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LOAN FORGIVENESS PROGRAMEXPANDS

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Kim M. Boyle ’87

Kim M. Boyle ’87

THE LAW SCHOOL is expanding its loan forgiveness program this year so that more graduates will be eligible for greater benefits.

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The Virginia Loan Forgiveness Program will now help repay the loans of all graduates earning less than $100,000 annually, up from $85,000. Participants in the program who earn less than $80,000 annually (previously $65,000) will receive benefits covering 100% of their qualifying law school loans. Those earning between $80,000 and $100,000 will receive prorated benefits based on income.

“We are grateful for the alumni support making this expansion possible,” Dean Risa Goluboff said. “Our students go on to work as prosecutors, public defenders, in nonprofits and legal aid organizations, and in federal, state and local governments. This increased funding for loan forgiveness will continue to make those careers possible, while also supporting graduates who strike out on their own as solo practitioners or pursue practice experiences that are less remunerative or uncertain—like working in-house for a startup.”

Though the expansion will in practice mostly affect graduates working in public interest roles, it will also provide relief to graduates working in the private sector. The school is simplifying the requirements to participate in the program by allowing any kind of employment to qualify, so long as legal skills are required for the role. With the median and 25th percentile private-sector salaries both at $215,000 for the Class of 2022, in effect the program will continue primarily to support alumni working in public service.

Graduates entering qualifying employment within two years of graduation or completing a clerkship are eligible for the program.

“By removing financial barriers to careers in public service, we hope this change empowers students taking on graduate school loans to pursue any career they wish, with substantial support from the Law School,” said Assistant Dean for Public Service Leah Gould, who serves as director of the Mortimer Caplin Public Service Center.

The expansion is made possible by alumni and other donors, including Stephen ’72 and Martha Anne Yandle, and the Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation.

The expansion of the loan forgiveness program builds upon increases in the Law School’s funding for public service over the past several years, including guaranteeing funding for qualifying students working in public service jobs over the summer. The Law School last year began fully shouldering the costs of the grants through funding from alumni and other donors, with more than $800,000 going to 167 students in 2022. Funds raised by the Public Interest Law Association, a student organization that began the grant program, now go toward the PILA+ program, which distributed an additional $40,000 to students living in areas with higher costs of living.

The number of Law School summer fellowships earmarked for public service has also grown in recent years, with new additions to the longstanding Linda Fairstein Public Service Fellowships including the Katherine and David deWilde ’67 Public Interest Summer Fellowships, the Democracy Summer Fellowships and the Women’s Health Summer Fellowships. In 2017, the school created the Virginia Public Service Scholarships—full-tuition scholarships with flagship endowment funds from Tim ’83 and Lynne Palmer, Dave Burke ’93, and Ted ’92 and Keryn Mathas in honor of former professor Bill Stuntz ’84. Twelve students have received the award.

Other initiatives include an expanded menu of clinical offerings, new courses focused on public interest skills, the hiring of additional career counselors, and establishing the Shaping Justice conference and awards to honor the work of alumni serving in public interest careers.

—Mary Wood

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ETHAN TREACY ’23 and DEV RANJAN ’23 won the 94th William Minor Lile Moot Court Competition.

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YEWANDE FORD ’23 was named this year’s recipient of the Gregory H. Swanson Award.

HELEN SONG ’23 will assist survivors of human trafficking as the 22nd Powell Fellow in Legal Services.

BIRUKTAWIT “BIRDY” ASSEFA ’23 was named the new editor-inchief of the Virginia Law Review.

5 TOMMY CERJAS ’23 was elected president of the Student Bar Association.

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NATALIE ANDERSON ’22, SUJATA BAJRACHARYA ’23, MEGAN JONES ’22, ELANA OSER ’23 and ARIANA SMITH ’23 will join the federal government in the fall through attorney honors programs.

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SEAN GRAY ’24 won the Virginia Law Review Online 2022 Student Essay Competition for “Chronic Nuisance Ordinances, Impossible Choices, and State Constitutions.”

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MARY MERKEL ’23 was awarded an Equal Justice Works Fellowship to help families navigate New York City public school hearings.

9 As an Equal Justice America fellow, RUBY CHERIAN ’23 will represent incarcerated and formerly incarcerated clients in Virginia on civil rights matters.

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Professor RUTH MASON (not pictured) and NATALIE MAUCH ’23 (from left) helped coach KATRINA MEYER ’23, KATHRYN KENNY ’24, DANIEL ELLIOTT ’24 and NEIL KELLIHER ’23 to a second-place finish at the International and European Tax Moot Court competition in March. Kelliher also won first place in the International Fiscal Association USA 2022 International Tax Student Writing Competition.

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