Skills development, training and collaboration are important. That's why we organise Quarterlies – a chance for everyone who works at community legal centres in New South Wales to catch-up, learn, share experiences, and coordinate advocacy.
This February and March, all of our events will be held online via Zoom, given the ongoing Covid-19 outbreak. Registrants will be sent Zoom links prior to the event.
Based off sector feedback, we have split the program across two weeks with fewer concurrent sessions. We hope that the shorter days mean the program is more accessible for people working and caring from home. As always, please get in contact with officemanager@clcnsw.org.au if you have any feedback on administration or program planning.
If you have any questions, please call Imogen on 0479 138 173 or email officemanager@clcnsw.org.au.
Monday 21 February
11:30am - 1:00pm
Domestic Violence and Victims Compensation Network
Convenors: Sarah Dahlenburg (Mid North Coast Community Legal Centre) and Karen Mifsud (Women's Legal Service NSW)
Open to all Meeting not recorded
Ethics & Professional Responsibility I Substantive Law I Professional Skills
Monday 21 February
1:30pm-3.00pm
Admin and Finance Network
Convenor: Kerrith Sowden (Refugee Advice and Casework Service)
Open to all Meeting not recorded
Practice Management & Business Skills
Tuesday 22 February
9:30am-11:00am
First Nations Justice Working Group
Convenor: Zachary Armytage (Community Legal Centres NSW)
Open to all Meeting not recorded
Ethics & Professional Responsibility I Professional Skills
Community and Social Worker Network (new network)
Interim Convenor: Evelyn Chan (Women's Legal Service NSW)
Open to all Meeting not recorded
Ethics & Professional Responsibility I Professional Skills
Tuesday 22 February
11:30am-1:00pm
Coordinators & Directors (Part 1)
Convenors: Arlia Fleming (Blue Mountains and Central Tablelands Community Legal Centre) and Robert Pelletier (Macarthur Legal Centre)
Meeting for C&D's Meeting not recorded
Practice Management & Business Skills
Prisoner's Rights Working Group
Convenor: Carolyn Jones (Women's Legal Service NSW)
Open to all Meeting not recorded
Ethics & Professional Responsibility I Substantive Law I Professional Skills
Tuesday 22 February
1:30pm-3:00pm
Coordinators & Directors (Part 2)
Convenors: Arlia Fleming (Blue Mountains and Central Tablelands Community Legal Centre) and Robert Pelletier (Macarthur Legal Centre)
Meeting for C&D's Meeting not recorded
Practice Management & Business Skills
Family Law, Care and Protection Network
Convenors: Kenn Clift (Intellectual Disability Rights Service), Luke Carr (Redfern Legal Centre), Symmon Andrews (Central Coast Community Legal Centre)
Training1.30pm- 2.30pm I Network Meeting 2.30pm-3.00pm
Care & Protection: s86 mediations, s87&s98(3) joinders and s90 restoration - what you should know?
Tim Mara I Head of the Care and Protection team at Rafton Family Lawyers
Open to all Meeting not recorded I Training recorded
Ethics & Professional Responsibility I Substantive Law I Professional Skills
Wednesday 23 February
9:30am-11:00am
Law Reform and Policy Network
Convenors: Alistair Lawrie (Public Interest Advocacy Centre)
Open to all Meeting not recorded
Ethics & Professional Responsibility I Substantive Law I Professional Skills
Youth Advocacy Network (NSW)
Convenor: Matthew Keeley (Youth Law Australia)
Open to all Meeting not recorded
Ethics & Professional Responsibility I Substantive Law I Professional Skills
Wednesday 23 February
11:30am-1:00pm
Communications Network
Convenors: Finn O'Keefe (Redfern Legal Centre) and Stella Maynard (Community Legal Centres NSW)
Open to all Meeting not recorded
Professional Skills
Professional Indemnity Insurance (PII) Committee
Convenors: Ali Mojtahedi (Immigration Advice and Rights Centre) and Louise Coady (Western Sydney Community Legal Centre)
Meeting for Principal Solicitors Meeting not recorded
Ethics & Professional Responsibility I Professional Skills I Practice Management & Business Skills I Substantive Law
Wednesday 23 February
1:30pm-3:00pm
Regional, Rural and Remote (RRR) Network
Convenors: Cassandra Coleman (Warra-Warra Legal Service), Julia Adamski (Hunter Community Legal Centre) and Stacy Treloar (Far West Community Legal Centre)
Open to all Meeting not recorded
Ethics & Professional Responsibility I Professional Skills
Employment and Discrimination Law Network
Convenors: Sharmilla Bargon (Redfern Legal Centre) and Anastasia Coroneo (Youth Law Australia)
Training: Intersection of Whistleblower legislation and employment law.
