Teton County Access to Justice Center is a self-help resource center that provides free legal advice to high-income people in Teton County. Wyoming Children`s Law Center, Inc. focuses on legal issues that affect the health, education, safety, or well-being of a child or adult with a disability. Types of legal services include: educational matters such as suspension, expulsion or special education services; Assist youth and vulnerable adults to access necessary services, resolve custody disputes, court-ordered mediation, guardianship of a minor child, guardianship and supervised visitation. Please call to see how we can help you. The ACLU is able to provide legal representation in a limited number of civil liberties cases. If you would like legal assistance from the ACLU, please read the information about the types of cases they accept on their website. Answer a few simple questions to see if you qualify for free legal answers. Then ask a volunteer lawyer a question about your civil law problem. You will receive an email informing you of the answer to your question. Log in to see the answer! wyoming.freelegalanswers.org/ callers to the hotline must go through a screening process to ensure they are eligible for services. After review and qualification, callers can speak to a lawyer, obtain legal advice and request advanced services. The coalition represents low-income victims of domestic violence, sexual assault, dating violence and stalking. Family law, housing, school immigration and economic issues with a focus on security and self-sufficiency.
The Coalition is a national program that provides holistic legal services to victims in every county in Wyoming. Teton County Access to Justice Center`s self-help facilities are available Monday through Friday at the Teton County Law Library, 185 South Willow St., Lower Level, Jackson, WY, 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Reference help in legal resources is available Monday to Thursday from 13:00 to 17:00. We provide legal services at free or discounted rates to protect the safety and well-being of children by: Legal Aid of Wyoming is a statewide nonprofit law firm that assists low-income Wyoming citizens with civil law matters. A tribal advocate is also on staff to provide services to members of the Wind River Indian Reserve. Get the legal forms you need. A complete list of available legal forms can be found here. They deal with many legal issues, including family matters, finances, the workplace and housing.
Get free help filing your taxes. The Federal Volunteer Income Tax Assistance Program (VITA) can help you prepare and file your tax return. Most people are eligible. Wyoming Legal Aid provides free legal advice on the following topics: divorce, custody and visitation, child support, paternity, guardianship, name change, protection orders, housing/landlord matters, financial matters, end-of-life planning, employment matters, public benefits, health care, record expungement, and power of attorney. Economic assistance staff help people by determining eligibility for food assistance (SNAP or Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program), health care (EqualityCare / Medicaid) and home heating (LIEAP or Low Income Energy Assistance Program). We also help people with dependent children find employment through a program called Personal Opportunities With Employment Responsibilities (POWER) and help needy families become self-sufficient through a program called Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF). We connect people and health services such as EqualityCare/Medicaid and WIC (a nutrition program for infants, pregnant and lactating women), programs administered by the Wyoming Department of Health. The Wyoming Coalition provides links to domestic violence and sexual assault programs on its website and provides direct legal services to survivors of sexual assault, domestic violence, and harassment. They can help with legal issues related to education, family law, housing, privacy, security, criminal justice, employment and immigration related to violence.