North Carolina attorneys are generous with their time in support of equal access to justice for all members of our state. Our profession has even adopted Rule of Professional Conduct 6.1, which encourages each attorney to provide 50 hours of pro bono legal services each year to those unable to afford them without expectation of a fee. With the constant demands on our time and energy, however, it can sometimes be difficult to prioritize this important activity.

From the new attorney who may be apprehensive about signing up for a pro bono opportunity to the veteran practitioner who can’t find the time to volunteer, there are valid reasons that we may not meet Rule 6.1’s aspirational goal in a given year. However, there are some equally great reasons to prioritize pro bono legal service as part of your law practice:

  1. Clients Need Our Help! Every year, roughly 80% of the civil legal needs of the poor in North Carolina go unmet. These needs, such as addressing housing habitability violations, protecting victims of domestic violence, ensuring access to health care or combating wage theft, are real to a person living in poverty.  Legal redress can mean avoiding homelessness, violence or even death.
  2. Volunteering Is Easy! Finding a pro bono opportunity is as simple as visiting the website of the NC Pro Bono Resource Center. On ncprobono.org, you will find a variety of pro bono legal service opportunities in numerous areas of law, geographic areas and types of activity, all searchable to make it easy to find a project that is the perfect fit for you.
  3. There Are Opportunities for Recognition! A lawyer who reports at least 50 hours of pro bono legal service in a given calendar year will be inducted into the NC Pro Bono Honor Society and receive a certificate from the Supreme Court of North Carolina recognizing that achievement — report your 2016 pro bono service at ncprobono.org by April 17, 2017.
  4. Service Provides Professional Development! While addressing unmet legal needs in our state, participating in pro bono legal service has the additional benefit of benefiting you as a practitioner. Whether it is expanding your professional network by volunteering at a legal clinic or building your competency in new areas of law, volunteering can help you become a better lawyer.
  5. It Feels Good to Give Back! As North Carolina attorneys, volunteering is a way to invest in our own communities in a way that we are uniquely suited to provide. Whether it’s seeing firsthand the difference you made in a client’s life or feeling as though you made a true impact in protecting another’s legal rights, pro bono legal service is incredibly rewarding.

Whatever your reason for volunteering as a pro bono attorney, the North Carolina Pro Bono Resource Center is here to support you. Visit us at ncprobono.org to find an opportunity to volunteer, learn more about pro bono legal service or to connect with us about why you serve.

Post originally featured in the Lawyers Mutual March 2017 Put Into Practice Newsletter

Original Web Publication: Lawyers Mutual Insurance Company Byte of Prevention Blog, April 5, 2017

Author: Sylvia Novinsky, Director, NC Pro Bono Resource Center