Vol. 71, No. 4, April
1998
Letters
Short term limits pose dangers
I am a member of the state bars in Wisconsin and Michigan. The Michigan
Bar Journal recently carried an article noting the effect of the 1992
passage of term limits for members of the Michigan Legislature. (Edmund
M. Brady Jr., Legislative Law School, Mich. B.J. 136-7 (Feb. 1998).)
In November 1998, 65 members of the Michigan House of Representatives (out
of 110 total) will be turned out of office because of the term limitation
law, which limits House members to three terms. Additional changes likely
will occur due to voluntary retirement or incumbent defeats. Similar term
limits will affect the Michigan Senate in 2002. The Michigan Bar
expects that two-thirds of the legislators seated in 1999 will have no
prior legislative experience.
Of the 110 members of the Michigan House, only 15 are lawyers. Of those,
six cannot return because of term limits. The Michigan Legislature now faces
the serious risk of loss of its institutional memory and of even an understanding
of how the legislative process works, let alone any subtleties of legal
principles.
While one could argue that this sea change in the legislature will bring
fresh ideas and clear out the "deadwood," it clearly poses a risk
that Michigan's laws will be in the hands of legislative rookies lacking
any knowledge or experience on the limitations of the legislative process,
the legislature's role in the constitutional process, or even the state's
role in the governmental process. The Michigan Bar is so concerned that
it is developing a "legislative law school" to attempt to close
the gap.
Persons advocating short term limits should pause to realize the risk
created if they are successful: It will leave our legislatures in the control
of rookies to make our laws.
Thomas J. Zaremba, Madison
Bar should not add to sprawl
It is with dismay that I read about the Board of Governors approving
an option on a site at the American Center commercial business park
on Madison's far northeast side. I am chagrined that my professional
organization would take steps to contribute to sprawl and bad transportation
and land use planning.
Madison's esthetic attractions are well-known. Sadly, it is rapidly
becoming less of the beautiful city so many of us have admired and enjoyed.
Doty designed the original city streets to radiate out of the Capitol like
the spokes of a wheel. Unfortunately what is radiating out now is strip
malls, office parks, and frontage roads. These so-called "parks"
use landscaping to sugarcoat their real purpose: aiding the driving and
parking of cars.
The Board of Governors should make a commitment to responsible land use.
The headquarters should remain in central Madison. Surely one of the downtown
office buildings currently under construction or on the drawing boards could
accommodate the Bar's expanding needs.
Wisconsin's attorneys can justifiably take great pride in the contributions
we make in our communities and state. The State Bar headquarters should
reflect that pride and commitment. We should not build another monument
to sprawl. Madison has enough of them already.
Allan Beatty, Sparta
The Facilities Committee spent the last six years exhaustively investigating
and pursuing all possible alternatives to our current building. Several
downtown locations were considered, but these sites either did not meet
the State Bar's future space needs or were far more costly than the
American Center site. One benefit of moving to Madison's east side
is easier access to lawyers outside Dane County using the state's main
highways and interstate system.
Gerald O'Brien, Chair
Facilities Committee
Real data needed on firearms and firearm safety
Firearm deaths in Wisconsin average about 500 per year. In some communities
firearm deaths exceed those caused by auto crashes. Little data exist to
provide insight into the number, nature, and costs of nonfatal firearm injuries.
The Wisconsin Legislature has devised various strategies to balance health
and safety interests with those of hunters, target shooters, collectors,
dealers, law enforcement, and persons who believe firearms are important
for self protection from criminals or an over-reaching government. These
laws: prohibit certain firearms, limit possession on the basis of age or
past behavior, limit local ordinances, establish waiting periods, require
background checks, regulate carrying, penalize negligent or intoxicated
use of firearms, require education and safe storage, and establish gun-free
school zones.
An amendment to the state constitution establishing a "right to
bear arms" may be placed on the ballot this fall. The impact of passage
on current laws is unclear. Laws regulating use and possession of firearms
may be subject to heightened state interest and scrutiny, raising questions
about age limits, concealed carrying, and waiting periods among other issues.
