Vol. 71, No. 6, June 1998
President's Perspective
Be All You Can Be
By Steven R. Sorenson
"Be all you can be, Steve." I found this message on my desk last
month. I still do not know who put it there, but what a wonderful
challenge. It is what I tried to do this past year.
In my inaugural address I asked you, the members of the State
Bar, to turn inward. I challenged myself, the leadership of the
Bar, and all its members to recognize the importance of helping
lawyers maneuver through the maze that is now the legal profession.
We needed to communicate both up and down the pathway between
leadership and membership. We needed to prioritize the Bar's actions
and activities. We needed to identify a mission and vision for
the Bar and allocate our finite resources to meet them.
Throughout the year, I have used this column to challenge. My
constant theme recognizes the unique role that a lawyer plays
in society. To be all that we can be as lawyers, we must understand
ourselves, our profession, and our communities. The course we
have laid this past year was done by establishing benchmarks,
not only for ourselves but for our profession and our communities.
First there was "Project Vision A Step Into the Future," through
which we identified the State Bar's mission and vision. Project
Vision was a grassroots effort involving more than 2,000 volunteers
from as far away as Washington, D.C., and Washington Island. Every
lawyer, every legal constituent, every entity within the Bar added
to the mix. Although the project is not yet complete, we have
established the course, the benchmarks, and the process for the
future.
Strategic planning also has taken place within the Board of Governors.
My initial effort to bring the presidents of the Young Lawyers,
Government Lawyers, and Nonresident Lawyers divisions into the
Executive Committee started a new trend of openness in the administration
of the State Bar governors. The board's Strategic Planning Committee
will present its final recommendations to the governors this month.
The result will clarify the duties of the executive director,
president, officers, Executive and Finance committees, and the
board itself. Clearer responsibilities and roles will be blended
with a new level of participation and openness. The key to the
entire process is communication to the membership and from the
membership to the governing bodies. The new open communication
strategies should help the board be more reflective of members'
needs. The board's Strategic Planning Committee and chair Tom
Hornig can be commended on their work.
Our second challenge was to reach out to the State Bar's sections
to reinvigorate the role of the Section Leaders Advisory Council.
This was done. The section leaders now meet regularly to discuss
State Bar issues and share their perspectives with the Bar's Board
of Governors and officers. The section leaders also completed
a specific plan for the future development of sections. The group
now has a mission and vision of their role in the State Bar.
Innovation and technology have become the watch words of the CLE
departments. Under the leadership of Paul Swanson, the CLE Committee
has taken an extremely active role this past year in developing
programs that will improve access to the State Bar's educational
materials. Soon they will bring live CLE seminars to lawyers'
desktops. The first interactive video program was demonstrated
successfully at the Midwinter Convention. Modifications are being
made to the program and new dollars are being committed to technological
advancement. The concept of CLE on demand, and the technologies
it requires, is being incorporated into the new State Bar Center
and the department's long-range strategic plan. This, combined
with our expanding Web site, continues to keep the State Bar of
Wisconsin at the cutting edge.
Technology and government can advance projects but also can bring
them to a stop. The idea of a centralized Wisconsin Legal Information
Network has become mired in the conflicting goals of various private
and public agencies. The goal of consolidating all legal information
into one centralized service is still an aspiration. Work needs
to be done on the mechanics and more consideration has to be given
to the intellectual property issues surrounding the final product.
Still, it is a realistic goal, and it is an essential aspect of
the partnering we need to develop between our law schools, court
system, governmental units, and the State Bar. The day must come
when every public and school library, courthouse resource center,
and law office computer can access all legal resources within Wisconsin, no matter where they are located,
at little or no cost.
Efficiency and openness also was the theme behind the year-long
process of restructuring the State Bar budget. Under the excellent
leadership of John Macy, a new strategic plan has been developed
for finance within the State Bar. The fiscal year 1999 budgetary
process brought with it a new spirit of openness and participation.
