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Our Mission

MidPenn Legal Services is a non-profit, public interest law firm that provides high quality free civil legal services to low-income residents and survivors of domestic violence and sexual assault in 18 counties in Central Pennsylvania.
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Our Impact in Fiscal Year 2024-2025

  • People Helped

    21,096

  • Cases Handled

    9,744

  • Economic Benefit $

    4,448,732.68

  • Advocate Hours

    115,512

News & Notes

Studies have found that volunteering can positively impact both your body and your mind. Here are a few ways doing good in your community can do some good for yourself!

DETROIT, MI – A growing body of research continues to confirm what housing advocates have long asserted: eviction is not only a housing emergency but a public health crisis with community-wide consequences, particularly for Black mothers and children.

New studies are revealing that eviction’s impact extends far beyond the loss of shelter, touching on maternal health, child development, and the structural inequities woven into American housing policy. In Detroit, where gentrification, rising rents and illegal evictions have become increasingly common, social epidemiologist Shawnita Sealy-Jefferson of The Ohio State University is leading a team of researchers working to quantify the community-wide effects of housing instability.

Their research initiative, SECURE (Social Epidemiology to Combat Unjust Residential Evictions), found that Black mothers living in Metro Detroit neighborhoods with higher eviction filing rates face a 68% higher risk of premature birth — one of the leading causes of infant mortality in the United States.

What’s more alarming, according to Sealy-Jefferson, is that the pregnant person does not need to be the one experiencing the eviction. The stress from witnessing a neighbor’s displacement or living under the constant threat of eviction in a high-turnover neighborhood can be enough to trigger serious physiological symptoms that increase the risk of preterm birth.

Summer is a time when many children may not have access to the free and reduced-price meals they get during the school year, and households might need a little extra help putting meals on the table.

SUN Bucks, Pennsylvania’s Summer EBT program, is a new grocery benefits program that provides households with a one-time payment of $120 for each eligible child to buy food while school is out. Benefits can be used at local participating retailers to purchase groceries.

Many children will get these benefits automatically, but some households will need to apply. The benefits will be added to an existing SNAP/TANF EBT card or a newly issued Summer EBT card.

Note: Benefits for Summer of 2025 will begin being issued to all eligible children in mid-August.