Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Can Scrappy Innovators Close the Access to Justice Gap? The Social Justice Hackathon


This past weekend’s first ever Social Justice Hackathon sponsored by Microsoft, Puget Sound Legal, Rehmke & Flynn PLLC, and Avvo kicked off Friday night at Seattle University School of Law, where an energetic and curious group of 63 law students, young lawyers, and programmers confronted the problem of legal access in America.


After some networking and then remarks by Annette Clark, Dean of the law school, and Hon. Donald Horowitz, co-author of the WA Access to Justice Technology Principles, ideas for apps were presented and teams began to form.


Teams worked throughout the weekend on projects that aimed to make legal services more accessible to the 80% of the poor and 60% of the middle class who are unable to afford legal representation. Teams worked for next several hours on their ideas. By the time they adjourned late Friday night, most teams had a complete and consistent view of the problem they set out to solve and its context.

For many of them, it was their first hackathon and they had no clue what to expect. Bob Watson, one of the attendees stated, “I felt that bringing together a collection of designers, developers, lawyers, and social activists would, if nothing else, make for an interesting evening.”

The teams reconvened Saturday Morning to continue building up their projects. During the lunch session, guests were able to hear Texas A&M Professor Milan Markovic’s remarks on the “Access to Justice Myths.” After, mentors assisted the teams with finalizing their presentations and projects before teams made their final presentations on Saturday evening to judges Brian Howe, CEO of Impact Hub, Diana Singleton, Director of the Access to Justice Institute, and Aurora Martin, Director of Columbia Legal Services.

 

After presentations, CEO of MetaJure, Inc. gave the Keynote remarks on “Innovations in Access.” The winning teams will be provided resources as they continue to develop their projects until they showcase their projects at a follow up demo day. Below is more information about the winning teams and their members.





 1st Place Winning Team: Court Whisperer

Court Whisperer is a mobile application that enables people to fill out court forms by speaking and that produces a finished, properly formatted court document. Basically, this app allows users to fill out court forms on a phone without having to actually deal with the forms themselves. Not only that, but the app can use the phone’s voice-recognition software to allow the user to speak his/her answers. Team members: Katherine Alteneder (Project Lead), Mathias Burton (UX), Dan Liebling (Dev), Bob Watson (UX), Taylor Lea (Dev), and Judd Deaver (Dev).

 2nd PlaceNLC Resource Dispersion Optimization

This team worked to develop a solution to more easily share self-help legal resources with clients that the Neighborhood Legal Clinic serves. They created this innovative solution through an inventive application of cutting-edge web technologies. The team launched an impressive prototype in just one day, allowing Clinic attorneys to easily send resources to their clients at the tap of a screen. Team members: Sara Huang (EVP of Front End Development), David Sessoms (Senior UX Designer), Akash Badshah (Principal Solution Architect), Adelaine Shay (Legal Partner), Austin Chang (Senior Managing CSV Partner), Dan McKeown (Pacific Pelican), Rene Miller (Executive API Manager).

 Paid It

This is a mobile app for clients facing eviction due to lack of rental (or other documents of proof) evidence to present in legal cases. Users can create a ledger of their payments with an easy interface that allows them to photograph and save heir payment instrument (e.g., money order) right in the ledger. Team members: Michael (Legal – Project Owner), Destinee (Project Manager), Jacob (Legal), Rahn (SDET), Liam (Android Dev), Allison (UX Designer), Diana (UX Designer), Chris (iOS Dev).

Darwin Talk at EvolveLaw's Social Media for Lawyers Event "Tech's Peculiar Relationship with Legal Access"


In a room full of tech savvy lawyers, I had the privilege to present their Darwin talk at EvovleLaw’s “Social Media for Lawyers event last week at Avvo. The event focused mainly on how lawyers maintain their relationship with social media and the ethical issues associated when many lawyers are building and growing their practices. This program brought together a mix of legal marketing experts to help lawyers use social media ethically and effectively.

 Evolve Law was founded by co-conspirators Mary Juetten of Traklight and Jules Miller as a catalyst for innovation for legal tech startups that fosters collaboration in the legal tech industry to accelerate growth.

 The “Darwin Talk “ is usually a ten-minute; ignite style presentation given at the end of EvolveLaw events on a proactive legal topic of choice. My presentation was titled “Tech’s Peculiar Relationship with Legal Access” discussing how the use of technology has affected legal access in our country, a topic that I am truly passionate about speaking on. I started the presentation by discussing tech’s relationship with the legal industry as a whole and how over the last ten years, technology has revolutionized the legal industry in all aspects and in every area of the law. However, during the same time of rapid innovation in legal industry, technology has done little make the law more accessible for the majority of Americans. As the numbers currently reveal that as many as eighty percent of poor and two-thirds of the middle class legal needs are unmet according to the Legal Services Corporation.


I stated that the core of the problem were that legal aid providers not having the ability or capacity to properly implement the use technology in their respective organizations to most efficiently serve their clients with their legal needs. Most legal aid providers through their self-help legal portals currently employ the use of technology to serve clients’ legal needs. However, many of these self-help legal portals are not user friendly from a design perspective, and contain pages full of legalese; creating barriers for low income users, who in most cases do not have the education to fully comprehend and digest the information in a manner they can readily use to solve their legal problems. Most of the self-help legal portals also assume that every user’s legal needs are the same, and that with a little legal information provided, their problems can magically be solved. As a law student myself, who is familiar with the law, and how a person would obtain legal services found some of these sites to be very confusing and convoluted.


 This result is largely because the funding of legal aid providers receive has not been able to keep pace with many of the new legal tech start ups who receive angel and VC funding and are able to rapidly improve their design and business processes around their intended user. My solution was that use of technology should be implemented in a user-centered design fashion and should start at a place or page when they are trying to first understand the user’s legal journey.


I also stated that if use of technology were ever going to increase the access to legal services, there would need to be an ecosystem in place where law schools, legal aid providers, governments, and legal tech companies collaborated to create sustainable solutions with the end user in mind, instead of the current unilateral approach.

My closing statements were that
 “I truly believe that we have an opportunity to something really great, and really employ the use of technology in a way that expands legal access.” 
After, the crowd was very receptive to the presentation, and I have followed up with many of the attendees after presenting. I would like to thank the team at EvolveLaw for giving me the opportunity to present on this topic.