Wisconsin
Lawyer
Vol. 79, No. 12, December
2006
It takes many hands
State Bar of Wisconsin Annual Report
Fiscal Year 2006: July 1, 2005 - June 30, 2006
It takes a lot of hands to work the mission of the State Bar of
Wisconsin. More than 22,224 diverse members, nearly 100 elected and
appointed volunteer
leaders, and the thousands of members of committees, sections,
divisions, special study groups, and professional staff join together in
myriad ways to support lawyers,
the public, and the legal system.
Sidebars:
In July 2005 the Board of Governors, the State Bar's policy making
body, refined the association's strategic plan that focuses on common
goals shared
throughout the organization. Committees and divisions engaged in the
strategic planning process in FY 2006 - and sections will do so in FY
2007 - to apportion
limited resources to ensure that all Bar activities support these
strategic priorities:
- increase relevance of the Bar to its members
- improve member engagement in the Bar
- improve public access to the legal system
- increase public understanding of the legal system
As in past years, the Bar's FY 2006 activities are so numerous that
only a representative few can be included in this annual report to State
Bar members.
Year at a glance
July 2005
D. Michael Guerin, Milwaukee, the State Bar's 50th
president, appoints the Access to Justice Study Committee to assess
unmet
civil legal needs of Wisconsin residents in response to supreme court
order approving mandatory WisTAF assessment.
Wisconsin Sesquicentennial
Portfolio, 17 prints by 15 artists honoring the state's 150
years, exhibits at the Bar Center.
Justice David T. Prosser and the Wisconsin Law Foundation fund the
portfolio.
August 2005
State Bar CLE releases The Bankruptcy Abuse
Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of
2005, provides seminars on the dramatic change in U.S. bankruptcy
laws.
September 2005
The Young Lawyers Division hosts Midwest regional
conference in Milwaukee offering practice advice, business tips, and
professional guidance to new lawyers.
40-plus WisLAP frontline responders receive
in-depth training to better help hotline callers cope with depression,
drug and
alcohol abuse, and other threats to their lives.
Board approves Criminal Law Section support of the
Criminal Justice Reform legislative package to improve criminal
justice procedures, Individual Rights & Responsibilities
Section opposition to the Graham/Levin Amendment to deny
Guantanamo
Bay detainees petition and hearing rights, and Public Interest
Law
Section opposition to legislation that would weaken
consumer protections.
October 2005
Pro Bono Survey respondents report providing 110,736
hours of free legal services in the preceding 12 months, valued at about
$18.3 million.
"Wisconsin Lawyers Make a
Difference" TV spots continue statewide rotation, airing
in northern Wisconsin October
through November.
30-second spots educate the public about the value lawyers bring to
their communities. TV spots rotate to 11 southeastern
counties, January - March.
November 2005
The Unauthorized Practice of Law Policy
Committee begins work on a petition to the court to develop a
rule defining the
practice of law and creating a system to administer the rule. The Bar
begins collecting evidence of how the UPL harms the public.
Following Hurricane Katrina, the State Bar donates
laptop computers and printers to the New Orleans Bar Association to aid
displaced lawyers. Hurricanes Katrina and Rita affect 167 State Bar
members in Gulf Coast states.
December 2005
State Bar CLE debuts Online Fillable Forms
Bank with the Real Estate Enhanced Library,
followed by the Criminal Law Library and the
Elder Law Library; presents 580 programs to 10,000-plus attendees in FY
06.
January 2006
30-second TV spots showcasing attorney public
service air statewide during U.W. men's Badger basketball games,
reaching a
potential 2 million viewers.
State Bar CLE and the Business Law
Section introduce the nine-volume Wisconsin
Business Advisor
Series with its debut volume Securities,
Mergers and
Acquisitions, and followed by Environmental and Real
Estate
Law.
February 2006
Practice411TM, the State
Bar's Law Office Management Assistance
Program, kicks off to provide resources to help State
Bar members more efficiently and effectively practice law. An
electronic list allows members to share information and access a panel
of experts when tackling business and technology aspects of their
practice.
March 2006
Following extensive study and debate, the Board created an
Ethics 2000 Review Committee to respond to the supreme
court's
draft revisions to the Rules of Professional Conduct.
Sections' legislative work is
passed into law: Real Property Probate & Trust Law - Uniform
Principle & Income Act and UCC Ch.
5; Children & the Law - protecting children in foster care;
Construction Law - lien statutes revisions.
370-plus lawyers and judges volunteer for the 23rd Mock
Trial Tournament - comprising 150 teams,
helping 900-plus high
school students develop critical thinking and public-speaking skills
as part of the profession's most visible public service project.
April 2006
State Bar hosts 65 leaders of 39 local and specialty bar associations
at the Wisconsin Bar Leaders' Conference, offering
training
to build and lead bar associations.
