Find our latest blog posts and media hits in one place.
Looking for our newsletter archive? Check it out here.
Find our latest blog posts and media hits in one place.
Looking for our newsletter archive? Check it out here.
How OCJF’s Legal Empowerment Program equips our community
By OCJF Staff
[Click here to read this piece in a separate page]
The justice gap is the “difference between the civil legal needs of low-income Americans and the resources available to meet those needs.” It means that people are left without the legal support they need, whether they’re facing routine challenges or profound injustices. For many, this forces them to navigate life-changing legal systems without the information, resources, or support required to succeed.
In Orange County, this gap is especially severe for immigrants facing detention or deportation. Immigration proceedings are civil matters, meaning people have no right to a public defender—even when the consequences are permanent. More than 236,000 undocumented residents live in Orange County, yet legal resources are severely limited. At the Santa Ana Immigration Court, many people go to court alone, without representation.
The results are devastating. In fiscal year 2025, only 4.1% of unrepresented immigrants in California were granted immigration relief. In contrast, 94.9% of represented immigrants secured relief—underscoring just how critical legal support can be.
The justice gap in our community looks like too few attorneys, accredited representatives, and other qualified professionals to meet immigrants’ legal needs. OCJF established our Legal Empowerment Program (LEP) as a community-driven effort to close that gap.
Giving Our Community The Tools It Needs
We see legal empowerment as a critical approach to closing the justice gap—not just by expanding access to legal support, but by equipping our neighbors with the knowledge and tools to navigate the law themselves. It empowers individuals and communities to know, use, and even shape the laws that affect their lives. In Orange County, nearly half of all new immigration court cases are filed without legal representation—making our work not just important, but urgent.
Since 2017, our LEP has equipped thousands of community members with the tools and resources needed to understand their rights and navigate legal systems, empowering them to advocate for themselves and their families. It has grown into a trusted resource for immigrants and allies alike.
Here’s what it looks like in action:
We’ve built this program alongside our community—guided by the insight of trusted partners, immigrant leaders, and those most impacted by injustice. What began as a handful of workshops has grown into a powerful, county-wide infrastructure for legal empowerment.
The justice gap may be a national crisis, but in Orange County, we’re making sure that immigrants have the knowledge, tools, and support they need to close it—one workshop, one clinic, and one community at a time.
How OCJF makes freedom accessible to all
By OCJF Staff
[Check back later this month for our new post]