FOR CURRENT & POTENTIAL CLIENTS

Rise is not an emergency service. If you are in danger, call 911.

We are not able to provide services for urgent legal issues or for upcoming hearings. Resources that may help you are Family Law Line or Family Duty counsel in your area.

We do not provide full representation for clients.

If you are looking to apply to legal aid for representation, please refer directly to the Legal Aid BC website.

We recommend reading about services we can provide, and our financial eligibility criteria before filling out our online form below.

  • We primarily provide services for clients self-representing themselves in family law matters. Based on financial eligibility, we are able to provide limited free legal services for our clients.

    Services we provide are:

    • legal navigation, which is the first step in our client services. The legal navigator acts as your first point of contact. They screen for family violence, assess legal issues, and screen for eligibility for Rise programs, other resources and programs including provincial legal aid.

      The focus is on helping clients build a path forward through the legal system by providing legal information combined with referrals to existing services.

      If you are ineligible for our services, the navigators may be able to connect you local resources in your community.

    • support from family law advocates funded by the Law Foundation of BC. The role of family law advocates is to provide free legal information, advocacy, and assistance to low-income people in the community.  Family law advocates are not lawyers but work under the supervision of a lawyer. 

      We have two family law advocates, one serving clients in the Lower Mainland and the other serving clients across the province excluding the Lower Mainland.

    • or community outreach advocate,

    • summary legal advice from lawyers, and

    • very limited court appearances on simple matters through our student clinic. We provide opportunities for law students from UBC to get first-hand experience on family law files. Students can help with simple matters like desk-order divorce and limited court appearances.

      Files taken on by student clinicians may take longer as students are with Rise for a semester and it takes some time to transition files to the new student group.

  • We do not provide full representation.

    We do not provide lawyer referrals if you are seeking to retain a lawyer or need recommendation for a legal aid lawyer. If you are looking for a paid lawyer, or If you have been approved for legal aid and are looking for a lawyer to take on the matter, you can reach out to Access Probono Lawyer Referral Service. Lawyers are also able to help you with some legal issues, also called unbundled services. You can see a list of lawyers, who provide unbundled services here. If you would like to know how to choose a Family Lawyer, please see here.

    We cannot provide our services if your family law matter is outside British Columbia. Our lawyers are not licensed to practice outside of BC, and it is against Law Society rules for any lawyer to offer advice or assistance on a file that’s being heard outside the jurisdiction in which that lawyer is licensed.

  • In most cases, Rise cannot provide legal advice to individuals who have legal representation. However, in very rare circumstances, Rise may provide limited services to individuals who have lawyers. If you need assistance, please see the section below. The legal navigator will be able to help you determine whether Rise can help.

    Rise does not provide clients with a second legal opinion.

  • We may be to able to assist you if you are running out of legal aid hours. The best way forward will be to ask for assistance in the section below.

Ask for Assistance

You can read about how we provide services, our workflow and tech safety tips in the sections below.

I can receive emails from Rise safely

I cannot receive emails from Rise safely

Have questions or need additional assistance? Email is the best way to reach us.

Clients in the Lower Mainland, email: clc@womenslegalcentre.ca

Clients outside the Lower Mainland, email vlc@womenslegalcentre.ca

If you are unable to complete our online form, or email us, you can leave a voicemail at 236-317-9000. If you have specific instructions for the safest way for us to reach you, like a specific time to call you back at, please leave those instructions in your voicemail to us. We usually return voicemails in 48-72 hours.

If you are leaving a voicemail to ask for assistance, no assistance will be provided without our online form being completed.

How we provide services

We ask you only provide us a safe email on the request form. Our first contact with you is usually via email.  Please check your spam folder if our email is not in your inbox. Emails you can expect from us after you send us a request - book an appointment, information about community resources, or questions we may have.

Legal navigation services are provided over the phone. We ask you only provide us a safe phone number on the request form. Our legal navigators will call you at the scheduled appointment time. Our family law advocates and program assistants may also call you for appointments or follow-ups.

