Amid the storm of riots, Covid, rising domestic violence and eviction threats, a newly revised website and app are aimed at giving more Minnesotans access to free legal help.
The effort, launched this month by St. Paul-based Legal Services State Support and the California-based digital design firm Y Media Labs, created a bigger and better LawHelpMN.org website to respond to a host of rising needs in Minnesota.
The website and mobile app launched in 2019 right before the pandemic hit. But last year's explosion of health crises and social unrest forced the project back to the drawing board.
While the website initially reached 670,000 Minnesotans, the app proved clunky to use and prevented many users from completing forms, reaching free legal information, or being linked to pro bono legal help.
Only about 50,000 Minnesotans successfully used the app, said Legal Services State Support Executive Director J. Singleton.
That number should rise significantly now that changes made the site much easier to use, she said. YML donated its services.
"In the first two weeks since we launched the new design, we've already seen a 40% increase in the number of people who get resources from the LawHelpMN Guide. Y Media Labs has been amazing to work with," Singleton said.
In the legal field, most people think volunteering is limited to attorneys providing free legal advice. They ignore the huge technology side, she said. "YML has expanded that [volunteer] definition to show that a tech company can have a real impact on expanding access to justice."