- University News Archive - 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock /news-archive/tag/arkansas-municipal-league/ 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock Wed, 03 Oct 2018 15:20:39 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Bowen honors alumni, raises $80,000 for access to justice initiatives /news-archive/2018/10/03/bowen-awards/ Wed, 03 Oct 2018 15:20:39 +0000 /news/?p=72097 ... Bowen honors alumni, raises $80,000 for access to justice initiatives]]> The University of Arkansas at Little Rock William H. Bowen School of Law聽honored two of its alumni for outstanding public and professional service during its 9th annual scholarship luncheon on Monday, Oct. 1, while raising more than $80,000 to support聽the school’s access to justice initiatives. More than 400 people attended the luncheon at the Marriott Grand Ballroom to honor the late Don Zimmerman, the longtime executive director of the Arkansas Municipal League, and Bowen Associate Dean and Professor of Law Terrence Cain. Bowen Law Dean Theresa Beiner said proceeds from this year鈥檚 luncheon will support Bowen鈥檚 access to justice initiatives, which help provide legal services to under-represented citizens in Arkansas. Proceeds from previous luncheons have funded five scholarships totaling $150,000 for deserving students; funded a student emergency fund that supports students who experience short-term financial crises; and helped fund the Delta Clinic, which expanded to two additional counties – Ashley and Drew – this year. The clinic also serves clients in Dermott, Dumas, Lake Village, McGehee, and Warren. Zimmerman, a 1972 alumnus of Bowen, passed away in June. He had worked 52 years for the Arkansas Municipal League, including 42 years as its executive director, which made him the longest-serving director of a state municipal league in the nation. Zimmerman鈥檚 wife, Jan Lea Zimmerman, accepted the award on her husband鈥檚 behalf. 鈥淚 know Don would be pleased as he dedicated his life to helping public servants across Arkansas鈥檚 500 cities and towns,鈥 she said. 鈥淒on was very proud to be a graduate of this law school. I know he has many friends in the room today and that warms my heart.鈥 Zimmerman represented Arkansas municipalities before the Arkansas General Assembly. A 1978 U.S. Supreme Court ruling held that municipal corporations could be held liable for damages to an individual, which set off a flood of litigation against cities. Because insurers considered cities a bad risk, Don created the Municipal Legal Defense Program, which allowed cities to pool their risks. It was the first of its kind in the country. Don worked incredibly hard to create more optional benefit programs to offer League members, including the Municipal Health Benefit Fund, the Municipal League Workers鈥 Compensation Trust, the Firefighters Supplemental Income Protection and Death Benefit Program, and Municipal Vehicle and Property Programs. These programs have saved Arkansas municipalities millions of dollars over the last three decades. In 1981, Zimmerman and the League pressed for a local option sales tax for cities and towns. Since then voters have passed local sales taxes to fund essential services like public safety, street and infrastructure, and amenities like parks and recreation facilities. Michael Flannery, associate dean for academic affairs and professor of law at Bowen, introduced Terrence Cain, this year鈥檚 recipient of the Faculty Excellence Award in Public Service. Cain, a 1999 Bowen graduate, has been on the faculty at the law school since 2007 and serves as the school’s associate dean for faculty development. In the classroom, he challenges his students to critically evaluate current legal doctrines and consider whether they deal effectively and fairly with contemporary issues. Cain was nominated for the award by Bowen law students, Flannery said. Bowen鈥檚 graduating classes of 2013, 2014, 2017, and 2018 all selected Cain to serve as faculty marshal or hooder at their graduations. In addition to his class and administrative responsibilities, Cain devotes more than 100 hours per year to pro bono legal representation of people who cannot afford to pay an attorney. These cases, primarily in the areas of family law and criminal law, help low-income people deal with life-changing legal matters. Photos by Benjamin Krain Top right: Jan Zimmerman accepts the 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock William H. Bowen School of Law award for public service for her late husband, Don Zimmerman, former longtime executive director of the Arkansas Municipal League. Presenting the award is Mark Hayes, the League鈥檚 current executive director.