Stites & Harbison has a rich tradition of pro bono service in the communities where our attorneys work and live. Our firm has been recognized annually by the Nashville Bar Association for its pro bono contributions. In Louisville, we were recently recognized as a Public Service Challenge Pacesetter by the Louisville Pro Bono Consortium, based on the firm's commitment to devote 50 hours per lawyer annually to pro bono publico causes.

Dan Douglass, Initiative for Affordable Housing
Board Chair (Atlanta) and an attorney with Stites
& Harbison, and Lisa Wise, Executive Director
for the Initiative for Affordable Housing, take a
break from the many Summer Festival activities.
Pro Bono
Members and associates of the firm participate actively in the affairs of the organized bar and serve as members of its governing bodies and presenters of continuing legal education programs. Members also have served as Presidents of the state, county and local bar associations.
The United Way has recognized Stites & Harbison for the firm's role in multiple record-breaking campaigns.
In 2009 the firm's attorneys donated time and counsel equaling more than $1 million in pro bono legal services.
By community, here are examples of what Stites & Harbison attorneys and staff have done to make a difference in their hometowns.
ATLANTA - Under the leadership of Dick Stephens and Dan Douglass, the attorneys and staff continued their commitment to the Initiative for Affordable Housing (IAH), which provides housing and social services for the homeless and low-income families. This year the team helped to save IAH's largest multi-family structure, a home to over 500 people, from the threat of foreclosure due to the market collapse by renegotiating an interim loan on the property and, later, helping to secure permanent financing on IAH's behalf.
LEXINGTON - Steve Ruschell, Charlotte Turner McCoy and Valorie Smith assisted the Kentucky Volunteer Lawyer Programby providing legal assistance to families affected by the Newtown Pike Extension Project, a construction project to connect one of Lexington's busiest thoroughfares from downtown to Interstate 64. The project temporarily displaced persons in low-income housing, but Stites & Harbison attorneys have worked closely with these families to explain relocation options. They also have assisted the families in getting settled into temporary housing until permanent housing becomes available.
LOUISVILLE- Stites & Harbison has had a long and celebrated relationship with a myriad of agencies and service organizations in the local community. As a result of the breadth of pro bono services provided in 2009 and our long-standing financial commitment, the Legal Aid Society named Stites & Harbison "Outstanding Law Firm of the Year." The firm also received the Paul G. Tobin Pro Bono Service Award from the Louisville Bar Association in 2011 for this pro bono service. Pro bono efforts included the following:
- Jamie Neal, Sheldon Haden and a team of 25 attorneys volunteered on behalf of the Center for Women and Families Domestic Violence Assistance Program. The program's success is a model that has been expanded countrywide.
- Intellectual Property Group attorney Jeff Haeberlin and his team have provided more than 400 hours of legal assistance to GuardiaCare, an elderly advocacy group that provides guardianship services to those without families or relatives capable of providing such support.
- Morgan Ward, a past president of the Legal Aid Society of Louisville, has assembled a team of attorneys donating their knowledge or mortgage, landlord and tenant assistance to the needy.
- Litigators Clark Johnson, Rick Vance and Cassie Wiemken have successfully assisted new arrivals to the United States with immigration and child custody issues.
NASHVILLE - Working the the Nashville Bar Association, attorneys helped fulfill an escalating need for people who had recently lost their jobs. Focused on providing assistance with unemployment appeals, the attorneys helped individuals receive unemployment benefits after their applications had been contested by their former employers. In all, over 70 appeals were resolved, earning Lauren Paxton Roberts, who headed the effort, recognition by the Middle Tennessee Legal Aid Society.
Community Involvement
Attorneys and staff members provide financial support and volunteer hours to many non-profit organizations, including the following:
- Alzheimer’s Association of Greater Kentucky and Southern Indiana Chapter
- American Red Cross - Metropolitan Atlanta Chapter
- American Red Cross - Nashville Area Chapter
- Center for Women and Families
- Central Kentucky Riding for the Handicapped, Inc., Lexington
- Children’s National Medical Center, Washington, D.C.
- Court Appointed Special Advocate - Nashville
- Dismas House Nashville
- Fayette Education Foundation, Lexington
- Friends of Radnor Lake
- Greenways for Nashville
- Habitat for Humanity
- Hospice of Southern Indiana
- Initiative For Affordable Housing, Inc.
- Jefferson County Historical Society of Charles Town, West Virginia
- Kosair Charities Pediatric Cancer Research Center at the University of Louisville’s James Graham Brown Cancer Center
- Legal Aid Society of Louisville
- Legal Aid Society of Middle Tennessee and the Cumberlands
- MJS Granting Dreams Foundation
- Matthew 25, Inc.
- McNeilly Center for Children
- Mercy Children's Clinic
- Salvation Army of New Albany
- Seedlings in the City
- Shepherd Center
- SIMON House, Frankfort
- Southeastern Guide Dogs, Inc.
- Susan G. Komen for the Cure. Nashville Chapter
- Visually Impaired Preschool Services, Louisville
- Volunteer Lawyer Program for Louisville's Center for Women and Families