The regular breakfast finance sessions, the lengthy budgetary
document presentation, the advance date of introduction of budgets,
the participation of committees and staff liaisons, and the personal
involvement of every Finance Committee member have given the State
Bar a truly representative budget. The process has a three-year
impact, establishing financial policy for the years 1999-2001.
The final implementation process for this rolling budget will
not be completed until next year, but the ground work is done
and success is imminent.
The other major theme of this past year was "outreach." As I told
the staff during my first week as president, they needed to find
new shoes and new tires because they were going out to meet the
membership. Miles logged by the staff in outreach programs this
past year is unparalleled. Two regional conferences were held
taking the State Bar and its staff out of Madison to the more
remote areas of the state.
The first regional conference last November in Hudson demonstrated
that effective partnering can be done between a local bar association,
the State Bar, and a Nonresident Lawyers Division chapter, which
in this case was from Minneapolis-St. Paul. The combined efforts
of these groups and the willingness of local attorney volunteers
provided dynamic educational and informational programs. Using
the theme of the political intrigue surrounding cranberry marshes,
a repeat performance of the successful regional conference was
held last February in Wisconsin Rapids. Again, through the efforts
of outreach by the State Bar staff, the State Bar volunteer leadership,
and the local bar association, a successful educational and informational
program was held.
Perhaps the greatest outreach effort this past year was the Midwest
Regional Small Firm Success Conference held in La Crosse in late
April. They said it couldn't be done; they said the resources
were insufficient; they said that Midwest state bar associations
would never come together, and yet we did it in La Crosse. This
program, which was spearheaded by Kris Karrmann, the Solo and
Small Firm Committee chair from Platteville, and Laura Adell from
the State Bar staff, was the most rewarding experience of my presidency.
The ability to provide an educational and networking opportunity
at a reasonable cost to lawyers throughout the Midwest, who otherwise
never have the chance to participate, is something of which I
am very proud. We, the State Bar of Wisconsin, can congratulate
ourselves on this program. The State Bar Association of Iowa plans
to repeat the program next year. Minnesota, Illinois, Indiana,
Michigan, Nebraska, and Ohio will soon follow.
I have been told by many people that the greatest accomplishment
of my presidency will be the acquisition of a new facility. While
I am proud of the work done by the Facilities Committee and look
forward to seeing the completion of the project, it is not the
principal legacy I wish to leave.
The legacy I am most proud of is found in the text of the President's
Perspectives of the past year. It is the commitment by volunteers
and staff to assist lawyers, the renewed desire by lawyers to
improve their profession, the promise of lawyers to serve their
communities, and the realization by lawyers of the need to balance
their lives. This legacy not only is in the words on the printed
page but also in the actions of lawyers. I have witnessed this
commitment during the many Wisconsin Lawyers Assistance Program
(WisLAP) meetings I've attended this year; I have heard the message
voiced by the hundreds of lawyers I've met; I have participated
in numerous national conferences on the status of the legal profession
and the one thing that remains constant is the realization that
lawyers are real people and they do care.
As I move forward in my career, I leave with you a message of
caring. As I said from the very first day of my campaign, this
presidency is a presidency founded upon a "spirit of service."
You, the individual lawyers of the State Bar of Wisconsin, your
successes professionally, in your communities, and at home, are
important to me. If your life has improved a bit, if you have
found help through State Bar resources, if you have recognized
the need to balance career and family, if you have recognized
that you are not alone, then the year has been a success. It has
been a success not because of what I have done but because of what we have done. It took the hard work of a loyal staff, the commitment
of the Board of Governors, the dedication of committee chairs,
the involvement of section leaders, the devotion of division presidents,
and the unending efforts of all of the other entities of the Bar.
Together we have and we can continue to make a difference for
ourselves, our families, our profession, and our communities.
So, "be all you can be," and thank you for giving me the opportunity
to carry out my "spirit of service."
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