Juvenile Rights Project
       Home       History       A Teen's Guide To Foster Care       JRP Board & Staff

 Support JRP

Juvenile Law Reader Issues:
Upcoming Events / Press Releases

Employment Opportunities

Educational Stability for Children in Foster Care (HB3075-A)

Reducing minority overrepresentation in school discipline

Past and Current
Advocacy Efforts

HelpLine

SchoolWorks and Education Project

Mental Health Services, Past, Present and Future.

System of Care Agreement

Resources, Links and Publications

Education Voucher information for Foster Children

Support JRP

Read our Email privacy warning
Board of Directors:

Sharon A. Reese, J.D.- Board President      Assistant General Counsel
Knowledge Learning Corporation.

Karen Shean - Board Vice President
Vice President, Center Operations,
Knowledge Learning Corporation.

Emily Kropf Shannon, J.D. - Board Secretary

Mike Chewning, Behavioral and Developmental Pediatric Nurse Practitioner
Northwest Early Childhood Institute.

 Sarah LeClair, J.D.
Attorney at Law

David Dorman, Principal.
Fern Hill Elementary School.

Christian Oelke, Partner
Scarborough, McNeese, O'Brien and Kilkenny, P.C.

Angela Kimball, Director of State Policy, NAMI National

Timothy Speth,
Senior Advisor, Center for Schools, Family & Community, Northwest Regional Education Laboratory

Jan Dawson
Public Relations, Arnerich, Massina & Associates, Inc.

Interim Executive Director:

Mark S. McKechnie

Operations Manager/Systems Administrator:

Jeff Jenks

Office Manager:

Jesse Jordan

Case Manager/Financial Assistant:

Carma Gallucci

Social Worker(s):

Kristin Hajny
Mark S. McKechnie

Staff Attorneys:

Brian V. Baker
Heather Clark
Kevin Ellis
Lynn Haxton
Mary Kane
Lisa Ann Kay
Julie H. McFarlane
Jennifer McGowan
Christa Obold-Eshleman
Elizabeth J. Sher
Angela Sherbo
Pat Sheridan-Walker
Mary Skjelset
Tim Sosinski
Stuart S. Spring
Tawnya Stiles-Johnson
Julie Sutton
Kathryn Underhill

Investigators:

Daniel Buck
Meghan Neumann

Legal Assistants:

DeWayne Charley
Nick Demagalski
Anne Funk
Liz Howlan
Lisa Jacob
Gretchen Taylor-Jenks
Julie Patterson

Legal Clerks:

Rakeem Washington

Helpline Coordinator:

Heidi Moon

Administrative Assistant:

Shemyia Clemons

File Clerk:

Clarissa Youse

Email Privacy Warning

E-mail is not yet a secure and private means of communication. As an e-mail message is transmitted through the internet there are opportunities when the message may be accessed by third parties. The speed and volume of traffic mean that as a practical matter this presents little risk. But if someone were looking for your message they could find it.

Because of this potential some people believe - but others disagree - that sending an unencrypted e-mail outside a company's intranet may lose the attorney-client privilege for that communication. This would be significant because we could lose the privacy protections that the privilege provides, and in a litigation context we may be required to produce the communication in discovery. Most courts which have considered the matter have concluded that use of ordinary e-mail does not lose the attorney client privilege.

To avoid this issue entirely, however, you should consider using an encryption procedure when sending important communications or sensitive attachments.

© 2002 Juvenile Rights Project, Inc.