Single mom from Prestonsburg earns law degree from University of Kentucky

Editor’s note: The following is a feature published by the University of Kentucky about a Prestonsburg native, and appears here in its entirety, as originally published by the university. The original publishing, which includes a video supplement, can be found here.

By Danielle Donham and Steve Shaffer

LEXINGTON, Ky. — Chynna Hibbitts is well known for student leadership within the University of Kentucky J. David Rosenberg College of Law. She’s president of the UK Student Bar Association, communications editor for the Kentucky Law Journal, recipient of the Lyman T. Johnson Torch Bearer Award for the college and participated in the dedication of the new Rosenberg College of Law Building – all as a single mother. 

“Everything that I’ve done since she’s been born has been to provide a
better life for her. And I have to stop and think about every decision I
made in law school about where I’m going to work, how much is it going
to provide, because I’m not just taking care of myself — I’m taking care
of her. She’s always at the forefront of my mind when I’m making
decisions.”

Chynna Hibbitts speaks at podium
Chynna Hibbitts, University of Kentucky photo

If all had gone to plan this semester, the law graduate would have
been at the Singletary Center for the Arts, seated side-by-side with her
classmates, anxiously awaiting her name to be called, and for interim
Dean Mary J. Davis to welcome her to stage with a very symbolic piece of
paper in hand. She would have hugged classmates, thanked faculty
members, and said goodbye to the people who have changed her life these
last three years. 

But this semester did not go as planned, much like Hibbitts’ own journey to this moment in her life.

Law school was not a part of her initial career path. After
graduating from high school, Hibbitts headed to college at the
University of Louisville. But after two years, she took a pause to move
back home and spend time with family.

Hibbitts has long held a deep passion for sports, and during that
break she moved to Atlanta and worked for several semi-professional and
minor league teams. But soon after, her mother was diagnosed with colon
cancer a few months into Hibbitts’ pregnancy with daughter Maiya. 

So, in 2013, Hibbitts packed up and headed back to her hometown of
Prestonsburg, Kentucky. She wanted to complete her degree, but at the
time, most institutions were not offering online education opportunities
and paying out-of-state tuition was not an option. 

It wasn’t until she moved back home and started working with one of
the four free legal aid programs in Kentucky, the Appalachian Research
and Defense Fund of Kentucky, that she began to think about law school
as a possible career path.

“Over the course of the first year I worked there I was dead set
against becoming a lawyer. In the beginning it was simply something to
pass the time while I was finishing my undergrad degree, but it became
so much more than that.” 

She adored her role at the “AppalReD,” but worried about the
responsibilities and pressure of working on the legal side of things.
That all changed when she began working on cases, performing client
interviews and observed first-hand the impact the organization was
having on families.

Hibbitts was tasked with orating a speech on the organization’s
founder, John Rosenberg, a Holocaust survivor, U.S. Air Force veteran
and esteemed attorney.

“Reading his story, coupled with what I was doing at the firm,
sparked my interest in thinking about law school. Seeing what John, and
his wife Jean, have done with their lives — putting so many ahead of
themselves — is a level of service I wanted to strive to reach, and that
is how I ended up going to law school.”

She was able to finish her general education requirements at a local
community college and returned to UofL to complete her bachelor’s in
communication and sport administration in 2017.

After she had made up her mind about attending law school, the
decision of “where” came much easier. From the moment she visited the UK
campus and the law school, she felt that this is where she was meant to
be.

Hibbitts visited campus twice before officially deciding, citing the faculty and size for making the decision simple.

“I chose the Rosenberg College of Law because it felt like the place I
would be comfortable for three years. Many students are afraid they
will end up as a number at law school, but our community is so small
that it is more like a family. It has been great to have this as a home
away from home.”

Throughout her law school career she has been blessed with the “best
babysitter,” in her mother, who has taken care of granddaughter Maiya
these last three years.

Right before Hibbitts left Prestonsburg to start law school in Lexington, her mother was diagnosed with breast cancer.