Most summary advice appointments with the lawyers are virtual unless they are requested by phone. If you are speaking with a lawyer at or through Rise, we will send a zoom link to you or the support worker (if you are working with one).

We have very limited in-person services as our clients are all over the province. As we are moving offices in August, we are not currently accepting drop-in appointments. Please complete our online form to ask for assistance. 

How our services work?

Step 1

Complete and submit our online confidential request form. Form is available in the next section.

Step 2

Book an appointment with the legal navigator, who is not a lawyer. You are sent an email when you submit the online form with the link to the booking appointment.

Step 3

This will depend on the information you have provided us. Navigators and program assistants review all incoming request forms.

  • If the navigators assess that you may qualify for Legal Aid BC, you may receive an email with information to apply. In this case, your appointment with the navigator will be canceled. If you are denied legal aid, you can reach back to us and will not need to submit another form. Clients in the Lower Mainland can email clc@womenslegalcentre.ca and clients outside the Lower Mainland can email vlc@womenslegalcentre.ca

  • At this stage, the navigator will also assess if your matter falls within our scope of services. For matters Rise cannot help with, the navigators may provide information about legal and community resources that may be a better fit in your legal matter.

  • You will speak with the navigator, who will assess for Rise’s financial eligibility and how you can be best supported.

Step 4

Depending on your call with the navigator, referrals will be made to:

  • internal clinics or service at Rise,

  • referral to a community organization better suited to assist you,

  • another legal resource.

    (this is not a complete list, the legal navigator is best suited to explore options with you).

Tech Safety Tips

As most of our services are provided via email, telephone, and virtually, we take your online your safety and security very seriously.

If you have concerns that your email is being monitored or checked by the other party/parties, we ask you do not fill our regular appointment form in the next section. Instead fill out our SAFE CONTACT FORM to ask for assistance. When you fill the safe contact form, you will not get an automatic email from us to book an appointment, instead you will be able to let us know of a time we can get in touch with you via phone. This ensures that no one else finds out through access to your email, that you are seeking our services.

Your information is safe with us. We do our best to ensure that all client information is confidential and protected

We ask you use your personal computer, one that is not shared with anyone or device to access information. In this day when passwords are stored, devices are synced, it is often challenging to think of every security concern. If you are concerned about your electronic safety, please use a safe computer such as a public terminal at a library or a computer at a community organization and ensure that your passwords are secure.

Some tech safety resources you can review:

Securing email

Smartphone safety  

Tech safety tips

Helpful guides

  • Research shows that when a domestic relationship breaks down, women and other marginalized genders are significantly less likely to be able to afford private counsel, creating a disproportionate gap in access to family justice. Our clinic was developed to try to bridge that gap.

    Rise has been approved as a special program by the BC Office of the Human Rights Commissioner, meaning that by limiting our services to self-identified women and gender diverse people, we are “improving conditions for an individual or group that has faced disadvantage.”

  • We do not charge for Rise services; however, some of our programs have financial limitations to the services. This will be assessed and discussed at your first appointment with the legal navigator.

  • Rise is not an emergency service. If you have an upcoming court date, we will refer you to a service equipped to work with urgent matters.

  • If you are a client, please see here.

    Support workers, see here

  • As a legal clinic, we ask all incoming clients fill out the confidential appointment request form, which includes the information of the other party/parties. We are required by Law Society to ensure we have no conflict to provide you with service.

  • Your first call with Rise will be to speak to our legal navigator, who will learn about your matter and will help you decide on the best resources. This may be a Rise program or another organisation that is better placed to help with your matter or timelines.

    After assessing your individual situation, our legal navigator will determine the type and level of assistance we are able to provide. All service decisions are made at Rise’s sole discretion.

    Rise can provide a range of services, including summary advice, limited legal services, and referrals to other organizations and depending on your issue you may receive assistance from law students, social work students, legal advocates, or summary advice from staff lawyers or volunteer lawyers. We are not able to provide full representation.

  • Once you have completed the form, the first person you will speak to is the legal navigator, who will assess for financial eligibility and ensure that Rise is the relevant service for your matter. We are looking at 4-6 weeks of waiting times to speak to our navigators.

