Atlanta Legal Aid has made a difference for nearly 100 years.
Five counties. 90 lawyers. 700 volunteers. Nearly 21,000 cases. Every year.
Since 1924, Atlanta Legal Aid Society has offered free civil legal aid for low income people across metro Atlanta. With five neighborhood offices, three offices in Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta hospitals, a medical-legal partnership at Grady Hospital, courthouse partnerships in four counties, a variety of self-help clinics and countless community education programs, Legal Aid lawyers and volunteers reach tens of thousands of people annually. More than 20,000 cases are represented by our staff of 90 attorneys and over 700 volunteers every year.
OUR SPECIAL PROJECTS
Our special projects bring our core work to special populations, including those with disabilities, seniors, victims of domestic violence, people with cancer or HIV/AIDS, veterans, and caregivers.
OUR HISTORY
Atlanta Legal Aid Society was founded in 1924 by a collection of lawyers and community leaders.
Many were instrumental to Atlanta’s rise to prominence in the south and their names still echo throughout the region on businesses, buildings and street signs.
Originally established with a single lawyer, Legal Aid’s work focused on family law and consumer issues.
The program remained small through its first decades, with the work of a few permanent staff supplemented by volunteers from the legal and charitable communities. In the 1960s, Johnson’s war on poverty offered opportunities for the expansion of civil legal aid as a tool to fight poverty. Legal Aid leapt to the challenge and expanded to include neighborhood offices in Cobb, DeKalb and Fulton counties. The legal aid movement of this era ushered in a golden age of civil legal aid. Young, eager lawyers took the opportunity to make real impact on those who had been long overlooked or forgotten, using the law in creative ways to challenge a system that often left the most vulnerable without redress or hope.
The work of these lawyers laid the foundation for changing Atlanta’s outdated and unfair housing codes and landlord-tenant law, while tackling food insecurity, unsafe living conditions and family issues. The founding of the Legal Services Corporation in 1974 cemented the ideals of this movement by providing civil legal aid with a steady source of funding. Atlanta Legal Aid would soon serve five counties – Fulton, DeKalb, Cobb, Gwinnett, and Clayton – and steadily grow into one of the most important nonprofits in the metro area. Legal Aid bought its first permanent home on Spring St. in 1978. Legal Aid continues to serve thousands of individual clients while working to create a fair and balanced system for all.
SIGNIFICANT CASES
Through our historical casework, we have made a lasting impact for individuals and communities in Georgia and nationwide.
Beginning in 1981 and for more than 10 years, Legal Aid lawyers represented more than 1,800 Cubans to get them due process hearing rights.
1981 | Marielitos
Atlanta Legal Aid won Olmstead v. L.C., 527 U.S. 581 in the United States Supreme Court in 1999. Olmstead ordered desegregation of state mental institutions, envisioning the freeing of inappropriately institutionalized persons to live in the community.
1999 | Olmstead Decision
Atlanta Legal Aid filed lawsuits against Stewart Finance for their unfair loan practices targeting the elderly and disabled. Ultimately, the FTC filed an action against Stewart Finance and shared part of the proceeds with our clients, with each client receiving $2,000.
2001 | Stewart Finance
Tony Strickland became a victim of Georgia’s unconstitutional post-judgment garnishment procedure, when his worker’s compensation funds were garnished from his bank account, despite protection from a statutory exemption.
2012 | Strickland Case & Garnishment Statutes
Staff Attorney Erik Heath led a client dealing with a severe health condition through bankruptcy, thereby discharging a decades-old student loan.
2013 | Bankruptcy Trifecta
Atlanta Legal Aid filed a complaint against Harbour Portfolio after the company misled people into thinking that they were buying homes when they were not.
2018 | Harbour Portfolio