Order in the Divorce Court
Transcription
Order in the Divorce Court
explains. "Options for women are very limited in slums, in rural rice villages. Many women become mail-order brides or live in abusive situations. I wanted to help empower women in these communities; help them to believe in themselves and realize they don't have to become mail-order brides." She took off for Southeast Asia, visiting Laos, Vietnam, and the slums of Ahmedabad, India. Six months later she wrote a business plan. The result is GIANNA (giannafairtrade.com), a fair-trade company that Driver founded in 2005. Making a fair-trade wage provides the artisans with options. "Too often, what we find is that women stay in toxic relationships because they feel financially dependent upon their spouse or partner," Driver says. "But when a woman is earning an income, she is no longer financially dependent, and so we're able to work with her and provide resources and help her realize that she doesn't have to accept that." GIANNA works with local non-government organizations to identify villages that would partner well with the company. "The NGOs help us identify different communities who have a willingness to invest in us just as much as we're wanting and willing to invest in them," Driver explains. Part of that investment is education. Driver works with the NGOs to come up with a curriculum suited to the needs of individual villages, then teaches all the women of the village, regardless of whether they are working with GIANNA. "I spend a lot of time teaching about fair trade," she says. "That sounds like a really simple concept in our culture, but it's actually a very difficult 74 SEPT I OCT 2010 concept for them to grasp because these are not moneybased economies. They understand rice markets, but they don't really grasp valuing their time. We go through this really elaborate, several-day process and come up with a fairtrade wage." Driver teaches her artisans to consider the value of their raw materials and their time, plus their basic needs. "It's X amount of money per hour, and that includes not only what they need to earn per hour, but we add additional margin," she says. "We don't necessarily want to sustain the status quo. We want to help them improve their lives. It's a thriving wage." Driver also educates the artisans about the dangers of chemical dyes. "Many problems in villages correlate to the introduction of [toxic] chemicals into these communities," she explains, citing increased birth defects and higher mortality rates. Driver does not use any chemical dyes in GIANNA products, and she works to educate the artisans so that they will refuse to use them. Above all, Driver's goal is to improve the lives of women so that they have choices that her mother never had. "A lot of times, when they're at home and they're between cooking and caring for their kids, they'll sit down and start weaving," she says. "They'll have some friends over; they'll be gossiping." This kind of flexibility allows them to connect with other women while at the same time providing a sustainable income. And on a larger scale, she notes, "it helps keep the skill alive" in a market that's often driven by cost to create inferior, massproduced products.-*-Emily Rosenbaum C'95 GEd'g6 THE PENNSYLVANIA G A Z E T T E Order in the Divorce Court CLASS OF '84 I "Mrs. Lucas, have you lost your mind?" asked Judge Lynn Toler L'84 sharply in a recent episode of Divorce Court. "You want to leave this man because he cooks too often and too well and made you gain too much weight?" She eyeballed the tearful complainant sternly before delivering her verdict: "You are a self-centered individual who doesn't appreciate a man who loves you and doesn't care what size you are. You need to grow up." Toler may have honed her legal skills in the moot-court program at Penn Law, but her commonsense approach to emotional management came courtesy of her mother, Toniwho, for the record, is less than thrilled that her daughter ditched the "serious" side of law to go to the "dark side" of a Fox reality show. "My mom was disappointed that as the sole municipal judge [of Cleveland Heights, Ohio], I didn't go on to become a state or federal judge," explains Toler, whose first book is titled My Mother's Rules: A Practical Guide {Agate Publishing, 2007), a combination memoir and selfhelp book that dealt with many of the issues that have come before her as a judge. "She said I had the capacity. Mom thinks [Divorce Court] is a silly show, and I get it. It's not Masterpiece Theater, but I try to end each show with a nugget of wisdom." Besides, the role of TV judge suits Toler well, and she knows it. "It's me amped up to full volume," she says. "It's me at a 10." Infidelity is, not surprisingly, a popular subject on the show. Last year Toler interviewed disgraced evangelical pastor Ted Haggard and his wife in a two-part show, and her blunt questioning forced him to admit that he had been treated at a secular counseling center for "trauma-induced" homosexual episodes when religious counseling failed. In another episode, a woman admitted having chased her "dog" of a spouse down the street with a bat. "He was running, dodging, ducking, and diving," she reported to Toler-who, after warning that the woman's anger could