Sign In
    Wisconsin Lawyer
    August 01, 2002

    Legal News and Trends

    Wisconsin Lawyer
    Vol. 75, No. 8, August 2002

    Legal   News & Trends

    ABA launches campaign, promotes public discussions on democracy and the Constitution

    "Sept. 11 was a vivid reminder that we must not take our liberty and freedom for granted," ABA President Robert Hirshon told attendees at a National Press Club Newsmakers breakfast when he unveiled plans to launch a major, national ABA initiative on July 1. The initiative highlights the importance of the U.S. Constitution and debate in our society and seeks to engage Americans in discussions about how our laws preserve democracy and make us secure.

    CONSTITUTION"Unless we pass our values on to our children in ways that make democracy relevant to them, there is no guarantee that what we have and cherish today we will have tomorrow," said Hirshon. "Our nation's security is fundamentally linked to the values and beliefs embodied in our Constitution."

    To underscore the importance of debate, the ABA is using print advertising to raise the visibility of these issues. The initiative also includes a continued commitment to the ABA's Dialogue on Freedom, a national program exploring American values and civic traditions through classroom discussions between lawyers or judges and high school students, and a new series of town hall meetings nationwide that provide a forum to raise and discuss the issues that our nation faces in this new era.

    Hirshon unveiled an advertisement depicting a child sleeping under a blanket imprinted with the U.S. Constitution, conveying that our national identity and security stem directly from the rights and obligations written into our Constitution. Titled "Security Blanket," the ad debuted on July 8 in newspapers in Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas, New York, San Francisco, and Washington, D.C. A second advertisement will provide a provocative invitation for Americans to join a pro-con debate on electronic surveillance. It is the first in a series of advertisements that examine legal questions of particular interest to the public and that "debate" opposing views on each topic.

    "Our intention is to select issues that are matters of genuine debate, where reasonable people differ - perhaps strongly - in a reasonable way," Hirshon said.

    For more information, visit the ABA's Web site.

    Self-represented litigation is on the rise

    In a statewide survey conducted approximately two years ago by the Dane County Clerk of Courts, 98 percent of the clerks who responded reported an overall increase in self-representation in the preceding five years.

    A two-month snapshot of family cases filed in Dane County in 1999 and 2002 reflects that the number of cases in which both parties are pro se litigants steadily increased from 48 percent to 60 percent.

    Family cases in which both parties are represented by counsel decreased from 21 to 13 percent for this same time period.

    New Supreme Court Rule guides court staff

    The Wisconsin Supreme Court recently adopted SCR 70.41, effective July 1, to guide court staff when assisting individual court users. The guidelines concept originated from the Wisconsin Pro Se Working Group, a committee of the Office of the Chief Justice. Subsequently, a committee comprised of representatives of the judiciary, State Bar, and clerks of circuit court, a district court administrator, and a member of the state law library staff crafted a petition based on a report that found court staff need and want guidance on how much information they can properly give to the public, particularly self-repre-sented litigants, without giving legal advice.

    "The new supreme court rule provides much-needed direction to clerks of court who are often the gatekeepers to the courts," says Wisconsin Clerks of Circuit Court Association president Judy Coleman. "These guidelines also will result in a more uniform level of assistance to court users statewide.

    "More clearly delineating what information court staff should provide reinforces the obligation and importance of providing access to the courts and fulfilling the public expectations in terms of quality customer service," Coleman says. "More clearly delineating what information court staff should not provide reinforces the need for court staff to be neutral and impartial in their dealings with court users. Lack of direction on what is legal advice should not be a barrier to providing service to the public."

    The Wisconsin Clerks of Circuit Court Association, Wisconsin Association of Municipal Court Clerks, and Registers in Probate Association submitted the petition to the supreme court. Newly created Supreme Court Rule 70.41 is published in the June Wisconsin Lawyer.


Join the conversation! Log in to comment.

News & Pubs Search

-
Format: MM/DD/YYYY