WisBar News
January 26, 2006
Supreme court tentatively rejects mandatory pro bono reporting
On Jan. 25, the Supreme Court voted tentatively to reject the Ethics 2000 Commission's proposal on SCR 20:6.1, the controversial provision that would have required mandatory reporting of pro bono publico work performed by State Bar members. The court's unanimous motion was to adopt the ABA Model Rule, which does not contain the reporting requirement included in the Ethics 2000 document.
Supreme court tentatively rejects mandatory pro bono
reporting
On Jan. 25, the Supreme
Court voted tentatively to reject the Ethics 2000 Commission's proposal
on SCR 20:6.1, the controversial provision that would have required
mandatory reporting of pro bono publico work performed by
State Bar members. The court's unanimous motion was to adopt the ABA
Model Rule, which does not contain the reporting requirement included in
the Ethics 2000 document.
The State Bar had advocated for
adoption of the Model Rule language and was represented at the hearing
by Dean Dietrich, chair of the Bar's Professional Ethics Committee. "I
am very pleased that the Justices recognized the difficulties with the
mandatory reporting requirement and stayed with the Model Rule language"
said Dietrich of the Ruder Ware Law Firm.
The court favored the ABA
Model Rule for its approach to the definition of pro
bono legal services. Members of the court also echoed
the Bar's concerns that any information received from the mandatory
reporting of pro
bono activities would be duplicative
considering the anticipated results of the Bar's extensive legal needs
survey. Justice Crooks pointed out that the court may revisit the
pro bono issue after the results of the survey are completed,
and that
the justices are looking forward to reviewing the Bar's report at the
end of the year.
This decision was reached
during one of a series of open administrative conferences, where the
court is discussing the proposed ethics rules that have garnered the
most controversy. During their deliberations, the justices are making
tentative votes on specific rules after reviewing comments from
individual lawyers and other interested groups and engaging in lengthy
debates. The court expects to make a final vote on the new proposed
ethics rules once the drafting is complete, most likely within the next
few months.
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