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Touro College Jacob D. Fuchsberg Law Center developed The William Randolph Hearst Public Advocacy Center to have an impact on social justice, legal training and the lives of countless individuals in and beyond the local community.

Housed within the law school, the Center provides furnished offices to local non-profit agencies. Touro students have the opportunity to work with participating agencies, proving them the opportunity for hands-on skills training while developing an understanding of the problems facing the local community.

Current member agencies include:


Brighter Tomorrows
Room: PA216
Aileen Fitz, Executive Director
631-650-2309


Brighter Tomorrows is a licensed not-for-profit domestic violence shelter facility that provides comprehensive services to victims of domestic violence and whose programs provide refuge and support to battered women and their children. By delivering a comprehensive array of services, self esteem and empowerment strategies for living, skills are restored and victims learn how to become survivors and return to their communities prepared to focus on better and more secure futures.


The Empire Justice Center
Room: PA222
650-2306

Linda Hassberg, Senior Attorney
650-2305

Don Friedman, Managing Attorney
650-2316

Cherly Keshner, Paralegal

Community Advocate
650-2317


The Empire Justice Center is the only statewide, multi-issue, multi-strategy non-profit law firm focused on changing the "systems" within which poor and low-income families live. With a focus on poverty law, Empire Justice undertakes research and training, acts as an informational clearinghouse and provides litigation backup to local legal services programs and community based organizations.


The Health and Welfare Council of Long Island
Room: PA219
Erica Chase, Director
650-2302


The Health and Welfare Council of Long Island is a health and human services planning, research/public education and advocacy organization that serves as the umbrella for public and voluntary agencies serving Long Island's poor and vulnerable individuals and families. Though the Council has changed and grown since its establishment in 1947, its mission has always remained the same: to respond to the needs of all Long Islanders, ensuring that the voices of the powerless are heard.


Long Island Advocacy Center
Room: PA204
Eilleen Buckley, Attorney
650-2313

Jean Trojack, Paralegal
650-2313


Long Island Advocacy Center provides information and referral, individual/case advocacy, and represents the legal rights of students attending Public School. In addition, Long Island Advocacy Center provides service coordination and vocational advocacy for adults with disabilities. Through mediation, negotiation and representation the Long Island Advocacy Center ensures students and individuals with disabilities receive all the services to which they are entitled under law.


Long Island Housing Services
Room: PA215
Michelle Santantonio, Executive Director
650-2304

Ian Wider, Attorney
650-2304

Maria DeGennaro, Housing Counseling Program Coordinator
650-2304


Long Island Advocacy Center seeks the elimination of unlawful housing discrimination and promotion of decent and affordable housing through advocacy and education. The agency promotes racial integration and equal housing opportunities on Long Island by providing fair housing testing, presentations to the public, landlord/tenant counseling, pre/post home purchase counseling and many more helpful services.


The Mobilized Interfaith Coalition Against Hunger (MICAH) Campaign of the Long Island Council for Churches
Room: PA207
Neelofer Chaudry, Advocacy Director
650-2318


The Mobilized Interfaith Coalition Against Hunger (MICAH) Campaign of the Long Island Council for Churches is an interfaith examination of conscience is a campaign that will focus on specific causes of hunger and poverty on Long Island. The campaign will apply the Catholic Charities USA study, Poverty in America: A Threat to the Common Good, to Long Island so that religious congregations and other community groups can: explore, from an interfaith perspective, religious mandates to serve poor people; educate Long Islanders about the extent of hunger which is rooted in the largely-hidden poverty of their region; elevate Long Island poverty to the attention of the general public, the media and local government officials; integrate concern and care for hungry, poor Long Islanders into the faith-life of religious congregations; establish federal, state and Long Island public-policy priorities to address the causes of both hunger and poverty and mobilize the faith community and other groups to advocate for these policies; and engage Long Islanders in a Campaign to Reduce Poverty in America.


Nassau/Suffolk Law Services Committee, Inc.
Room: PA214
Jonathan Schwartz, Attorney
650-2314


Nassau/Suffolk Law Services Committee, Inc. is a non-profit, community-based poverty law program which provides legal assistance in civil (non-criminal) matters to low-income individuals throughout Nassau and Suffolk Counties in New York. The program provides free legal service in thousands of cases each year as well as legal support to every church, agency and grassroots organization that works with the poor.


SEPA Mujer, Services for the Advancement of Women
Room: PA211
Karla Coreas, Outreach Coordinator
650-2307

Martha Maffei, Outreach Coordinator
650-2307


SEPA Mujer, Services for the Advancement of Women is a community-based organization offering legal rights education for Latina immigrant women and free representation for Latina victims of domestic violence. Founded in 1996, the agency is dedicated to educating, informing and organizing the community.


The Society of American Law Teachers (SALT)
Room: PA223
Hazel Weiser, Executive Director
650-2310

Elizabeth Luzzi, Assistant
650-2310


The Society of American Law Teachers (SALT) is the largest membership organization of law teachers in the United States. SALT is committed to creating and maintaining a community of progressive and caring law professors dedicated to making a difference through the power of law. The organization is dedicated to promoting the use of innovative styles of teaching to make our classrooms more inclusive and challenging faculty and students to develop legal institutions with greater equality, justice and excellence.


The Suffolk Chapter of the New York Civil Liberties Union
Room: PA221
Andrea Callan, Esq., Suffolk Chapter Director
650-2301

Marina Nadler, Suffolk Chapter Assistant
650-2301


The Suffolk Chapter of the New York Civil Liberties Union is dedicated to the protection of civil liberties as embodied in the Bill of Rights. Its mission is to protect the constitutional rights of the people it serves through advocacy and involvement in the legislative process and to educate the community about civil liberties issues.


Suffolk County Coalition Against Domestic Violence (SCCADV)
Room: PA218
Adam Small, Staff Attorney
650-2311


Suffolk County Coalition Against Domestic Violence (SCCADV) dedicates all of its efforts to providing safety and support to family violence victims by offering preventative and supportive services. SCCADV offers victims options as they take the steps needed to reclaim their lives. Services provided include a 24-hour hotline, a shelter, legal assistance, community education, counseling services and transitional housing programs.


The Workplace Project
Room: PA212
Nadia Marin, Executive Director
650-2315


The Workplace Project is a non-profit organization that organizes immigrant workers for better working and living conditions. It is dedicated to fighting the exploitation of Latino immigrant workers on Long Island and to achieving social justice through full political, economic and cultural participation of those workers in the communities in which they live. Services provided include education, development of worker-owned cooperatives, leadership training and labor-related legal support.


For additional information, please contact Thomas Maligno, Executive Director of the Public Advocacy Center and Director of Public Interest at Touro Law Center at (631) 761-7033 or thomasm@tourolaw.edu

Click here to read about the Opening Ceremonies of the William Randolph Hearst Public Advocacy Center.

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