vermonters in need of le- gal representation. If you are inspired by the work the Clinic does and want to learn more about how your donations and IOL- TA contributions help Vermonters around the State please check out the newly re- designed Vermont Bar Foundation web- site which features stories about real peo- ple who have been helped through the VBF grants. ____________________ Ryan P. Kane, Esq. is an associate attor- ney in the Montpelier firm Tarrant, Gillies & Richardson and is a member of the Ver- mont Bar Foundation Promotion Commit- tee. ____________________ I hope! If you have not yet donated to the VBF it is not too late—head on over to the brand new and exciting Vermont Bar Foundation web- site at https://vtbarfoundation.org , read stories about how the VBF grants make a difference in the lives of Vermonters, and donate what you can to support this important work. If every attorney reading this gave one billable hour it would go a huge way toward ensuring the work funded by the VBF continues. 2 See footnote 1, supra. Seriously though, check out the new VBF website at https://vtbar- foundation.org and donate to the VBF. 3 http://www.vermontlaw.edu/academics/clin- ics-and-externships/south-royalton-legal-clinic 1 1959ers REUNITE A SIXTH TIME Pictured from left to right are Steve Martin, Ted Tyler, Joe Frank, and John Hutton who gathered for dinner with their spouses at Pauline’s Restaurant in Shelburne on October 7, 2016. All 1959ers are holding copies of Judge Martin’s published analysis of the circumstances of the death of Orville Gibson. 40 THE VERMONT BAR JOURNAL • WINTER 2016-17 Praise from a student clinician for the South Royalton Legal Clinic (SRLC): “Working at the SRLC has given me a unique opportunity to learn more about the law and sharpen my lawyer- ing skills. The SLRC is a diverse envi- ronment and provides various areas of practice for me to gain exposure to. I particularly enjoy being able to apply what I have learned in the classroom to real-life cases and situations.” – Meggie Kane VLS C’17 The attendees were celebrat- ing for a sixth time their success on the Vermont bar exam in 1959 and their subsequent legal ca- reers in Vermont. Missing from this reunion was the most illustri- ous 1959er, Tom Salmon, who is remembered among lawyers for his service as Governor of the State of Vermont; he sent his re- gret. These five are among the fourteen law school graduates who took and passed the Ver- mont bar exam in calendar year 1959. The others include six who are deceased, one who has dis- appeared, one who lives out of state, and one in Vermont who is usually absent but sent his re- gards. To their knowledge, no other group of examinees for the Vermont bar has ever held a re- union. Yet, at the conclusion of this sixth reunion, the attendees decided to have another reunion dinner in 2018. The inescapable conclusion is that the 1959ers have been a convivial group since their entry into the bar of Vermont. www.vtbar.org