Kieren Pedler (Senior Solicitor, HRLC)
Open to all Training session recorded
Ethics & Professional Responsibility I Substantive Law I Professional Skills
Thursday 24 February
9:30am-11:00am
Health Justice Partnerships Network
Convenors: Diane Anagnos (Kingsford Legal Centre) and Carolyn Odgers (Justice Connect)
Open to all Meeting not recorded
Ethics & Professional Responsibility I Professional Skills
Thursday 24 February
11:30am-1:00pm
Community Legal Education Workers
Convenors: Nalika Padmasena (Seniors Rights Service) and Melanie Kallmier (Mid North Coast Community Legal Centre)
Open to all Session recorded
Ethics & Professional Responsibility I Professional Skills
Thursday 24 February
1:30pm-3:00pm
Community of Practice: Vicarious Trauma
Convenor: Roslyn Cook (Inner City Legal Centre)
Open to all Meeting not recorded
Ethics & Professional Responsibility I Professional Skills
Monday 28 February
9:30am-3:00pm
Yarn Up
For community legal centre Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander staff to meet and discuss key policy and practice issues.
Convenor: Zachary Armytage (Aboriginal Legal Access Program Coordinator, Community Legal Centres NSW)
For CLC Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander only Meeting not recorded Ethics & Professional Responsibility I Professional Skills
Tuesday 1 March
9:30am-11:00am
Opening Plenary
Welcome to country: Brendan Kerin
Opening Plenary: Reflections: Responsiveness, Resilience and Reckonings
It’s been two years of continual disruption and uncertainty. As a sector and as individuals we’ve been challenged to change the way we work and have found new ways to engage with clients, stakeholders and each other. We’ve created new initiatives and projects, found funding, implemented new technology and have continued to assist over 55,000 clients. Join us to reflect on the amazing work the sector has done in the last two years and acknowledge the people that have done that work under difficult circumstances.
Panel Host: Tim Leach I ED I CLCNSW
Sarah Dale I Centre Director & Principal Solicitor I RACS
Deb McMillan I ED I Central Coast Community Legal Centre
Melanie Kallmier I ED I Mid-North Coast CLC
Robert Pelletier I ED I Macarthur Legal Centre
Open to all Session recorded
Practice Management & Business Skills
Tuesday 1 March
11:30am-12:30pm
Showcase: Innovation, practice and technology: NALA, our chatbot
A session where people can present on new projects, initiatives, wins and challenges. As the first recipients of the NSW Access to Justice Innovation Fund, Marrickville Legal Centre developed NALA, a chatbot that helps people with basic legal queries online. Since launch, NALA identifies high-volume, low-complexity matters and automates an appropriate response, effectively allowing Marrickville Legal Centre to reallocate its finite resources to assist complex, high-need clients faster.
Presenters: Justin Abi-Daher (Acting Managing Principal Solicitor, Marrickville Legal Centre) and Chris Anderson (Operations Manager, Marrickville Legal Centre). Presenting from the land of the Gadigal, Wangal, Guringal, Wallumedegai and Cammeraygal people of the Eora Nation.
Open to all Session recorded
Practice Management & Business Skills
Tuesday 1 March
1:30pm-3:00pm
Social Movement Lawyering: Reflective Practice
Reflective practice is more than navel-gazing and a rushed effort to complete an annual appraisal. It is recognised as a core professional capability that law graduates should demonstrate before admission to practice. (Admittedly, some of us have come a long way since then!) So, how do we do it, when do we do it, and how can we use it to reflect on our roles as individuals, and as a sector to effect more meaningful change?
In this interactive session you will be invited to share in breakout rooms your perspectives on the micro (a disorienting dilemma in practice, taking a look at our hidden biases and assumptions), and then the macro – why we do what we do, and how can we do it better?
Presenter: Hayley McEwen (Lecturer, Lawyer, Discipline Lead, Centre for Law and Justice, Charles Sturt University). Presenting from the land of the Wiradjuri, Ngunawal, Gundungarra and Biripai peoples.
Open to all Session recorded
Ethics & Professional Responsibility
Tuesday 1 March
3:15pm-4:45pm
ICT Tech for the Non-Techies: Commercial Case Management Systems: Do we make the move?
There is lots of talk about commercial case management systems. Take the tech out and let's talk about what they can do for workflows, risk management, efficiency, job satisfaction and their potential benefits to clients. And let’s talk about the pitfalls and the resources you might need. Join us for a lively discussion because our panellists have a lot to say, and we know you do too. Bring your insights, experience and questions.
