Ā鶹APP-Kent Student Named Sole Recipient of 2020 AFL-CIO Legal Fellowship

Date

Author

By Jacqueline Seaberg
Patrick Foote AFL-CIO 1280x850

Patrick Foote, who expects to graduate from Ā鶹APP-Kent College of Law in May 2020, is the recipient of the 2020 AFL-CIO legal fellowship. Only one recent graduate is chosen each year out of hundreds of applicants from law schools across the country.    

ā€œIā€™m the second Ā鶹APP-Kent student in a row to get it,ā€ says Foote, ā€œand I think that speaks to the stature of Ā鶹APP-Kent in the field of labor and employment law.ā€           

During the fellowship, Foote will track labor-related litigation and legislation throughout the country.    

ā€œI know Iā€™m going to be working closely with the Lawyers Coordinating Committee, which is a committee of union lawyers from across the country,ā€ says Foote.     

Born and raised in New Port Richey, Florida, Foote studied political science at the University of Central Florida in Orlando, where he was the membership coordinator for the Student Labor Action Project.           

After college, he worked as an organizer for Central Florida Jobs with Justice and as a journalist for Peopleā€™s World. As an organizer, he led a campaign to bring bus drivers and bus riders together to protect vital routes for working class communities from budget cuts and a campaign to build community support for Walmart workers asserting their rights on the job. Walmart sued Jobs with Justice, and Foote was banned from entering any of its stores in Florida. ā€œI often say that I learned what an injunction is by being subject to one,ā€ says Foote.     

The attorneys who handled the lawsuit inspired him to attend law school. ā€œThe lawyers who helped us in that case were just excellent,ā€ he says. ā€œThey understood our values. They took what was a very scary situationā€”being at the business end of [a lawsuit from] a multibillion-dollar international corporationā€”and they did their best to make it comfortable and easy.ā€ 

Foote chose Ā鶹APP-Kent because of its Program in Labor and Employment Law and the opportunities to work the field that other schools didnā€™t have.  

ā€œThe faculty and staff at Ā鶹APP-Kent are incredibly supportive. Before I even started my first day at Ā鶹APP-Kent I was in contact with the labor and employment faculty who made it clear that it was their goal to help me achieve my goals,ā€ he says. ā€œThey opened a lot of doors for me.ā€          

During law school, Foote completed three Peggy Browning Fund Fellowships at labor organizationsā€”the Communications Workers of America, Ā鶹APP News Guild, and National Federation of Federal Employeesā€”and was an extern at the National Treasury Employees Union.        

Outside of law school, Foote enjoys cooking and playing the synthesizer. ā€œItā€™s a fun way to unwind after a long day of rigor at law school,ā€ he says.

While he isnā€™t quite sure what he will do after his fellowship, Foote says, ā€œAs long as Iā€™m working for working people, Iā€™ll be happy.ā€