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Programme11.15am Welcome from Jean Couper,

Chairman, Scottish Legal Aid Board

11.25am Address by Iain Gray MSP, Deputy Minister for Justice

11.35-12.15 Presentations from the four pilot projects

12.15 Close and lunch

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WelcomeWelcome

Jean CouperJean Couper

Chairman

Scottish Legal Aid Board

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The pilot projects:•Castlemilk Law and Money

Advice Centre and the Ethnic Minorities Law Centre

•Citizens Advice Scotland

•Streetwork

•West Lothian Advice Partnership

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Address by:

Iain Gray MSPIain Gray MSPDeputy Minister for Justice

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Castlemilk Law and Money Advice Centre

and the Ethnic Minorities Law

Centre

Presenter:

Rosie Sorrell

Ethnic Minorities Law Centre

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About the Law Centres• Castlemilk Law Centre - very first Law Centre

to open in Scotland in 1970s

• Ethnic Minorities Law Centre – opened over ten years ago and works with ethnic minority groups across Glasgow

• both have built up substantial expertise in the field of asylum and immigration law

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The problems for asylum seekers

• being able to access the legal services that they require

• significant language barriers

• often they receive no information about where they can go

• problems finding how to get there in a strange city

• there may not be an interpreter available for several days

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The need for the project

• from April 2000 policy of dispersal of asylum seekers throughout the UK

• Glasgow has become one of the major centres for dispersal

• 40004000 asylum seekers in Glasgow now in Sighthill, Springburn, Castlemilk and other nearby areas in the Southside

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The need for the project• support services set up and now better co-

ordination, particularly in the Sighthill area

• but lack of legal advice – small number of solicitors provide advice

– poor referral network or co-ordination on a Glasgow wide basis

• Castlemilk in a slightly better position than the Sighthill area – outreach in a local hall successful even though

only publicised by word of mouth

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What the Part V project will do

• two solicitors serving the Southside and Sighthill areas of Glasgow through outreach clinics

• providing casework in the different areas

• working together on community education element

• project steering group aims to include key organisations and individuals

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Project benefits• excellent opportunities for partnership

working

• promote awareness of project services

• the project could be replicated in new dispersal areas

• provide a model of best practice for working with asylum seekers using a co-ordinated multi agency approach

• significant impact on individual clients  

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Citizens Advice Scotland

Presenter

Carol Greer, Advisory Officer

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What does the CAB do?

• provides free, confidential, independent and impartial advice and information

• also provides specialist services

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What does the CAB do?• six CABx will be involved in this project using 13

offices as well as a number of other outreach clinic services– Caithness

– Ross and Cromarty

– Nairn

– Moray

– Skye

– Western Isles – Barra, Harris, Lewis, Uist

• over 25,30025,300 enquiries last year amongst these six bureaux

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The need for the project• enquiries increasingly complex

– particularly legal issues, welfare benefits and employment law.

• dearth of legal specialists in rural areas

• creates a number of problems for the CAB Service and for its clients:– increase skills and knowledge

– referrals

– high standards maintained and enhanced

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What will the project do?

• Solicitor will work out of Citizens Advice Scotland’s Inverness office

• Delivery of a second tier advisory service

– - new methods of delivery e.g. email

• training volunteers and paid staff

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What will the project do?

• taking on a limited number of client cases that are significant to local community

• contributing to social policy work

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Anticipated benefits

• Clients:– greater access to legal services

expertise

– improved CAB Service

– improved referral system

• CAB:– more highly trained volunteers

– expanded range of services

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Anticipated benefits

• Part V project:– experimentation of innovative

delivery methods

– investigation of most efficient and effective delivery in rural areas

– creation of a replicable model

– provision of models for effective partnership working

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StreetworkStreetworkPresenter

Katie OwenKatie Owen

Homeless Services Manager

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About Streetwork• set up in 1991

• works in Edinburgh with rough sleepers and young people at risk, both in city centre and outlying housing schemes

• client group are some of the most excluded individuals in our community - they can be difficult to engage, distrusting of authority and have been let down by agencies intended to support them

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What we do• Advice, information and preventative

education to individuals and groups

• Intensive advocacy support to help them access services

• Uses a people centred approach to deliver this support through one to one and group sessions the street and office base

• Staff are on the streets seven nights and four days a week and are available at the office five days a week

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Our clients• Our clients aren’t victims

• Last year we worked with around 1500 vulnerable individuals

• over 4500 4500 interventions - 8% legal

• Client issues include:

– mental health

– physical health

– self harm

– drugs and alcohol users

– offending

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Our clients• rough sleepers - 80% male, 20 % female

– average age of 33 - 32% were under 25

– 40% originated from outwith Edinburgh

– 15% were care leavers - higher % under 25

– 44% had mental health problems and 35% physical health problems

– 28% had recent family or relationship problems

• 12001200 people under 25 are homeless in Edinburgh

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Streetwork

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Our Part V solicitor will• enhance our existing support to people we work

with

• drop in legal advice to clients on issues like

– housing

– Children (Scotland) Act and through care rights for those leaving care

– civil rights in terms of exclusions from services

– family issues – mediation role, rights as parent when children may be in care

– other issues like Benefits, Human rights, mental health issues

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Our project will

• work with clients where they are comfortable- in our current venues and on the streets

• work with staff - improve advice, knowledge and back up as well as review cases

• work with partners to improve services, policies and highlight good practise

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West Lothian Advice Partnership

PresentersAlan Cunningham, Welfare Strategy

Manager, West Lothian Council

Jane Marnie,

Manager,Livingston CAB

Workers Benefits Advice Project

Breich Valley Information Service

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Who we are• unique partnership between all the major

advice providers in West Lothian

– West Lothian Council Advice Shop, Bathgate

– Livingston CAB

– Breich Valley Information Service, Fauldhouse

– Workers Benefits Advice Project, Bathgate

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The need for the project

• four partners dealt with almost 58,00058,000 enquiries last year - mainly social security, benefits, employment rights, money advice

• majority of clients sick, elderly, unemployed, poor - least likely to exercise their civil rights

• unmet legal need - local solicitor fortnightly 2 hour session - 100+ enquiries last year

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What the project will do

• Aims to give information and advice in areas of civil law to 1500 of the most socially excluded people in West Lothian

• break down barriers to legal advice

– make available to those people who do not use a solicitor through better access and local delivery

• oral advice and limited casework

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What the project will do

• project will bridge gap between welfare advice and other forms legal advice

• partnership with local legal profession - develop links, facilitate referrals

• partners offer high quality advice services - service will plug a gap

• training and support to partner’s staff

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