NEW: RWU Law Professor Appointed to RI Foundation Board
GoLocalProv News Team
NEW: RWU Law Professor Appointed to RI Foundation Board
Governor Lincoln D. Chafee today announced his appointment of Roger Williams University School of Law Professor Jorge O. Elorza to the Board of Directors of the Rhode Island Foundation.

Rhode Island Foundation Chairman David M. Hirsch reinforced the governor’s comments, saying, “We are delighted that Governor Chafee selected Professor Elorza for this position. The Foundation’s directors endorsed his appointment with great enthusiasm and appreciation for his expertise and perspective. We anticipate that he will make wonderful contributions to our board.”
GET THE LATEST BREAKING NEWS HERE -- SIGN UP FOR GOLOCAL FREE DAILY EBLASTRaised by Guatemalan immigrant parents in inner-city Providence, Professor Elorza returned to his old neighborhood after his graduation from the University of Rhode Island and Harvard Law School to give back to his community as an attorney for Rhode Island Legal Services. Professor Elorza has litigated race discrimination cases and represented both private and public housing tenants in Rhode Island courts. Professor Elorza is currently co-chair of the Latino Policy Institute at Roger Williams University. This organization pulls together resources from Rhode Island universities, business firms, and community-based organizations to provide a data-driven analysis of issues relating to Latinos in Rhode Island. Professor Elorza has defended the constitutionality of the Rhode Island Lead Hazard Mitigation Act before the Rhode Island Supreme Court, and, because of his expertise in housing matters, has been appointed to preside in the Providence Housing Court.
At Roger Williams School of Law, Professor Elorza teaches Property, Advanced Constitutional Law, and Housing & Policy. His primary research interests are the economics of housing policy and the intersection of law, science, and religion.
The Rhode Island Foundation is the state’s largest funder of nonprofit organizations. In 2011, the Foundation made grants of $28 million to more than one thousand organizations statewide; in the last decade, the Foundation has made grants of more than $255 million. Among community foundations nationally, the Rhode Island Foundation, established in 1916, is one of the oldest as well as one of the largest, with estimated net assets at the end of 2011 of more than $571 million.