聽 Above left: Bowen Law professor Terrence Cain gets a thumbs up from Rita Gruber (right), chief judge of the Arkansas Court of Appeals, after being honored with the Bowen School of Law award for public service. ]]> For Bowen grad, law is a path for serving others /news-archive/2018/05/09/liz-harris/ Wed, 09 May 2018 17:23:45 +0000 /news/?p=70495 ... For Bowen grad, law is a path for serving others]]> For the past four years, Liz Harris has played the role of Superwoman: law clerk by day, part-time law student by night, and full-time single mom to her 8-year-old daughter. The long days and nights, though, are about to pay off for Harris, who graduates on May 12 with a Juris Doctor from the University of Arkansas at Little Rock鈥檚 William H. Bowen School of Law. She will take the Arkansas Bar Exam in July and has already secured a prestigious clerkship with the Honorable Lavenski Smith, chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, beginning August 2019. 鈥淚t鈥檚 exciting because it鈥檚 been such a long journey,鈥 Harris said. While Harris, 30, isn鈥檛 the first in her family to go to college, she is the first to attend law school. She grew up in Brinkley, the youngest of 11 children. 鈥淢y parents didn鈥檛 go to college,鈥 Harris said. 鈥淭hey have always worked factory jobs and have an unparalleled work ethic that I have always admired. They鈥檝e always been supportive of me through the good and bad times.鈥 Her parents, siblings, and daughter, will be at commencement in the Jack Stephens Center to see Harris get her degree. Her sister has even made matching T-shirts for the family to wear. 鈥淭hey are my rock solid support system,鈥 Harris said. 鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 have done it without them.鈥 After high school, Harris enrolled at 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock and earned a Bachelor of Business Administration in entrepreneurship and small business management in 2009. That was also the year Harris had her daughter, Naila, who is now a second-grader at Don Roberts Elementary in Little Rock. Shortly before giving birth to her daughter, Harris started the Master of Business Administration program in 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock鈥檚 College of Business. She attended part-time and earned her MBA in 2011. While she was a graduate student, Harris interned with the Department of Housing and Urban Development鈥檚 Division of Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity, which investigates housing discrimination claims. 鈥淔or many years, I鈥檝e always been genuinely interested in the law itself – how it鈥檚 made and how it affects this group of people versus that group of people,鈥 Harris said. During her first year of law school, she worked full-time in the Department of Human Services Division of Childcare and Early Childhood Education. 聽 鈥淚 made the decision in my second year to pursue clerkships that would give me legal experience as well as some income.鈥 For two summers, she clerked full-time at the Arkansas Municipal League, and on May 3, she completed a clerkship at the general law practice firm Gill Ragon Owen, PA in Little Rock. As a student in the Judicial Practicum course, Harris assisted the Honorable Carlton D. Jones of the Eighth South Judicial Circuit, which serves Miller and Lafayette counties. Although Harris completed most of her work remotely, she traveled to Texarkana to help as well. She has assisted with an expungement clinic at St. Mark Baptist Church and assisted attorneys doing pro bono work at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences鈥 free Estate Planning Clinic for cancer patients. This spring, she participated in the Consumer Protection Legal Clinic. She and other student attorneys helped low-income individuals with housing and consumer law issues. At Bowen, Harris has been active with the Black Law Students Association, serving as treasurer for two years. During her third year of law school, she sought membership on the student-run Law Review and served as an apprentice. She researched an area of employment law dealing with mandatory workplace 鈥渄onning and doffing鈥 鈥 the putting on and taking off of required uniforms 鈥 and whether such time should be paid. Her note will appear in a future issue of the Law Review journal. This past year, she has served as the Notes and Comments Editor for the Law Review. In this role, she has worked with incoming apprentices to guide them through the note-writing process and has edited student notes chosen for publication. Her experiences have broadened her interests to include employment law, civil rights law, housing law, administrative law, business law, and education law. 聽 鈥淚鈥檓 trying to keep my mind open to jobs,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to shut out opportunities.鈥   聽Liz Harris will receive her Juris Doctor from the William H. Bowen School of Law on May 12 and is preparing for the Arkansas Bar Exam. Photo by Benjamin Krain  ]]>