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Access to Justice for All The work of Central England Law Centre.

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Presentation on theme: "Access to Justice for All The work of Central England Law Centre."— Presentation transcript:

1 Access to Justice for All The work of Central England Law Centre

2 Who are we? www.covlaw.org.ukwww.covlaw.org.uk www.birminghamclc.org.ukwww.birminghamclc.org.uk UK’s largest Law Centre 41 staff including 9 solicitors

3 What do we do? We deal with the law of every day life Discrimination Debt Employment Family Health and Community Care Housing Immigration Public Law Welfare Benefits

4 Coventry 50% of Coventry’s population live in the top 34% most deprived UK areas 27.4% of children in Coventry live in poverty The gap in life expectancy between the most affluent and disadvantaged in Coventry is 5.1 years for men and 5.9 years for women

5 Birmingham Sparkbrook second most deprived ward in Birmingham - area within which is within in most deprived 5% nationally. 77% of population defined as non-white in the 2011 census and 42.5% were born overseas. 22.5% of households are overcrowded 18.8% unemployment.

6 Challenges

7 We make people aware of their rights

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9 We work for change Its all about people and their lives Timely intervention Inter-connected problems and whole household Joining up our services with others

10 Kristina’s story Referred from CRASAC Physical and mental health problems meant off sick from low paid work for months and debts built up Scared because perpetrator had moved in near-by

11 Kristina’s story

12 Maintaining dignity for Mary Referred from Coventry Carers’ Centre Mary lives with her daughter in a 3 bed house with an upstairs bathroom She has several serious health issues and, after a fall, is now reliant on a wheelchair She was provided with a commode, which gave her no privacy but the local authority had told her this met her needs

13 Protecting people in work Our client was a checkout assistant in a supermarket on sick leave Received 23 weeks of SSP then no further payments or contact from her employer Our client was left with no income and her employer not responding to her

14 New lives and keeping families together Our client is a Gambian national in the UK with spouse and 3 children We represented him at Tribunal twice - in Stoke and in Birmingham - before the Home Office eventually granted him indefinite leave – complex area of law including Human Rights and Section 55 elements as well as failure to apply Home Office policy Client’s children can now register as British Citizens We are continuing to act for the client’s wife to regularize her stay

15 Challenging discrimination Sara, a care worker, told her employer that she was pregnant at 24 weeks She requested a risk assessment be carried out Employer told her ‘can’t you just stop work?’ and made her take her accrued annual leave Given a backdated risk assessment and told her maternity leave would begin immediately Client not eligible for SMP due to insufficient length of service so left with no income

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17 Ping

18 Families with multiple and complex needs

19 One family Client engaged after many months of work with MDT worker Joint visit with MDT worker at client’s home Client suffers mental health problems due to years of domestic abuse

20 Campaigning for policy change

21 Central England Public Interest Litigation Unit

22 The Future

23 Early Action Neighbourhood Fund


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