Commission Supports Veteran Access to Justice

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Commission Supports Veteran Access to Justice | The TexasLawbook

4/10/15 7:22 PM

Commission'Supports'Veteran'Access'to'Justice © 2015 The Texas Lawbook.

By Patricia Baldwin (April 9) – The sixth annual Champions of Justice Gala Tuesday in Austin raised $401,000 to support legal aid for veterans — for a cumulative total of more than $2 million. Last year, about 8,800 veterans were provided legal assistance. That’s the good news. The bad news: Texas has nearly 1.7 million veterans, and resources are not sufficient to meet their demand for legal services. “Getting aid can make the difference between life and death,” said Harry Reasoner, chair of the Texas Access to Justice Commission. And while he appreciated the response to the gala, the Vinson & Elkins attorney encouraged the state’s lawyers to do more. The theme to “do more” and stories of veterans’ needs pervaded the evening of celebration that brought together diverse groups within the legal community, including Supreme Court justices, law school deans, legislators, corporate and law firm attorneys, legal aid practitioners — as well as a former college football coach and a university chancellor. Keynote speaker William McRaven, chancellor of The University of Texas System and retired U.S. Navy four-star admiral, gave context to the evening’s conversations among the more than 400 attendees. Borrowing a phrase from a commencement speech he had given, he told the legal gathering he had advised the new graduates about how to change the world: “Start by making your bed.”

V&E’s Harry Reasoner

That simple act, the chancellor said, is about “order in your life.” He explained that military personnel are

constantly adjusting to situations in war. “At the end of the day, you return to your plywood hooch, and the only thing you controlled that day was your bed,” he noted. “There is trouble in the world today.” Chancellor McRaven choked up as he spoke of “today’s servicemen and women who wear the flag of the United States and represent all that is good and decent. “When they come home, all they ask is for a place of safety. All they need is a ‘bed that is made.’ And that is where you come in.” He said a veteran’s need for legal services can be as simple as obtaining a power of attorney document. The gala represents “one more chance to help,” said legendary Houston attorney Joe Jamail, known for his philanthropy. “I get more fun from helping than from making money.”

Justice Nathan Hecht presenting award to retired Justice Wallace Jefferson

Justice Nathan Hecht, Joe Jamail, Joe Straus, Speaker of the Texas

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