Student Debt Relief
- Law School LRAPs
- Student Debt
- CCRAA – Income-Based Repayment
- CCRAA – Public Service Loan Forgiveness
- Law School Grants and Scholarships
- Law School Tuition and Fees
- Employer-Based LRAPs
- State-Based LRAPs
- Public Service Salaries
- Non-Legal LRAPs
- Webinars
- Civil Legal Assistance Attorney Student Loan Repayment Program
- John R. Justice Student Loan Repayment Program
ANNOUNCEMENTS
- Student registration for the 2010 Conference and Career Fair is now open.
- Tickets now on sale for our 2010 Annual Awards Dinner. Join us as we honor public interest law leaders.
- Please view our latest job postings and see how you can help mobilize the next generation of public interest lawyers.
- Now accepting applications for 2011 Fellowships. Jump start your career in public interest law!
Student Debt Relief
Featured Resources
Podcast: Get full credit for loan payments
Public Service Loan Forgiveness cancels the remaining balance on Federal Direct loans after 10 years of qualifying monthly payments. This six-minute podcast explains what constitutes a qualifying monthly payment.
Student Debt Relief Webinar Series
Getting Your Student Loans Forgiven: How government and nonprofit employees can earn public service loan forgiveness
Most Recent
John R. Justice Student Loan Repayment Program (JRJ)
This Resource Includes
NEW: Resources for Designated State Agencies
Equal Justice Works, in consultation with the Bureau of Justice Administration, has developed a description of the grant application process and sample State JRJ Program Guidelines and Application. These materials are designed to assist managers of the designated state agencies charged with the responsibility of administering John R. Justice funds in their state.
- John R. Justice Grant Program Process
- State John R. Justice Program Sample Guidelines Explanation and Instructions
- Sample State John R. Justice Program 2010 - 2011 Guidelines
- Sample State John R. Justice 2010 - 2011 Application
- State of Illinois JRJ Program Narrative
Loan Repayment Assistance Available for State and Local Prosecutors and Defenders
The John R. Justice Student Loan Repayment Program (JRJ) provides loan repayment assistance for state and federal public defenders and state prosecutors who agree to remain employed as public defenders and prosecutors for at least three years. Repayment benefits cannot exceed $10,000 in any calendar year or an aggregate total of $60,000 per attorney. State agencies administering the John R. Justice Grant Program must ensure that funding for loan repayment is allocated equally between prosecutors and public defenders. State agencies must give priority to those eligible beneficiaries who have the “least ability to repay their loans.”
State by State Administration
Governor-designated state agencies (or in the case of Washington, D.C., a Mayor-designated agency) will conduct outreach and education, solicit applications from eligible recipients, and administer the JRJ Program in each state. Each Governor-designated state agency is eligible to apply for funding to distribute equally between prosecutors and defenders within their state.
Funds will be available to states based on the total population of each state with a minimum base allocation of $100,000.
Governor-designated state agencies must register with OPJ’s Grants Management System (GMS) and apply by 8 p.m. eastern time on July 27, 2010.
Eligible Attorneys
State and federal public defenders and state prosecutors who agree to remain employed as public defenders and prosecutors for at least three years.
- All eligible attorneys must be “continually licensed to practice law.”
- Eligible prosecutors are full-time employees of a state or unit of local government (including tribal government), who “prosecute criminal or juvenile delinquency cases at the state or unit of local government level.”
- Public defenders are either full-time employees of a state or unit of local government (including tribal government), or full-time employees of a nonprofit organization operating under a contract with a state or unit of local government, who “provide legal representation to indigent persons in criminal or juvenile delinquency cases.”
- Full-time federal defender attorneys in a defender organization providing legal representation to indigent persons in criminal or juvenile delinquency cases pursuant to Subsection )(g) of section 3006A of Title 18, United States Code are eligible.
- Attorneys providing supervision, education, or training of other persons providing prosecutor or public defender representation are also eligible.
- Prosecutors who are employees of the federal government are not eligible.
- Attorneys who are in private practice (and not a full-time employee of a non-profit organization) are not eligible, even if providing public defense services under contract to the state.
- An attorney must not be in default on repayment of any federal student loans.
Eligible Loans
Federal student loans (both FFEL and Direct loans) are eligible for assistance; however, loans in default, Parent PLUS loans, and private, commercial, or alternative student loans are not eligible.
Tools
- Equal Justice Works Webinars
- Bureau of Justice Assistance John R. Justice Student Loan Repayment Program Information Page
- FY 2010 JRJ State Solicitation
- Grant Program Allocations
- Governor Designated State Agencies
- John R. Justice Student Loan Repayment Program (JRJSLRP) Service Agreement Fillable PDF Form
- John R. Justice Prosecutors and Defenders Incentive Act of 2008
This Directory was last updated on July 19, 2010. Each entry in the Directory is verified and updated at least annually.







