Touro Law Announces New Longevity and Aging Law Institute
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Touro Law Announces New Longevity and Aging Law Institute
Professor Marianne Artusio Named Founding Director
July 9, 2013Touro Law Center is pleased to announce the launch of a new Longevity & Aging Law Institute. The Institute will be led by Professor Marianne Artusio, who has been named Founding Director and Robert Cannon, Esq., who is Founding Coordinator. In addition Robert Abrams, Co-Founder and Of Counsel to Abrams, Fensterman, Fensterman, Eisman, Formato, Ferrara & Einiger, LLP has been named Chair of the Institute’s Advisory Board. Touro Law students will assist in the efforts of the Institute.
“This Institute, the first of its kind in the country, is the brain child of Bob Abrams and we are thrilled to be joining forces with him to make this vision a reality,” said Dean Patricia Salkin. “Bob and I have worked together on aging issues for the past 20 years. He is a leading expert in Health and Elder Law and has made a significant impact in the field. This new Institute represents an innovative opportunity for collaboration that will benefit the community at large as well as Touro Law students. It is going to be an exciting venture.”
The Institute has been designed to provide attorneys and other professionals with the information and resources they need to serve the 100 million Americans who are 50 years of age or older. Through Touro Law Center’s Continuing Legal Education (CLE), the Institute will provide CLE programs and continuing education credits for programs developed for other licensed professionals such as social workers. The Institute will address a wide variety of educational topics, including fragility of capacity, adult children with special needs, bankruptcy, confidentiality, emergency preparedness, estate planning and administration, financial planning, grandparents’ rights, mental health issues, retirement, taxes and many others. As the Institute grows, plans include a research agenda focused on law and public policy in the area of longevity and aging law.
“Marianne is uniquely qualified to launch and run our new Longevity and Aging Law Institute and I look forward to watching this innovative center blossom under her guidance and direction,” said Dean Salkin. “I am confident that our students who are interested in this field of study and all of those associated with the Institute will benefit from Marianne’s leadership and this innovative center.”
Artusio has been at Touro Law for more than twenty years, serving as Director of Clinical Programs and faculty advisor for the Elder Law Clinic until accepting this new post. She supervises the Elder Law Clinic and teaches courses in elder law and consumer law. She has served as the Director of Touro's Summer Discover India Program in India, teaching Comparative Constitutional Law and Tibetan Buddhist Law & Philosophy. Before joining the faculty she practiced law for fifteen years specializing in discrimination, civil rights, disability and poverty law, first as a staff attorney and then as Deputy Director with Monroe County Legal Assistance Corp and then as a Managing Attorney with Westchester Legal Services, Inc., where she directed the agency's Senior Citizens' Law Clinic at Pace University School of Law. She has served for over fourteen years on the board of the Lower Hudson Valley Chapter of the New York Civil Liberties Union, where her special interests are censorship and students' rights.
Artusio stated, “I am excited about these new initiatives and the opportunities they will certainly bring for our students in the very near future. I think we have an opportunity to affect the landscape of the elder law field to the benefit of community members and legal professionals. I am thrilled to have a leadership role in this newly created Institute and look forward to the future.”
“I am looking forward not only to the opportunities that will be generated through the Institute, but this partnership with Touro Law Center,” said Robert Abrams. “I believe that this Institute will prove to be a valuable collaboration for the field of Elder Law and will have a lasting impact on the community.”
“This Institute, the first of its kind in the country, is the brain child of Bob Abrams and we are thrilled to be joining forces with him to make this vision a reality,” said Dean Patricia Salkin. “Bob and I have worked together on aging issues for the past 20 years. He is a leading expert in Health and Elder Law and has made a significant impact in the field. This new Institute represents an innovative opportunity for collaboration that will benefit the community at large as well as Touro Law students. It is going to be an exciting venture.”
The Institute has been designed to provide attorneys and other professionals with the information and resources they need to serve the 100 million Americans who are 50 years of age or older. Through Touro Law Center’s Continuing Legal Education (CLE), the Institute will provide CLE programs and continuing education credits for programs developed for other licensed professionals such as social workers. The Institute will address a wide variety of educational topics, including fragility of capacity, adult children with special needs, bankruptcy, confidentiality, emergency preparedness, estate planning and administration, financial planning, grandparents’ rights, mental health issues, retirement, taxes and many others. As the Institute grows, plans include a research agenda focused on law and public policy in the area of longevity and aging law.
“Marianne is uniquely qualified to launch and run our new Longevity and Aging Law Institute and I look forward to watching this innovative center blossom under her guidance and direction,” said Dean Salkin. “I am confident that our students who are interested in this field of study and all of those associated with the Institute will benefit from Marianne’s leadership and this innovative center.”
Artusio has been at Touro Law for more than twenty years, serving as Director of Clinical Programs and faculty advisor for the Elder Law Clinic until accepting this new post. She supervises the Elder Law Clinic and teaches courses in elder law and consumer law. She has served as the Director of Touro's Summer Discover India Program in India, teaching Comparative Constitutional Law and Tibetan Buddhist Law & Philosophy. Before joining the faculty she practiced law for fifteen years specializing in discrimination, civil rights, disability and poverty law, first as a staff attorney and then as Deputy Director with Monroe County Legal Assistance Corp and then as a Managing Attorney with Westchester Legal Services, Inc., where she directed the agency's Senior Citizens' Law Clinic at Pace University School of Law. She has served for over fourteen years on the board of the Lower Hudson Valley Chapter of the New York Civil Liberties Union, where her special interests are censorship and students' rights.
Artusio stated, “I am excited about these new initiatives and the opportunities they will certainly bring for our students in the very near future. I think we have an opportunity to affect the landscape of the elder law field to the benefit of community members and legal professionals. I am thrilled to have a leadership role in this newly created Institute and look forward to the future.”
“I am looking forward not only to the opportunities that will be generated through the Institute, but this partnership with Touro Law Center,” said Robert Abrams. “I believe that this Institute will prove to be a valuable collaboration for the field of Elder Law and will have a lasting impact on the community.”
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Touro College Jacob D. Fuchsberg Law Center’s 185,000-square-foot, state-of-the-art facility is located adjacent to both a state and a federal courthouse in Central Islip, New York. Touro Law’s proximity to the courthouses, coupled with programming developed to integrate the courtroom into the classroom, provide a one-of-a kind learning model for law students, combining a rigorous curriculum taught by expert faculty with a practical courtroom experience. Touro Law, which has a student body of approximately 750 and an alumni base of more than 5,000, offers full- and part-time J.D. programs, several dual degree programs and graduate law programs for US and foreign law graduates. Touro Law Center is part of the Touro College system.
About the Touro College and University System
Touro is a system of non-profit institutions of higher and professional education. Touro College was chartered in 1970 primarily to enrich the Jewish heritage, and to serve the larger American and global community. Approximately 19,000 students are currently enrolled in its various schools and divisions. Touro College has branch campuses, locations and instructional sites in the New York area, as well as branch campuses and programs in Berlin, Jerusalem, Moscow, Paris and Florida. New York Medical College, Touro University California and its Nevada branch campus, as well as Touro University Worldwide and its Touro College Los Angeles division are separately accredited institutions within the Touro College and University System. For further information on Touro College, please go to: http://www.touro.edu/media/.
Patti Desrochers
Director of Communications
pattid@tourolaw.edu
(631) 761-7062