
Vol. 75, No. 11, November
2002
Volunteering Time, Expertise Giving Back
Community service is a hallmark of Wisconsin
lawyers and Bar staff.
by George C. Brown,
State Bar executive director
Thousands of Wisconsin attorneys
volunteer time, talent, and energy giving back to your profession and
communities. More than 1,000 of you annually volunteer to serve on State
Bar committees, on division and section boards, and on the Board of
Governors. Nearly 150 of you coach high school students in the annual
statewide high school mock trial competition, and an additional 450-plus
serve as mock trial judges. Each year more than 100 serve the public
through the Lawyer Referral and Information Services Hotline program,
providing free counsel to citizens who need brief legal advice. And this
doesn't include the thousands of hours you give to your local or
specialty bar associations or to your community or religious
organizations, let alone all the pro bono legal work so many of you
perform.
Volunteering takes all manner of time. In service to your colleagues,
some of you have available only a few hours a month, so become involved
in the State Bar grassroots program or serve on a committee. Others can
spend more time, so volunteer to teach at a CLE program, write a CLE
book chapter, or serve on the Board of Governors or a section board. For
the State Bar president, volunteering is a half-time job. Because we ask
so much of you as members, State Bar staff also are encouraged to give
back through their communities or professional organizations.
Recently, senior government relations coordinator Jenny Boese
returned from her third annual week-long trip to the Dominican Republic
on missions work with her church group to improve the living conditions
and spiritual lives of people in one rural village. Working with civic
and church leaders, she has performed all manner of community
development work. She has worked to improve housing and sanitation,
including constructing latrines, and even helped start a baseball club
similar to Little League by bringing hundreds of baseball gloves and
balls to the villagers. Dozens of State Bar staff have answered her
annual call for contributions for school supplies, clothing, and
sporting equipment.
At the end of September, Joyce Hastings, the longtime editor of this
magazine and the director for the State Bar's Communications Department,
attended the annual conference of the National Association of Bar
Executives (NABE) Communication Section. Joyce is a past president of
the section and often makes presentations on publishing, Web site
development, and other communications issues at national conferences. At
this meeting, she gave a presentation on the Bar's branding effort to
more than 100 of her colleagues from other state and local bar
associations. She also returned with something special. In recognition
of her leadership and contributions to the section and the
communications profession, Joyce was presented with the highest award
offered by the NABE Communications Section, the E.A. "Wally" Richter
Award.
Jenny and Joyce are just two of the many staff members who volunteer
their time and talents. Just as community service is a hallmark of
Wisconsin lawyers, so is it characteristic of the staff who work for you
at the State Bar of Wisconsin.
Wisconsin
Lawyer