Board approves Access to Justice Report
At its May meeting, the Board of Governors voted to
accept the Access to Justice Report and to adopt the report’s
recommendations. The board also directed the State Bar president to
refer the report’s recommendations to the appropriate State Bar
committees and sections for further work on implementation.
The report’s recommendations focus on the need for
coordinated actions that leverage commitments from Wisconsin lawyers,
the court system, the Legislature, the Governor, legal aid providers and
our law schools.
The Access to Justice Study Committee, appointed by
then President Michael Guerin in 2005, was charged to rigorously assess
the civil legal needs of Wisconsin residents and to
evaluate and recommend long-term solutions. The committee was asked to
identify persons or communities with unmet legal needs, the nature of
the legal needs, how those needs are distributed statewide, the reasons
why the needs are not being met, ways the needs could be met, and the
major social impact on our communities by allowing these legal needs to
go unaddressed.
Judge Sankovitz informed the board that the report has
even attracted national attention to the Bar’s efforts on access
to justice, with a number of other states expressing interest in the
report’s comprehensive approach and its demonstration of the value
of using cost-benefit analysis to supplement the discussion on this
important issue.
Past President Guerin told the board, “One of
the main committee findings is that the problem of access to justice
cannot be solved by Wisconsin lawyers. As Judge
Sankovitz has reported, if every lawyer in Wisconsin took on four more
pro bono cases, we would not solve the problem. It is much bigger than
that. The committee has developed a proposal that brings into play for
the very first time, the legislature, the business community, and other
parties who have not been stepping up to the plate.”
While many members will have differing points of view
on the committee’s recommendations, Guerin said, “I believe
members are not looking for us to make them comfortable. I believe they
are looking for us to do the right thing. There may be parts of these
recommendations that don’t completely satisfy everyone, but
implementation is not going to happen overnight. There will be reasoned
discussion, and we will be a part of it. Let’s pass the
committee’s recommendations and get the process
rolling.”
While some governors raised concerns with the
recommendations dealing with the mandatory assessment to fund legal
services, expanded roles for paralegals and an expansion in pro se
assistance, President-elect Tom Basting urged the board to “move
the Access to Justice Committee’s recommendations forward,”
emphasizing that, “the State Bar of Wisconsin has a real
opportunity to take a leadership role in this issue, which will be
recognized nationwide. I think we have an opportunity to move forward
with solutions for the delivery of civil legal services to the 500,000
poor people of this state who have been identified in this report as
being unserved.”
Read the “Bridging the Justice
Gap” report and recommendations.