Vol. 72, No. 3, March 1999
President's Perspective
We have seen the future,
and it better be us
By Susan
R. Steingass
Many
of you now know that on Jan. 27, 1999, your Board of Governors
voted a $35 increase in dues, beginning next year.
This was a very difficult decision for me personally. Though
I eventually came to support and vote for the dues increase,
I had been against it. I knew at the beginning of this fiscal
year that a future dues increase was inevitable, despite efforts
of the Finance Committee, on which I have served these last two
years, to curb expansion and trim all fat from the budget. But
our last dues increase was four years ago and I knew, as do you,
that virtually all costs have increased over that time. Even
so, I was concerned that an increase would be associated by some
with the new building and could hamper our ongoing fund-raising
efforts.
After looking closely at the budget and future projections,
and looking at them every way I could to avoid a dues increase,
I reluctantly concluded that we, as the Finance Committee, had
no other fiscally responsible choice than to recommend a modest
dues increase to the Board.
The Board of Governors debated the question at length. Some
members thought about the effect on fund-raising and the association
of the increase with the new building. Others thought that we
should consider slashing expenses by extensive program and personnel
cuts, as necessary. Still others thought the entire membership
should have more opportunity for input before the vote. In the
end, the great majority thought that a $35 increase was necessary
and that it would be fiscally irresponsible to put the inevitable
decision over for a future Board to face. The motion carried
by a vote of 27 to 12.
Everyone would like to see costs go down, not up. But that
belies common sense and experience, whether you're a fiscal
conservative or not. Four years ago, the then-Board grappled
with the same issues. The Bar's cost projection showed the
necessity for a $25 dues increase in this fiscal year 2000 budget.
Whether to approve it prospectively was actively debated, and
that Board decided not to bind this Board by such a vote. That
Board, as this one, had to have known that even without expansion,
costs increase over time. They had to know, as do you, that paper,
postage, and, yes, salaries, have to increase.
While that $25 increase has been long projected and comes
from increased costs and not the new building, it would be naive
to argue that none of the $35 increase comes from the new building.
It is surprising that only a small portion - between $8
and $10 of the $35 - is related to the new building.
Why? Again, common sense tells us that a 40,000 square foot
building costs more to buy and operate than the current 20,000
square foot Bar Center. For example, we have to snowplow 200
free parking spaces, not 25.
But a variety of factors have kept the cost of the new facility
as low as it is. Our current building was sold at a favorable
price. We have obtained a unique and extremely favorable financing
arrangement with our lender. We converted short-term reserves
to further reduce the price, though we thereby sacrificed the
interest earned on that money in prior years - money that
was used for programming.
Our fund-raising efforts have been extremely successful (almost
$1 million by mid-February), but we did not dare hope to raise
the full $2.3 million needed to avoid borrowing against the debt
for the new building.
But there are far larger issues at work than increased costs.
There is the future to consider. The State Bar is not and should
not be a static association. It must plan its finances with an
eye toward the future of the practice of law and an organization
that looks very different in the future, a future that is close
at hand.
Editor's Note: Click here to read more on
the dues increase. |
Just think of the changes over the last 10 years and multiply
that exponentially into the future. Technology experts predict
that dramatic new technological advances will not occur every
five years, but each and every year. The impact on your practice
and the State Bar is unprecedented, and the Bar must be ready
to meet it.
Ten years ago, we didn't have fax machines, let alone
computers. Today, we fax from our computers. Ten years ago, we
sat in rows and listened to experts speak for our continuing
legal education. Today, the State Bar must prepare for the increasing
alternatives for delivering information and knowledge in ways
we cannot now even fully imagine.
You have already seen the results of the State Bar's
efforts to use new technologies to deliver information: partnering
with LOIS to deliver lower cost legal research alternatives;
free case law on WisBar, the Bar's Internet site, delivered
to your desktop; CLE by telephone; CLE books in electronic form,
complete with links to related primary source material; and a
searchable membership directory with email links to facilitate
lawyer-to-lawyer referrals and communication.
But we can't stop here. The State Bar is developing hands-on
computer training to help you stay abreast of technology changes.
We are working on an "electronic storefront" on WisBar
that pulls together State Bar information - whether from
a CLE book or seminar, a Wisconsin Lawyer article, or a convention
outline - making it easy for you to find what you want,
when you want it. We are working on high-quality, more flexible
distance-learning alternatives. And, we will continue to partner
with other service providers to provide low-cost or free access
to historical case law, agency decisions, and public records.
The infrastructure in the new Bar Center is designed to accommodate
these changes.
All of this costs money. This modest dues increase will responsibly
pay for our present and our future. We have seen the future,
and it had better be us if we want to remain dynamic and relevant
to our members.
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