The impact on future efforts to reduce firearm injuries through design and
safety standards also is unpredictable.
Previous writers have urged the State Bar to avoid taking positions because
the debate over gun regulation is "political." However, automatically
silencing the Bar when an issue becomes politicized rewards extremism and
amounts to a heckler's veto.
Why should lawyers and the State Bar take positions on firearm issues?
First, a large body of law and legal practice involving firearms already
exists and is subject to change and improvement. Second, amending the state
constitution has ramifications far beyond the criminal justice system. Third,
criminal cases involving firearms consume an inordinate amount of judicial
and enforcement resources. Fourth, the practicing bar is in an important
position to educate the public.
Advocates on all sides will argue that their position is the right one
to reduce the social and judicial costs of violence. Therefore, progress
in public policy is not likely unless three things happen:
- The issues must be reframed. Lobbying groups have an interest in casting
public debate in stark terms such as "pro-gun vs. anti-gun" or
"gun-control vs. individual rights." These terms are calculated
to raise funds and motivate constituents but may not contribute to real
solutions. Reframed issues include: focusing on injury reduction, assuring
gun-owners wider access to safety choices, promoting research into firearm
engineering, and improving education.
- A better job must be done to gather and analyze the data. Many of the
advocates' assertions are based on faith and not fact. We lack
basic information about environmental circumstances contributing to
gun injuries and we lack the necessary capacity to evaluate injury-reduction
strategies. We don't know which firearms are more likely to produce
injuries or deaths or why. Crafting policies without even knowing how many
gun injuries occur is, indeed, shooting in the dark. We do a better job
reporting and evaluating dog-bite cases than gun injuries.
- The public needs education about firearms and firearm laws. The one
thing everyone agreed upon following a recent Wisconsin survey was that
much of the public is uninformed or misinformed about firearm law. This
is an area where the Bar has an opportunity, as well as a responsibility,
to act.
The Commission on Violence and the Justice System recommended establishing
a firearm injury tracking survey. Agreement should be possible on this and
on providing education to the Bar and the public. We can then tackle the
tougher issues of identifying the factors associated with firearm injuries
and promoting responsible firearm policies.
Richard L. Withers, JD
Stephen W. Hargarten, MD, MPH
Medical College of Wisconsin
Firearm Injury Center, Milwaukee
Many thanks to Atty. Withers and Dr. Hargarten for their well-reasoned
and astute analysis. Our Board of Governors was well aware of the controversy
that would ensue from approval of the recommendations of the Commission
on Violence and the Justice System, including the call for firearm
injury tracking. I agree with the several reasons stated for the
State Bar taking positions on firearm issues. Those reasons plus the arguments
against taking such positions were strongly debated. In the end, the report
was adopted with only a single dissent. I am proud that our governance chose
to contribute to the discussion of a very serious issue of public health
with profound implications for our justice system.
David A. Saichek, Past President
Milwaukee
Gerald R. Fox's
letter in the February 1998 Wisconsin Lawyer demonstrates the
common sense that is a hallmark of good lawyering. I second Mr. Fox's
suggestion that if the State Bar really wishes to address violence
in our society, we must contribute to reducing ignorance, poverty and social
injustice. These are the hard issues that politicians and headline seekers
tend to avoid.
Attacking inanimate objects like kitchen knives, baseball bats or guns
makes no sense. In the end, such attacks will do nothing to protect the
victims of violence.
If cheap and unduly dangerous handguns have proliferated as Past President
Saichek indicates, shouldn't we be asking why? As an organization devoted
to justice, let's get at the root causes, rather than rushing to the
easy, but ineffective, answers.
John L. Peeters, Kaukauna
I agree with Mr. Peeters on the root causes of American violence.
The Commission on Violence and the Justice System did not "attack"
guns. It suggested feasible safety mechanisms that could protect people
from accidental injury plus aid law enforcement to identify the perpetrators
of violent crimes.
David A. Saichek, Past President
Milwaukee
Note: The commission's
report was published in the July 1997 Wisconsin Lawyer at page 10.
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