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Letters
Bar should implement a dues structure based on income
As a Wisconsin attorney, I strongly object to the State Bar
Board of Governors' recent approval of a $35 dues increase,
which will take effect on July 1, 1999, as reported in the March Wisconsin
Lawyer. I object because this dues increase will be disproportionately
carried on the backs of those attorneys who have the least ability
to bear it.
The current State Bar dues structure is very regressive and
unfairly penalizes active Wisconsin attorneys who have little
or no income. First, active attorneys with lower incomes currently
pay the same flat rate dues amount as attorneys with higher incomes.
I firmly believe that those attorneys who receive a greater benefit
from the use of their law licenses ought to pay more for that
privilege than those attorneys who have been less
fortunate and, as a result, have lower incomes.
Second,
the current State Bar dues structure favors fully employed attorneys
over attorneys who are active but underemployed or unemployed.
Most fully employed Wisconsin attorneys have their Bar dues completely
paid for by their employers, while underemployed and unemployed
attorneys generally must pay these dues out of their own pockets.
Under the current Bar dues structure, active status fully employed
attorneys who have the wherewithal to pay (through their higher
incomes) do not have to pay their own Bar dues (because the employer
pays them), while underemployed and unemployed attorneys with
lower incomes are required to pay these dues themselves (because
no one else does). Thus, the current Bar dues structure places
a disproportionate financial burden on those attorneys who have
the least ability to pay.
Many other Wisconsin professional associations (for example,
the Wisconsin Institute of CPAs, the State Medical Society of
Wisconsin, and the Wisconsin Education Association Council) already
provide full dues waivers or reduced dues allowances for their
underemployed and unemployed members. Also, several other state
bar associations (for example, California, Minnesota, Indiana,
and Illinois) currently have progressive dues structures based
upon the income levels of their attorney members.
I would like to see the State Bar of Wisconsin implement a
progressive dues structure for its active attorneys that is based
upon their income levels. The current dues structure is highly
regressive and unfair to active attorneys with lower incomes.
Like other state bar associations and professional organizations
have already done, our State Bar should implement a dues structure
that allows its active members with lower incomes to pay at reduced
annual rates (regardless of how many years they have been in
practice). Such an approach is the most equitable way to solve
the problems that plague our current State Bar dues structure.
Jeffrey M. Gonyo
Slinger
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