About Us

How We Work

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Direct Services

Our team provides free direct legal services and support or matches clients with pro bono advocates, ensuring they have a partner standing with them, their families,  and our communities as they pursue justice.

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Policy Advocacy

We address the root causes of inequities in our society by advocating for inclusive policy solutions in collaboration with grassroots coalitions and the communities most impacted by systemic oppression.

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Impact Litigation

Our team provides free direct legal services and support or matches clients with pro bono advocates, ensuring they have a partner standing with them, their families,  and our communities as they pursue justice.

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Pro Bono Partnerships

Since its inception, Public Counsel has relied upon the generous donation of pro bono services from lawyers, legal professionals, and law students as the keystone for our model of delivering free legal services to low-income communities.

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Resource Library

Popular Resources

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Guide

10/29/25

Robo de Identidad: Qué hacer si alguien está usando su número de Seguro Social

Descubrir que alguien ha usado su número de Seguro Social (SSN) puede ser angustiante y abrumador. No estás solo. Este folleto explica los pasos clave que puede seguir, dependiendo de...

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Guide

10/29/25

Identity Theft: What To Do If Someone Is Using Your Social Security Number

Finding out someone has used your Social Security number (SSN) can be upsetting and overwhelming. You are not alone. This handout explains the key steps you can take, depending on...

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Guide

09/26/25

Guía sobre cómo presentar y notificar una respuesta a una demanda no verificada

¿Cómo presento y notifico una respuesta a una demanda?

Learn More

How We Work

See All

Direct Services

Our team provides free direct legal services and support or matches clients with pro bono advocates, ensuring they have a partner standing with them, their families,  and our communities as they pursue justice.

Learn More

Policy Advocacy

We address the root causes of inequities in our society by advocating for inclusive policy solutions in collaboration with grassroots coalitions and the communities most impacted by systemic oppression.

Learn More

Impact Litigation

Our team provides free direct legal services and support or matches clients with pro bono advocates, ensuring they have a partner standing with them, their families,  and our communities as they pursue justice.

Learn More

Pro Bono Partnerships

Since its inception, Public Counsel has relied upon the generous donation of pro bono services from lawyers, legal professionals, and law students as the keystone for our model of delivering free legal services to low-income communities.

Learn More

Popular Resources

See All

Guide

10/29/25

Robo de Identidad: Qué hacer si alguien está usando su número de Seguro Social

Descubrir que alguien ha usado su número de Seguro Social (SSN) puede ser angustiante y abrumador. No estás solo. Este folleto explica los pasos clave que puede seguir, dependiendo de...

Learn More

Guide

10/29/25

Identity Theft: What To Do If Someone Is Using Your Social Security Number

Finding out someone has used your Social Security number (SSN) can be upsetting and overwhelming. You are not alone. This handout explains the key steps you can take, depending on...

Learn More

Guide

09/26/25

Guía sobre cómo presentar y notificar una respuesta a una demanda no verificada

¿Cómo presento y notifico una respuesta a una demanda?

Learn More

10/23/25

Groundbreaking Lawsuit Challenges Federal Government’s Discontinuation of School Mental Health Grant

Rural Northern California School District McKinleyville Unified Sues Trump Administration

San Francisco, CA—Public Counsel, Morrison Foerster, and the California Tribal Families Coalition have filed a groundbreaking lawsuit with national implications on behalf of McKinleyville Unified School District, challenging the federal government’s decision not to continue funding a $7 million, five-year school mental health grant.

The lawsuit alleges the federal government abruptly and unlawfully announced its intent to discontinue the grant, flatly violating regulations that require the government to base continuation decisions solely on grantee performance. Instead, the government—without even conducting a performance review—cited only shifting political priorities as the basis for its decision. The lawsuit asks the court to order the government to comply with its own regulations. A victory could open the door for hundreds of other districts affected by similar decisions to seek relief.

With just one counselor for its 850 students, McKinleyville—located in remote Humboldt County—relied on the School-Based Mental Health Services Grant to hire two more professionals, in addition to developing evidence-based policies and practices. 

“This funding is a life-or-death issue for the kids in our rural corner of California,” said Julie Giannini-Previde, the district superintendent. “This funding could change hundreds of lives by providing mental health services to students who literally can’t get it anywhere else.”

The entire nation is facing a youth mental health crisis—with more than one in seven youth ages 6 to 17 experiencing a mental health disorder. At the same time, more than 50% of young people who need it have difficulty accessing mental health care. 

The problem is particularly acute in Humboldt County, where 58% of youth have experienced traumatic events like abuse or homelessness more than once. By high school, more than 20% have considered suicide. Humboldt County also has a significant Native population, whose members have been subjected to intergenerational trauma that has often been the direct result of federal policies.

“For generations, Native families have borne the weight of historical trauma caused by federal policies that tore children from their homes and communities,” said Blair Kreuzer, co-executive director of the California Tribal Families Coalition. “This latest, unconscionable action by the federal government violates the law and repeats that cycle of harm, especially in places where Native and rural youth already face some of the highest barriers to accessing mental health care.”

With few providers and a six-hour round trip to the nearest city, school-based care is the only option for many of Humboldt County’s youth. Paying for care is also a major challenge, as roughly 60% of county students come from lower-income families.

“The Administration’s decision denies children in rural, high-poverty communities the services they need to meaningfully access education,” said Amanda Mangaser Savage, Strategic Litigation Counsel at Public Counsel. “It treats these children—many of whom come from Native communities harmed for generations by the federal government—as disposable.”

The suit, McKinleyville Union School District v. U.S. Department of Education, was filed in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California.

“We filed this lawsuit to ensure that the Department of Education complies with the law and its own regulations before discontinuing critical mental health funding for children in poor rural communities,” said David Wiener of Morrison & Foerster LLP.  “The Department’s unilateral change to its ‘priorities’ is not a lawful basis for discontinuing this much-needed funding for vulnerable students in Humboldt County.”

The district will seek an injunction to rescind the non-continuation decision and to require, going forward, that any decisions be based solely on grantee performance, as the law requires. A coalition of state attorneys general filed a similar suit earlier this year on behalf of multiple states.

  • For media inquiries, email Maria Amezquita with Rise Strategy Group here.
  • Read the complaint here.
  • For more on McKinleyville Union School District v. U.S. Department of Education, click here.

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