HomeCity Government NewsBice Donates $2 Million to USC Law School

Bice Donates $2 Million to USC Law School

The USC Gould School of Law has announced a $2 million estate gift from educator, philanthropist and community leader Barbara Bice to support and further the work of the school’s Public Interest Law Foundation, one of the nation’s oldest student organizations in the area of public interest law.
The endowment enhances USC Gould’s commitment to encouraging the pursuit of public interest legal careers and advances PILF’s more than 30-year legacy of helping underserved and vulnerable groups. In recognition of the gift, PILF is now renamed the Barbara F. Bice Public Interest Law Foundation.
“Providing an endowment to support the PILF summer public interest internships provides a unique opportunity,” Bice said. “First, it recognizes the great contributions the student founders, subsequent student leadership and grant recipients have made to public interest work over many years. Second, the endowment supports Gould’s commitment to law in the public interest. Third, it furthers opportunities for students to experience firsthand the importance of public interest work.
“Through these internships, students gain appreciation for the important assistance that they provide to underserved populations,” Bice continued. “Finally, the gift expands the important benefits the host organizations make to the public good. I am grateful for this unique opportunity.”
A resident of Pasadena, Barbara Franks Bice is a former educator with the San Marino Unified School District. During her 20-year tenure, she was an AP English teacher, founding director of the Career Education Program and the Career Center at San Marino High School, and served as the founding executive director of the San Marino Schools Foundation. She served on the Scripps College board for 13 years and has served on the boards of the Sycamores and the San Marino Chamber of Commerce.
She also was an advisory board member with USC Gould, of which her husband, Scott Bice, is an alumnus and where he has taught for more than 50 years and served as dean from 1980-2000. The Bices both served as board members of L.A. Family Housing and Queens Care Health Alliance. Barbara Bice was the director of volunteer services for the 1994 World Cup; she and her team of 2,000 volunteers served the needs of attendees from around the world for the seven soccer games held at the Rose Bowl.
She was also the first woman member of the Rotary Club of San Marino and currently serves as a founding board chair of True Connection, which promotes social awareness and provides emotional intelligence education to children and adults.
“Barbara cares deeply about our students,” said USC Gould Dean Andrew T. Guzman. “Her gift has meaningful implications for them not only while they are in school, but also beyond their time here. Public interest experiences have the potential to shape our students’ legal careers — and the power to transform the lives of the people and families we all serve.
“I am enormously thankful to Barbara for this investment in our students and the positive impact that they make,” Guzman added.
The gift is one of many examples of Bice’s commitment to PILF, which was founded in 1987.
“Mrs. Bice has dedicated her life to philanthropy and education efforts across Los Angeles County, but especially in the case of Gould students,” says Mirelle Raza, current president of PILF. “For over 30 years she has guided PILF with an unmatched ability to be both a warm mentor and a fierce advocate for public interest initiatives. Mrs. Bice has been an integral part of PILF victories for over three decades. I cannot imagine a more perfect namesake for the Public Interest Law Foundation than Barbara Bice.”
PILF, one of the largest student organizations at USC Gould, funds summer grants for students pursuing public interest law careers and organizes pro bono clinic opportunities during the school year. Students work to obtain legal relief for people who are homeless, children who were abused, low-income working families, undocumented immigrants and refugees and other vulnerable populations. Community partners include the Legal Aid Foundation of Los Angeles, Veterans Legal Institute, and Bet Tzedek.

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