The Law School is rapidly earning a national reputation for its program in affordable-housing and community-development law.
"Since 1987, our faculty and students have been instrumental in partnering $75 million in public and private funds with agencies and developers who build or rehab housing for the elderly, the disabled and working poor families," said George M. Hezel, director of the law school's Affordable Housing Clinic.
The clinic's faculty and students use legal tools at their disposal to link funding sources and private and public agencies.
As a result of their efforts, which are primarily oriented to learning and teaching law, at least 1,000 housing units exist today in the community that otherwise would not have been available. And more are in the planning stages.
"Attractive apartment complexes, townhouses, row-houses and single-family dwellings have either been built or carved out from outdated housing projects or residences of religious orders who came to Buffalo at the turn of the 19th century to serve waves of European immigrants," Hezel explained.
The projects have been accomplished working with community partners such as the Diocese of Buffalo, the Franciscan and Jesuit orders, Polish Community Center and Delta Development of Western New York, a not-for-profit developer.
They have included Ellicott Town Center, a complex of townhouses and apartments at Michigan and Clinton streets; a tidy row of townhouses on Buffalo's East Side that is a haven for abused spouses and their children; St. Ann's Apartments at the corner of Emslie Street and Broadway, a former Jesuit residence that now accommodates 19 affordable apartments and earned a prestigious State Historic Preservation Award, and Francis John Apartments, 62 units at Broadway and Memorial Drive located in two large buildings that previously housed a major furniture store.
Clinic students learn the legal techniques and strategies involved from start to finish.
"They begin with the design and analysis of feasibility studies that identify the type and location for housing needed most, do a cost analysis, write the proposal, apply for funding and oversee the finished proposal through operation and sale," Hezel noted.
The second- and third-year law students in the clinic also must complete 15 credits of related courses. Courses include tax and real estate finance law, state and local government law, land use regulation, and poverty and labor law.
Students also are required to pass nine credits selected from a "menu" of an additional 14 courses that include the Community Economic Development Clinic, non-profit corporations, affordable housing development and worker-ownership transactions.
Students also are required to write a paper, which may be presented at seminars or clinics and often are published in the American Bar Association's Journal of Affordable Housing and Community Development, housed at the UB Law School.
"We were the unanimous choice to have the journal at UB, outbidding 20 other law schools to win it," Hezel pointed out proudly, adding that "the UB program's growing reputation brings calls from other schools across the country who want to learn how we operate our clinic."
It has inspired students who have enrolled in the active, dynamic "can-do" clinic to specialize in this field of public-interest law.
"Our students come to see that public-service lawyers who are dedicated to a goal can influence the amount of decent, affordable housing in the community," Hezel said.
He predicted the need for decent, affordable housing will grow faster in the next decade as baby boomers get older and are unable to keep and live in their own homes.
"More people with disabilities now are encouraged to be active members of society and either live independently or in group settings and will need more options for low-cost decent housing, too." Hezel noted.