Showing posts with label Virginia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Virginia. Show all posts

Monday, April 19, 2010

May 14 / Quantico, VA - Military Law Update

The Military Law Section of the Virginia State Bar has put together an outstanding Seminar where you can learn the latest on:

"Constitutional Law vs. The War on Terrorism"
"Uniformed Services Employment and Re-employment Rights"
"Ethical Issue facing Military attorneys"

Our featured speakers include:
Eric S. MontalvoMajor, United States Marine Corps (Ret)
Puckett and Faraj, PC
Courtney Wheeler Lieutenant Colonel, Judge Advocate, U.S. Army Reserve (Ret)
Ombudsman Director, Virginia Employer Support to the Guard and Reserve
Edward L. Davis Colonel, Judge Advocate, U.S. Army Reserve (Ret)
Bar Counsel, Virginia State Bar

When:
Friday, May 14, 2010
9:00 a.m. - 12:00 Noon

Where:
Marine Corps Base Quantico,
Expeditionary Warfare School (EWS)


CLE:
3 hours with 1 in ethics (pending)

Cost:
Free

REGISTRATION FORM FOR MILITARY LAW SECTION CLE PROGRAM 5/14/10
(Please register by May 7th to allow registration lists to be forwarded to the base)
Mail to:
Ms. Dolly Shaffner
Virginia State Bar
707 E. Main St. Suite 1500
Richmond, VA 23219
Or email her at shaffner@vsb.org
or Fax form to (804) 775-0501

Directions to Quantico:
Marine Corps Base Quantico is located off of Interstate 95 in Virginia, 36 miles south of Washington D.C. and 20 miles north of Fredericksburg.
From I-95: Take exit 150, Quantico/Triangle. Take route 619 east to the entrance of the base. Marine sentries assist visitors arriving at the base; visitors are issued vehicle passes and given directions to their destination. Proper identification, such as a state driver's license, is required to get onto base.

More:

Saturday, December 27, 2008

Virginia Legal Assistance to Military Personnel

For the Warrior Community
Active duty service members can go to Armed Forces Legal Assistance's online database to locate active duty legal activities offering general legal services within the continental United States. When you put in your state or ZIP code, and it looks up about a dozen of these offices in Virginia.

The Findlaw website has a city-by-city list of lawyers interested in representing active-duty military personnel, military reservists, and veterans here.

Virginia has two statewide bar associations that should not be confused:
  • The Virginia State Bar (VSB) is an arm of the court system, and focuses on regulating the practice of law
  • the Virginia Bar Association (VBA) is a voluntary association of lawyers.
  • The Virginia State Bar's Military Law Section hosts Law Related Resources for Veterans webpage. Among other things, it mentions that Active Duty & Retired Military Personnel are eligible for pro bono assistance or a reduced fee through the VSB Lawyer Referral/ Pro bono Project: call 1 800 552-7977
More resources to check out:
  • Virginia Department of Veterans Services The department operates more than twenty field offices to provide information, assistance, and advocacy for military veterans who live in Virginia. Areas the department can help with include pensions and benefits, homelessness, spousal conflict resolution, education, and home loans. Services are described at http://www.dvs.virginia.gov/veterans-benefits.shtml. Veterans can walk into the field offices and receive same-day service, or they can make an appointment. To find the field office nearest you, click on the map or call (804) 786-0294.
  • Virginia Committee for the Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve:The volunteer lawyers and nonlawyers who make up this group serve as neutral ombudsmen in employment disputes governed by the Uniform Service Employment and Reemployment Rights Act. Ombudsmen intervene in disputes in response to reservists who return from duty to find that their employer won’t take them back or restore them to an equivalent job. And they intervene at the request of an employer who feels the reservist did not meet his or her responsibilities to qualify for reemployment under USERRA. Much of the work is by telephone. Ombudsmen also provide training to inform employers of their rights and responsibilities under USERRA. In 93 percent of cases referred to the committee, the dispute is resolved with the help of the ombudsman - no need for anyone to sue! Learn more at http://www.esgr.mil/Contact/Local-State-Pages/Virginia.aspx  To be put in touch with an ombudsman, call (800) 336-4590. 
  • Clinic for Legal Assistance to Service Members (CLASM):CLASM is a George Mason University program through which attorney-supervised law students help active-duty service members with a range of civil issues— contracts, landlord-tenant, uncontested divorces, and administrative matters, for example. Clients are persons who would suffer undue financial hardship if they were to hire a lawyer. Cases are selected that are manageable by students. Learn more at http://clas.law.gmu.edu/ To refer a client, contact (703) 993-8214. To volunteer or ask questions, contact Joseph C. Zengerle, executive director of CLASM, at jzengerl@gmu.edu.
  • Community Mediation Centers:Virginia's court system coordinates an extensive program of mediators. For more information, see http://www.courts.state.va.us/courtadmin/aoc/djs/programs/drs/mediation/cmcl.html.
  • Virginia Lawyer Referral Service:
    The Virginia State Bar operates this service to match people with lawyers in their communities. Some lawyers have indicated an interest in assisting with issues that affect military members or veterans. For a small fee, the lawyer will provide a half-hour consultation. See www.vsb.org/site/public/lawyer-referral-service. Persons seeking a lawyer may call (800) 552-7977.
  • Dawn Chase's article for VSB's Virginia Lawyer Magazine is a good resource, although now a little dated (download here - PDF).

For Lawyers

See also