Paragraph: (Society_Law_and_Justice/oanc-agency_expands-0.txt)
Sent 1: Neighborhood Legal Services, which provides free legal services to the poor, has expanded into the San Gabriel and Pomona valleys, areas with large Asian populations, many of whom speak limited or no English.
Sent 2: Language is their biggest obstacle, but the Asian communities' cultural isolation and service providers' lack of cultural expertise also play a part, said NLS executive director Neal Dubovitz.
Sent 3: And with 13 percent to 15 percent of the Asian population in the U.S. living below the poverty line, NLS services are badly needed, Dubovitz said.
Sent 4: "Although it is a significant part of the poverty population, Asians historically have not been able to participate in the services and programs available to the poor," he said.
Sent 5: From simple telephone advice to complete legal representation in court, the agency provides free consumer, health, family, immigration, housing, public benefits and labor legal services to people who earn under $1,380 per month.
Sent 6: Legal service providers have long served large Latino populations, who have cultural diversity but share a common language.
Sent 7: "I remember the days when there were only a handful of people in the legal offices who spoke Spanish," Dudovitz said.
Sent 8: "Now Spanish and English are interchangeable.
Sent 9: Our goal is to have that for the major Asian languages as well."
Sent 10: Before the expansion, only a few NLS lawyers spoke Asian languages, said attorney Rebecca Yee, who was hired by NLS in April 2002 to design and head the project.
Sent 11: "Now we have people speaking Cantonese, Mandarin, Thai, Khmer (from Cambodia), Korean, Vietnamese, Japanese and Tagalog," Yee said.
Sent 12: One of the 13 attorneys hired to work with the program is Irene Mak, a family law attorney who speaks Cantonese, Mandarin and Thai.
Sent 13: Mak was a partner at a private law firm before she went to work for NLS two years ago, earning up to $20,000 less a year working on domestic violence cases.
Sent 14: "The job is more satisfying than the money," said Mak, who grew up in Hong Kong and Thailand before coming to the United States.
Sent 15: "I could use my language skills and wanted to give back to the Asian community."
Sent 16: NLS expanded when Legal Services Corp., the federal agency that funds providers of free legal services nationwide, reduced the number of grantees in the Los Angeles area from five to three, Dudovitz said.
Sent 17: NLS won the competitive grant over the Legal Services Program for Pasadena, San Gabriel-Pomona valleys.
Sent 18: That boosted its client base from 16,000 to around 25,000, and NLS opened an office in El Monte.
Question: What is the language goal of neighborhood legal services? (true/0)
Question: What is the biggest obstacle for neighborhood legal services and why? (false/1)
Question: In addition to language, what obstacle does the Neighborhood Legal Services face when providing legal services to Asians? (false/2)
Question: Can you name two attorneys mentioned? (false/3)
Question: Who said "I could use my language skills and wanted to give back to the Asian community."? (true/4)
Question: What languages spoken by the different attorneys of Neighborhood Legal Services? Name three (false/5)
Question: How do the attorneys working with the program feel about it? (false/6)
Question: What boosted the NLS client base to 25,000? (true/7)
Question: What does NLS stand for? (true/8)
Question: What communities are most well-served by the program? (false/9)
Question: Who grew up in Hong Kong and Thailand and speaks Cantonese, Mandarin and Thai? (true/10)
Question: What are some of the languages are now spoken by employees of the NLS? (true/11)
Question: What is the biggest obstacle NLS faced while trying to provide legal services to poor Asian populations? (true/12)
Question: What obstacles does Neighborhood Legal Services face? Name at least one (false/13)
Question: What does Mak think of this job as more than for the money? (true/14)
Last updated: Mon Apr 16 04:55:33 EDT 2018
Generated from a file named: /Users/daniel/ideaProjects/hard-qa/split/train_456.json