Community Care

 

1. Eligibility for legal aid

The survivor has to meet both of these two criteria:

a. Have a type of case for which legal aid is available (‘in scope’ for legal aid)

b. Come within the financial means test

 
  • The following categories of cases are in scope for legal aid:

    • Local authority support for children and families (including families with children with no recourse to public funds)

    • Local authority reports on children in need and accommodation of children

    • Local authority and NHS services due to illness, disability or mental capacity (including Court of Protection)

  • The survivor will need to qualify financially for legal aid. There is a legal aid eligibility checker that members of the public can use, follow the link for ‘community care law’. If she has a partner she lives with, their finances will also be assessed as part of hers.

2. Finding legal advice

 
    • Gov.UK legal aid lawyers search engine
      This is a directory of all solicitors with a legal aid contract around the country – enter the town or postcode and tick “community care

    • AdviceLocal search engine
      AdviceLocal have developed a map of advice services across the country assisting in social welfare law: welfare benefits, debt, housing, employment, community care, asylum & immigration. (It does not include the main national organisations, advice services that are open for only a small number of hours a week and law clinics that don't provide a service in social welfare law). The services are mostly law centres, university law clinics, housing advice services and also legal aid solicitors who do social welfare law. Legal aid solicitors and some law centres will take on cases.

    If the survivor does not qualify financially for legal aid, she can still contact a specialist community care solicitor using the above links and ask about paying privately.

    • LawWorks – national umbrella for pro bono services
      On the LawWorks website you can search for pro bono legal advice clinics around the country on different areas of law. Search “legal advice for individuals”, then “free advice clinics” – scroll down to the search function where you can enter the area of law and distance from home address.

Need to contact us?

If you have looked at our signposting materials and you still want to contact us, you can send a message below. If you don’t feel that you can make a request in writing you can call us on 020 7092 1807 and leave a message and we will call you back. Please note that we don’t provide an emergency service so we may not be able to get back to you at busy periods for up to three working days. If your enquiry is not about violence against women and girls, then it is out of our remit and we won’t be able to assist.