Stanford Law’s Community Law Clinic Celebrates Opening of New Redwood City Home

Event Marks More Than Two Decades of Delivering Free Legal Aid to Low-Income Residents of San Mateo and Santa Clara Counties

Juliet M. Brodie, Professor of Law and Director of the Stanford Community Law Clinic
Juliet M. Brodie, Professor of Law and Director of the Stanford Community Law Clinic

Stanford Law School’s Community Law Clinic (CLC) opened the doors of its new downtown Redwood City home on Wednesday, November 19, celebrating what clinic director Professor Juliet M. Brodie called the clinic’s “new forever home.”

Since 2003, the CLC has been a vital legal resource for low-income residents of the communities surrounding Stanford University, as well as a training ground where Stanford Law students learn by serving those most in need. The CLC is one of 11 clinics that make up the  Mills Legal Clinic at Stanford Law School, all of which allow students the opportunity to spend at least a full academic quarter focusing on real-world lawyering, handling cases from start to finish under faculty supervision. Students in the CLC and their faculty advisors represent clients in three core areas: eviction defense, securing Social Security disability benefits, and removing barriers to reentry after incarceration.

The CLC is the only clinic located outside the Stanford campus, serving as a bridge between Stanford Law School and the broader community. The new location in Redwood City is close to the San Mateo County Superior Court and easily reachable by public transportation.

“This space finally reflects who we are and the work we do,” Brodie said at the event, which brought together community legal service providers, clinic alumni, students, Stanford Law faculty, and supporters. “After years of temporary locations, it feels like we’ve ended up in exactly the right place—embedded in the community, easy for clients to reach, and designed to be a welcoming, dignified environment for anyone who walks through the door.”

Dean George Triantis providing remarks at the Community Law Clinic Opening

George Triantis, JSD ’89, the Richard E. Lang Professor of Law and Dean of Stanford Law School, underscored that although opening the clinic’s new home is an important milestone, the essence of the clinic lies in the people who run it and those it serves.

“The strength of the Community Law Clinic isn’t just the space, though the space helps,” Triantis said. “It’s about the people and its mission. In clinic, students learn that being an effective lawyer is not just about appearing in court. It involves a broader assessment of their client’s needs, a variety of lawyering skills in serving them and collaboration with other professional and support services. With its location embedded in the community, the CLC—as a full-time student engagement—provides a unique clinical experience.”

Decades of Community-Driven Work

The CLC’s roots stretch back to the mid-1980s, when a group of Stanford Law students launched the East Palo Alto Community Law Project (EPACLP), a neighborhood-based legal services model that endured into the early 2000s. EPACLP’s off-campus location in a low-income neighborhood was central to its mission, and that later became the defining feature of the CLC, which stepped into EPACLP’s mandate when it closed. 

The exceptionally long tenures of the clinic’s leaders and staff members have helped define its mission. Brodie has been with the clinic since 2006, clinical supervising attorney Danielle Jones since 2004, and clinical supervising attorney Lisa Douglass since 2007. Legal assistant Lupe Buenrostro started working at the EPACLP in 1989 and legal assistant Lakeshia Phillips-Marshall joined in 2018.

Community Law Clinic leaders and staff (from left to right): Guadalupe Buenrostro, Lakeshia Phillips-Marshall, Juliet Brodie, Lisa Douglass, and Danielle Jones

Over the years, the CLC has carried its mission through a series of beloved but imperfect locations—a deteriorating building in East Palo Alto, a cramped office off a remote highway 101 interchange, and most recently, temporary quarters on Stanford’s Redwood City campus.

Despite its many moves, the clinic never lost its sense of place, Brodie said. Each office kept the CLC embedded in the neighborhoods where its clients lived and worked, shaping a model of legal service that has always been rooted in the community itself.

Stanford Law’s Community Law Clinic Celebrates Opening of New Redwood City Home 3

“Looking around this grand opening event, we see alumni of CLC that go back many, many years, many of whom are now working day in, day out in the public interest,” Brodie said. “Or they are doing pro bono work in their law firms, or working for government agencies. This is resource-intensive work, and the fact that Stanford University and Stanford Law School have chosen to continue to invest in bricks and mortar in the community means the world to us.”

About Stanford Law School

Stanford Law School is one of the world’s leading institutions for legal scholarship and education. Its alumni are among the most influential decision makers in law, politics, business, and high technology. Faculty members argue before the Supreme Court, testify before Congress, produce outstanding legal scholarship and empirical analysis, and contribute regularly to the nation’s press as legal and policy experts. Stanford Law School has established a model for legal education that provides rigorous interdisciplinary training, hands-on experience, global perspective and a focus on public service.