land her in jail, awarded her relocation costs. The show is taped in a replicated courtroom, and while the audience reaction energizes the proceedings, it's not all laughs. In another Divorce Court episode, Toler, herself African American, tore into a young black husband whom she believed was shirking his parental responsibilities. "Kids need to know there's a man around providing a stable home environment," she said sharply. "Mom taught me how to listen to people when they're agitated and find out how their emoting gets them into fights and other problems," says Toler, who uses her legal-discovery tools to probe for issues "too deep for daytime"-such as the bride who slept with the best man on her wedding night. While the show has been a good fit for Toler's talents and personality, she says that the greatest positives for her, at first, were the short taping schedule (just 20 days a year), the minimal preparation, the deluxe treatment (five-star hotels, limousines), and the fun atmosphere. To facilitate commutes to Los Angeles, Toler moved her family from Ohio to Mesa, Arizona. When she first took the Divorce Court bench in 2006, some viewers objected, berating her for replacing Judge Mablean Ephriam. "She was well loved," Toler says of her predecessor. "The press reported that producers fired her because her hair was too 'Afro'-meaning she was too black-but she was really fired over a money dispute." The subject of finance is familiar to Toler, who specialized in bankruptcy and litigation at two large Cleveland law firms after earning her degree from Penn Law in 1984. Ten years after graduation she was approached to run on the Republican ticket for a municipal judgeship. "I had a lo-monthold, four stepchildren, and my law firm wanted 60 billable hours every week," Toler says. "I was crazed." She campaigned door-to-door, and despite Cleveland Heights' reputation as a Democratic Caucasian stronghold, wonin a recount, by six votes. As a city judge, Toler says she "ran a tight ship and had few hold-over cases, which is the gauge of efficiency." Having ruled on a variety of misdemeanors-from speeding to negligent homicide— she says that she "hated traf- fic court the worst," since "people get the nastiest" in that environment. Eight years of "high-volume households" and "mega-angry reactions" took their toll, she admits. Yet during one low period, a young woman who had been a complainant in an assault case approached her in a grocery store and told her: "You talked to us [her boyfriend and her] for a long time, and that made a difference. Things aren't perfect, but they're better." Gradually, Toler morphed into Cleveland Heights' judicial expert on domestic violence. "One woman was so fragile and emotionally abused, she was literally shaking," Toler recalls. "Her husband testified that she refused to submit to his direction when he pushed her head to the dirt." Realizing that "incarceration without elucidation was pointless," she introduced innovative punishments, such as reading a prescribed book and writing a report on it. Toler also tried to steer young people in the right direction before they too made bad decisions. A mentoring program she established for at-risk girls at Taylor Academy in Cleveland helped teens define goals and write contracts. One evening a student telephoned for advice regarding a murder confession she was privy to. "I said, 'Turn him in,'" Toler recalls. says Toler, who then negotiated a safety net: If the show met its demise before the end of a five-year contract, she would still receive her salary for that time period. Which is exactly what happened. After four months, the producers pulled the plug. "It was too expensive to produce," Toler says. "They had to pay me, the attorneys, the plaintiffs, the defendants, even the small-claims judgments up to $10,000." No surprise that her most recent book, which she co-wrote with Deborah Hutchinson, is Put It In Writing: Creating Agreements between Family and Friends (Sterling Publishing, 2009). In addition to appearing as an expert guest on shows hosted by the likes of Dr. Phil, Tyra Banks, Rachael Ray, Larry King, and Montel Williams, Toler has had numerous speaking engagements around the country on domestic violence, black youth, and relationships. She also writes a column for Divorce Magazine, which bills itself as "the Internet's leading divorce and separation resource site"; has been named one of the Cleveland Bar Association's Ten Outstanding Women in the Law; and last year was given the After a profile of Toler Freedom Award by the Philadelphia Chapter of the Marappeared in the Cleveland tin Luther King Association Plain Dealer, Twentieth Television offered her the top for Nonviolence. Having recently served spot in Power of Attorney, as executive producer for a show with former O.J. Wedlock or Deadlock, a Simpson prosecutors Chris Darden and Marcia Clark. Divorce Court spin-off that The only problem was, Toler tested well in several cities had just been re-elected but never caught on, Toler judge in Cleveland Heights. admits that she would like "It would have been a little to create more TV shows. So stay tuned.*1 embarrassing to leave the bench and get cancelled," -Janice Arenofsky THE P E N N S Y L V A N I A G A Z E T T E SEPT | OCT 2010 75