    If you are referred to a program within Rise, it can be another couple of weeks before you may speak with the lawyer. In all you may be waiting 8 weeks to speak to a lawyer.

  • Absolutely. We are available to meet with you by phone or teleconference. The Virtual Legal Clinic works with clients outside the lower mainland. The fast way for service will be completing our request for assistance.

  • Rise is an independently operated community legal centre and we are not connected with Legal Aid BC. Please see Legal Aid’s website if you are looking to apply for legal aid.

  • We are very limited in our ability to accommodate drop-in service at this time. Like any law office, we want to serve you to the best of our ability, and so we need to set aside sufficient time and resources to give your matter its proper attention. We only have drop-in service available for our community outreach advocate.

  • Children are welcome at Rise. We have a relaxing space with toys and books where your older children may wait for you, and you are welcome to have your infant or toddler in the room with you while you speak to our team.

  • Yes, the office is accessible for wheelchairs. We have a ramp indoors.

  • Rise does not have any designated parking, but there are several parking garages and metered street parking nearby. If you will be driving, please leave yourself enough time to find parking.

  • Our office is in Downtown Vancouver and we are very close to Granville and Waterfront sky train stations and also on multiple bus routes.

  • There is no guarantee that any of us aren’t being monitored online. However, there is a greater risk of being monitored online when women are leaving abusive relationships. What you can do is be aware of your online presence so that you can make safer decisions about your online activities. Your online use can be monitored in a variety of ways including, but not limited to:

    • Looking up internet browser history, email accounts, and social media accounts;

    • searching cell phones and other devices;

    • sharing accounts such as iCloud;

    • hacking of passwords; and

    • monitoring through software such as spyware, and hardware such as keystroke loggers.

    Internet Safety – Start by deleting your web browser history. Some web browsers will let you surf the web in privacy/stealth and incognito modes. Check if these modes are available in the web browsers you’re using.

    • Always use a safer computer when you’re communicating with friends and family about your private plans, searching, setting up appointments and communicating with support services and setting up new accounts and passwords. Safer computers can be found in public libraries, schools, community centres, support service offices or even at a trusted friend’s house.

    • Check your settings to see if your accounts are linked and shared between devices such as a smartphone and tablet as information which is sent from your phone when you are out in the world may be accessible from the tablet at home.

    Email – Your (ex)partner could have access to your email account.

    • To be safe, open a new email account your partner does not know about, on a safer computer and use a new and hard to guess password.

    • Also, try NOT to “click” on the email addresses on web pages as your email and the reply you receive may go to an (ex)partner’s account.

    • Always copy and paste an email address into the account you own that you know the (ex)partner doesn’t have access to or use webforms to send messages where available.

    Cell Phone – Call and text history can be retrieved in a variety of ways and your cell phone can be used as a tracking device.

    • Turn off location services on your phone when you don’t need them. Also, check your shared family and friends location settings or any location apps that may have been downloaded on your phone.

    • You can consider a pay-as-you-go phone if you suspect your phone is being monitored.

    Social Media – Change your password and ensure you’re notified if any changes are made to your account through options in your settings.

    • Only post things you want the public to see or know.

    • Be protective of your personal information. Your phone numbers and addresses enable people to contact you directly, and information like your birth date, the schools you attended, your employer, and photos with landmarks or location tags may make it easier for someone to find out where you live, hang out or go to school.

    • Tell people not to post your personal information or include you in comments, tags and check-ins on social media. Set your settings to options like having to “approve” all information about you before they are posted on your page. Remember this doesn’t stop information about you being shared on other people’s accounts, just your own.

    Maintain Appearances – If you are being monitored and concerned for your safety, consider continuing to maintain appearances by using your computer, email, cell phone, and social media for non-sensitive information. Consider setting up an appointment with a local anti-violence program to safety plan around your technology use.

    Please see www.nnedv.org/resources/safetynetdocs.html for more information on technology and safety.

Frequently asked questions

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