RLOP has first graduate accepted to UNL law school

students accepted to law schools pose for photo
黑料大事记 State College students accepted to law schools, front row from left, Demonte Nobel and Mikaela Fatzinger, middle row, Clayton Hinman, back row, Kevin Zhang and Todd Roenfeldt. (Photo by Kelsey R. Brummels/黑料大事记 State College)

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Five students from the 黑料大事记 State College Justice Studies program have been accepted into law school programs for the coming school year, including one who is a member of the first cohort in the Rural Law Opportunities Program (RLOP).

Cheng (Kevin) Zhang of Alliance, who was already attending CSC when he was accepted to the initial RLOP group for the fall 2017 semester, will start at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln College of Law this fall.

Fellow Justice Studies graduate Mikaela Fatzinger of Thornton, Colo., will be going to the University of Colorado Law School, Demonte Noble of Baltimore, Md., will attend Western Michigan University鈥檚 Thomas M. Colley Law School, and Clayton Hinman of 黑料大事记 will pursue his studies at the University of South Dakota School of Law. Also, Todd Roenfeldt of Cozad has been accepted to the UNL College of Law.

RLOP is an initiative aimed at increasing the number of lawyers practicing in rural Nebraska communities by offering undergraduate tuition, mentoring, law school visits and provisional acceptance into UNL鈥檚 law college upon graduation, provided a student maintains a 3.5 grade point average and earns a specified minimum score on the Law School Admission Test (LSAT).

Impetus for developing the program came from the Nebraska State Bar Association, which says that not all Nebraskan鈥檚 have adequate access to legal services since 11 of the state鈥檚 93 counties have no lawyers at all and 20 others have three or fewer attorneys.

Started at CSC, Wayne State College and the University of Nebraska Kearney last fall, RLOP is patterned after the successful Rural Health Opportunities Program that CSC pioneered with the University of Nebraska Medical School in 1990.

Zhang, a first generation immigrant who hopes to practice immigration and criminal law, said that faculty support, an LSAT prep course and the visit to the UNL law school offered through RLOP were particularly useful for him.

鈥淭hat (campus visit) helps RLOP students connect with UNL law. I was able to talk with UNL law admissions during the trip,鈥 Zhang said. 鈥淩LOP is a wonderful program that helps you succeed at CSC and save budget before going to law school.鈥

Zhang and the other CSC graduates who will be pursuing law degrees this fall were effusive in their praise of the Justice Studies program and faculty.

鈥淭hey truly go above and beyond being just educators,鈥 said Hinman, 鈥淭he Justice Studies faculty has enabled me to strive towards my greatest potential and they have been role models anyone can look up to.鈥

Fatzinger added she wouldn鈥檛 have been as successful without the Justice Studies faculty. Roenfeldt said he feels more prepared for law school because of the quality of instruction he received.

Anyone interested in studying law at UNL should consider applying to the RLOP, said Zhang. 鈥淒on鈥檛 miss RLOP if you want to pursue a law career. UNL is a great law school and there are countless opportunities in rural Nebraska,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 am so grateful that I am the first RLOP student who graduates who is going to UNL law.鈥

-George Ledbetter

Category: Campus News, Justice Studies, Student Awards & Achievements