
We seek to shift the balance of power towards greater equity in our economy and society by leveraging legal strategies and resources to build worker power and enhance the capacity of the low-wage worker movement
About Us
Our Values
We believe that impacted people should be directly involved in shaping the policies that govern their lives and that people power will achieve more lasting change than any legal or legislative strategy alone. However, when used in coordination with organizing, legal strategies can be an effective tool to meet the immediate needs of workers while also advancing campaigns for worker justice.
Our History
GLOW was previously known as National Legal Advocacy Network, a fiscally sponsored project of the National Employment Law Project (NELP), created in 2018 for the purpose of providing movement aligned legal support to worker centers, their members, and their campaigns.
In 2024, NLAN spun off NELP and became an independent non-profit organization – Grassroots Law & Organizing for Workers (GLOW). We feel this name more accurately reflects who we are, what we do, and how we aim to do it. It is our intention to sustain a steady light and support the fire lit by working-class people fighting for fairness, dignity, and joy.
Since 2019, we have reached over 75,000 workers with information about their rights and opportunities to engage in collective action, put over $10 million back into the hands of low-wage workers and their communities and provided legal support for more than 35 worker organizations and campaigns.

Meet the Team
Sheila Maddali
Executive Director
Sheila (she/her) is the daughter of South Asian immigrants and began organizing as a teenager when her community was targeted by post-9/11 racial profiling and immigration enforcement. She has been involved in the struggle for racial and economic justice for nearly two decades in a variety of roles, ranging from street canvasser to legal counsel. For the past decade her work has focused on the intersection of law and organizing. Prior to working at GLOW, Sheila served as the Director of Law & Organizing at the Restaurant Opportunities Centers United (ROC United) and before that she practiced immigration law and organized around immigrant detention, prison expansion, and sex workers rights.
Keren Salim
Staff Attorney
Keren Salim (she/her/hers) is a Muslim Pakistani North Carolinian committed to community and movement lawyering that de-centers the law and leverages resources in order to shift the balance of power. Prior to her position at GLOW, she worked as a community lawyer at New Haven Legal Assistance Association, where she focused on workers' rights and housing justice. During her time at legal aid, she prioritized providing legal and technical support to organizers and coalitions in the community. She graduated from Northeastern University School of Law, where she spent the majority of her time on public interest and civil rights law opportunities, including participation in the Civil Rights and Restorative Justice Clinic and the Poverty Law Clinic and interning at Southern Coalition for Social Justice and Greater Boston Legal Services. Keren is a relationship-builder, and works to center anti-racist and liberatory organizing principles in her work as an attorney.
Lorraine Sands
Legal Organizer
Lorraine (she/her), an organizer and a paralegal, aims to bridge law and organizing in movement work. Motivated by the belief that all people deserve access to safe, healthy & happy lives, Lorraine’s work is rooted in abolition and inspired by liberation struggles across the world. Prior to GLOW, Lorraine worked at Workers’ Law Office as an Outreach Paralegal, working on class action lawsuits against exploitative and discriminatory temporary staffing agencies. Before moving to Chicago, Lorraine lived & worked in Kansas City, Missouri at Legal Aid in the Economic Development & Immigration departments. While in KC, Lorraine was active with Stand Up KC, Kansas City's Fight for 15 campaign, supporting workers in their movement for a living wage and a union. Lorraine is devoted to deep relationship-building, cross-movement collaborations, trauma-informed advocacy and storytelling as a form of empowerment.
Chris Williams
Of Counsel
Chris (he/his) was one of the founders and the first Director of the Working Hands Legal Clinic (now Raise the Floor Alliance) in Chicago, a non-profit legal clinic that worked with a network of community-based worker centers to support workplace justice campaigns and to bring access to legal services for low wage Illinois workers in the area of labor and employment law. While Director, Chris advised the Illinois legislature on a number of pieces of legislation designed to protect the rights of Illinois’ most vulnerable workers, from the Illinois Day and Temporary Labor Services Act to the Illinois Right to Privacy in the Workplace Act, creating protections against abuse of the E-Verify system. In 2011, Chris left WHLC to start his own practice, Workers’ Law Office, PC, and now works with a national network of worker centers addressing workplace abuses in a variety of industries, from temp workers, restaurant workers, warehouse workers and domestic workers. Chris has been lead counsel or co-counseled in over 400 wage and hour and employment discrimination cases, including 45 class actions. Prior to practicing law, Chris spent over a decade as a union organizer for Chicago area labor unions and was a founding member of a Chicago-based worker center.
FAQs
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A: GLOW is Grassroots Law & Organizing for Workers. We combine legal strategy with organizing to build worker power, defend rights, and fuel the low-wage worker movement.
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A: We work in deep partnership with worker centers, base-building organizations, and movement lawyers across the country. Our focus is supporting low-wage workers, especially those pushed to the margins of the labor market.
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A: Unlike traditional legal aid, GLOW centers organizing and collective power. We use legal strategies in coordination with worker campaigns to challenge exploitation, strengthen movements, and win systemic change.
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A: We offer legal clinics, trainings, research, policy drafting, co-counseling, and direct representation in partnership with worker centers and organizing campaigns.
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A: GLOW anchors TWAC, a national coalition of 30+ organizations fighting for justice for temp workers through campaigns, enforcement, and base-building.
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A: The Worker Center Bar is a growing network of lawyers and legal workers mobilized to meet the legal needs of the worker justice movement at scale.
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A: We’re always seeking interns, externs, fellows, and volunteers. Check our [Work With Us] page for current opportunities.
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A: Join the Worker Center Bar! Contact us to learn how your skills can support worker organizing and campaigns.
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A: GLOW primarily works in collaboration with worker centers and community-based campaigns. If you’re an individual worker seeking legal help, we encourage you to reach out to a local worker center or contact us for a referral.
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A: Yes. GLOW is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. All donations are tax-deductible within U.S. law. Our EIN is 82-3524198.
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A: Your support funds legal and organizing strategies, worker convenings, enforcement campaigns, and resources that directly strengthen the low-wage worker movement.
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A: Yes. Checks can be mailed to Grassroots Law & Organizing for Workers at 1 N. La Salle, Suite 1275, Chicago, IL 60602. For donor-advised funds or stock donations, contact info@glow.law.
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A: You can reach us at info@glow.law or through our Contact Us page. Follow us on Instagram for updates on our work.