“I felt a lot of guilt because I was already planning to leave and
she was supposed to take care of my daughter. But she told me that if I
didn’t go now, there may not be a chance for me to go back.” 

The first year of law school was a challenge for Hibbits, as it can
be for many law students, adjusting to the amount of coursework and a
new schedule. She and her mother worked out a FaceTime schedule so that
she could check in each evening, and on the few occasions that Hibbitts
needed to bring her daughter to class, she was warmly welcomed.

“I could never have made it through without my mom, and even when I
had to bring Maiya to school she was welcomed with open arms.”

Hibbitts has proved that her status as a parent was an asset for her in the classroom, and will be for her in the courtroom.

“A lot of people think having a child in law school is a liability,
but I have found that having those skills as a parent has helped me
manage personalities, excel in time management and just be an overall
better person because of it.”

Although she and her classmates will not have the opportunity to have
a commencement ceremony in person at the moment, she will still be a
member of the first graduating class of the newly named J. David
Rosenberg College of Law. This particular class has made school history,
beginning their studies across the street from the law building during
two years of construction, and ending their final semester scattered
across the country, finishing classes from home.

“I am so proud of myself and my classmates because law is one of the
most rigorous programs that you can go through, and we did it. To
conquer that while being displaced for two years and during a global
pandemic speaks volumes of the resilience and determination to make a
difference in the legal field.

Hibbitts had the privilege of speaking at the dedication ceremony for
the new law building during the fall 2019 semester in front of a
crowded courtroom, standing beside alumnus and donor J. David Rosenberg.
Earlier in the year, Rosenberg and his wife Dianne gave a $20 million
dollar gift to the College of Law.

“Getting to speak at the event was a tremendous honor. To be the
voice of the entire Rosenberg Law student body was a bit nerve-racking,
but I took the responsibility with a lot of pride. I cannot wait to see
how this gift elevates the way the Rosenberg College of Law is viewed
throughout the Commonwealth and the nation.”

Now that Hibbitts has conquered law school, she is setting her sights on the future, and another degree.

This summer she will take the Kentucky Bar Exam and will work at a
litigation firm in downtown Lexington. In the fall she will begin a
master’s program in recreation and sport administration with a focus on
intercollegiate athletic administration. She hopes to merge her two
passions, athletics and law, into one fulfilling career.

“It’s been amazing to have such a positive support system in our faculty, staff and administration and I do not say that lightly. You can’t go everywhere and feel the way I felt when I came here. I want to be a vision that the law school can say ‘look if she can go through this and make it, anybody can.’ And that’s probably what I’m most proud of: I set those goals, I accomplished those goals, and now I’m graduating, and I got to fulfill everything I set out to.”

(left to right) Chynna Hibbitts, Dianne Rosenberg, J. David Rosenberg and President Eli Capilouto
Chynna Hibbitts president of the UK Student Bar Association, communications editor for the Kentucky Law Journal and recipient of the Lyman T. Johnson Torch Bearer Award. Mark Cornelison | UK Photo.

The University of Kentucky is increasingly the first
choice for students, faculty and staff to pursue their passions and
their professional goals. In the last two years, Forbes has named UK
among the best employers for diversity, and INSIGHT into Diversity
recognized us as a Diversity Champion three years running. UK is ranked
among the top 30 campuses in the nation for LGBTQ* inclusion and safety.
UK has been judged a “Great College to Work for” two years in a row,
and UK is among only 22 universities in the country on Forbes’ list of
“America’s Best Employers.”  We are ranked among the top 10 percent of
public institutions for research expenditures — a tangible symbol of our
breadth and depth as a university focused on discovery that changes
lives and communities. And our patients know and appreciate the fact
that UK HealthCare has been named the state’s top hospital for four
straight years. Accolades and honors are great. But they are more
important for what they represent: the idea that creating a community of
belonging and commitment to excellence is how we honor our mission to
be not simply the University of Kentucky, but the University for Kentucky.

window[‘bsa_content_preview_only_270896’] = true;


Source: Mountain Top