WisBar News
August 20, 2007
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel editorial endorses State Bar's legal services consumer protection initiative
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel is the first Wisconsin newspaper to speak out editorially on the State Bar's June petition to the State Supreme Court proposing adoption of the Legal Services Consumer Protection Act. Journal Sentinel editors endorsed the Bar's position, noting that we need "more tools to protect consumers from bad legal advice by non-lawyers." The August 20 editorial explains that the state "has the power to act when lawyers themselves misbehave, but it lacks that kind of control over non-lawyers who dispense legal advice." The editorial stresses the need for a narrowly-drawn provision "written to target only cases in which consumers may get hurt as a result of outright fraud or well-intentioned error."
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel editorial endorses State
Bar’s legal services consumer protection initiative
August 20, 2007 - The Milwaukee Journal
Sentinel is the first Wisconsin newspaper to speak out editorially
on the State Bar’s June petition to the State Supreme Court
proposing adoption of the Legal
Services Consumer Protection Act. Journal Sentinel editors
endorsed
the Bar’s position, noting that we need “more tools to
protect consumers from bad legal advice by non-lawyers.” The
August 20 editorial
explains that the state “has the power to act when lawyers
themselves misbehave, but it lacks that kind of control over non-lawyers
who dispense legal advice.” The editorial stresses the need for a
narrowly-drawn provision “written to target only cases in which
consumers may get hurt as a result of outright fraud or well-intentioned
error.”
State Bar President Tom Basting recently met with editorial staff
from the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and other media to clarify
the petition and urge support. “My goal in meeting with print and
electronic media leaders is to convey both the urgency and the merits of
our petition. I have emphasized in all of my meetings that the State Bar
is working cooperatively with representatives of the real estate,
banking and other industries to address their interests as well. Our
only goal is to safeguard consumers from unqualified legal
advice,” Basting said.
The petition asks the court to take two steps: 1) adopt a new rule
clearly defining what constitutes the “practice of law” for
consumer protection purposes; and 2) create an administrative system to
enforce the new rule. A hearing on the petition has been scheduled for
December.