Presenters
- Camilla Pandolfini (Principal Solicitor, Public Interest Advocacy Centre)
- Greg Rohan (Director and Solicitor, Immigration Advice & Rights Centre)
- Lee Bunney (Principal Solicitor, Northern Rivers Community Legal Centre)
- Cath Evans (Chief Operating Officer, Wotton + Kearney)
Open to all Session recorded
Practice Management & Business Skills
Wednesday 2 March
9:30am-11:00am
An overview of social security entitlements: How to do a health check for your clients to ensure they are receiving what they should be
This session will outline the basics of social security law. It will address both payments and processes, aiming to help volunteers, community workers and solicitors spot situations where their client may have an issue with Centrelink - including situations where the problem may not be obvious. It will address criteria integral to eligibility including residency, age, relationship status, income and assets, children, waiting periods, illness and injury, and family and domestic violence. The session will also cover common reasons for debts, and the appeals/review process.
Presenter: Sally Cameron (Community Legal Education & Communications Officer, Welfare Rights Service)
Presenting from the land of the Gubbi Gubbi people
Open to all Session recorded
Substantive law
Wednesday 2 March
11:30am-12:30pm
These two separate sessions run concurrently, select one.
Showcase: Protecting and empowering whistleblowers: Introducing the Human Rights Law Centre's new whistleblowing project
A session where people can present on new projects, initiatives, wins and challenges. When Australians speak up about wrongdoing, injustice and unlawful conduct, they make the country a better place. But Australia's whistleblowers are suffering. 80% of people who speak up about wrongdoing at work suffer some form of retaliation. Australia has had whistleblower protection laws in different forms for decades, but there have been just a handful of cases - few successful. This session will explore the the potential for different areas of law to protect and empower whistleblowers. The aim of the session is to give all lawyers an understanding of how, in a wide range of contexts, whistleblowing protections might be helpful to their clients. The session will also introduce a new whistleblowing-focused initiative from the Human Rights Law Centre.
Presenter: Kieren Pender (Senior Lawyer, Human Rights Law Centre). Presenting from Gadigal land.
Open to all Session recorded
Substantive Law
Showcase: Community Legal Centres Australia - What we are working on: Power BI
A session where people can present on new projects, initiatives, wins and challenges. More information to follow.
Presenter: Suzanne Slegers (Data Manager, Community Legal Centres Australia). Presenting from Gadigal land.
Open to all Session recorded
Practice Management and Business Skills
Wednesday 2 March
1:30pm-3:00pm
Trauma Informed Practice: It's a Hard "No"
How hard is it to say "no" to someone who really needs help? How much time do you spend in appointments, at reception or on the phone listening to someone tell their story with that sinking feeling that you know you can't help but you can't say "no"? The situations we find ourselves in are because of systemic issues, circumstance, our own empathy and compassion and the way we run our practices. Join the discussion about how we work with empathy and give our time and resources to those we can help, without feeling bad for those we can't? A session full of dilemma, stories and hard learnt strategies for all staff.
Facilitator: Ken Beilby (Senior Solicitor, Central Coast Community Legal Centre). Presenting from the land of the Darkinyung people.
Open to all Session recorded
Ethics & Professional Responsibility Professional Skills
Wednesday 2 March
3:15pm-4:45pm
Legal Practice Issues: Assessing Client Capacity
Assessing a client's capacity for providing instructions and witnessing documents particularly in outreach and health-justice partnership settings is a sensitive and legally challenging issue. Our colleagues from Sparke Helmore have worked in the Cancer Council's Legal Clinic and routinely work with people who need to finalise wills, enduring powers of attorney or appointments of enduring guardianship. Learn from their experience and expertise of working with clients in difficult circumstances.
Presenters: Andrew White, Partner and Aimee Dash, Senior Associate Sparke Helmore). Presenting from the lands of Gamilaraay and Whadjuk Nyoongar people.
Open to all Session recorded
Ethics & Professional Responsibility
Community Legal Centres NSW indicates whether a session may be appropriate to attract Continuing Professional Development (CPD) points but takes no responsibility if the content does not meet CPD requirements. Sessions are not accredited by the NSW Law Society. Community legal centre solicitors should make their own assessment of whether the session meets their CPD requirements, and maintain their own records for meeting CPD requirements. Further information about CPD requirements are available on the Law Society NSW website.
For further information contact our Sector Development Manager: katrina.ironside@clcnsw.org.au.