May 2006
The Communications Committee translates into Spanish the guide,
A Gift to Your Family: Planning Ahead for Future Health
Needs. Gov. Doyle proclaims May 22-26 life planning
week.
The Elder Law Section's 10-year effort earns passage
of three major pieces of legislation affecting guardianship, protective
services and placement, and adult protection systems. The
Business Law Section revision of Chapter 180 is signed
into law.
The 2006 State Bar Annual
Convention provides 28 CLE programs by 150 presenters to
1,000-plus attendees. 95
attorneys admitted to practice in 1956, including Chief Justice
Shirley Abrahamson, are recognized for 50 years' service as lawyers. The
Volunteer Lawyers Recognition Celebration, held during
convention, honors lawyers for service to their colleagues and
communities.
June 2006
During the year, 687 attorneys are admitted to the State Bar,
bringing total membership to 22,212.
The Diversity Outreach Committee copresents the 2006
Annual Diversity Counsel Program in Milwaukee. The
Board cosponsors a resolution to urge the ABA to work to improve
diversity through increased educational opportunities and
awareness.
Increase the Bar's Relevance to and Engagement of Its Members
An organization's relevance to its members goes hand-in-hand with
members' involvement in their organization. Relevance can take many
forms - it may
be legislation to protect your clients' interests. It may be a new CLE
seminar or resource in your practice area to help you practice more
knowledgeably or
increase your efficiency. It may be assistance in managing your law
practice. Involved members also broaden their network of professional
contacts and shape the future
of their profession by developing policy, products, and services that
benefit their colleagues, the public, and themselves.
Products and Services
To find out what members need and value, the Bar conducts several
surveys every year. In FY 2006, 16 surveys captured 5,462 responses on
topics ranging
from member satisfaction with Bar services, law office management
needs, Branding the Profession awareness, bench and bar assessment of
issues affecting the
legal system, members' pro bono contributions, fillable forms utility,
and more. Survey responses and other member input help in developing and
refining products
and services:
- Practice 411 , the State Bar's Law Office
Management Assistance Program, kicks off with a staff advisor
offering telephone and
in-person guidance on the use of technology, business and financial
planning, and personnel, facilities, and operations management; a Web
site and lending library of
practice management resources; and an electronic list for the
sharing of information between members and a panel of experts. In the
six months since the program
launched in January 2006, the staff advisor assisted 192 individuals
and spoke to multiple attendees at state and regional conferences, local
bar meetings, and law
school classes. In FY 2006, the Board of Governors adopted a policy
to provide confidentiality between members and State Bar-employed legal
counsel for the
Practice 411 and ethics hotlines to protect candid discussion on
behaviors otherwise subject to reporting under professional conduct
rules.
- State Bar CLE launches
online
forms with the real estate, criminal law, and elder law
libraries. State Bar CLE also introduces the nine-volume
Wisconsin Business Advisor Series with
Securities, Mergers and Acquisitions, followed by
Environmental and Real Estate Law. In FY 2006, State Bar CLE
releases
54 publications, including six new titles, and 48 updates and
supplements of other titles.
- State Bar CLE continues
technology upgrades, recording seminar audio on CD,
compressing seminars for future MP-3 downloads, converting
Law Office videos to DVD for improved quality, and streaming
seminars to an archive for future on-demand viewing. In FY 2006, 60
different seminar titles
delivered live and by video, telephone, and the Internet resulted in
580 presentations for 10,000-plus attendees.
- The 2006 State Bar Annual
Convention provides 1,000-plus attendees opportunities to
network, build business, attend 28 CLE programs -
including an in-depth Spotlight Program on changes to the Rules of
Professional Conduct for Attorneys, and honor lawyers at the
Volunteer Lawyers Recognition Celebration - the
"feel good" celebration of the year - for leading by example
in serving their colleagues and communities.
- Wisconsin Lawyers Assistance Program
(WisLap) provides in-depth training to frontline responders
to better help hotline callers cope
with depression, drug and alcohol abuse, and other threats to their
lives; adopts the "Johnson" intervention process; and joins
with the Senior Lawyers Division
to present a retirement planning program during the Annual
Convention.
- Leadership training and networking
events for various groups, including promoting diversity in
the legal profession, lobbying training for
section leaders, the Wisconsin Bar Leaders' Conference offering
programs to build and lead local and specialty bars, receptions
welcoming new lawyers into the Bar,
and outreach activities to law students, among others.
- A new group health plan especially helpful for
smaller firms becomes available to members in August. Other similar
services to members include
discounts on long-term care insurance, prescription drug discounts,
discounted online legal research, no annual fee credit card, and
more.
Issues and Policy Decisions
Work on issues affecting the practice of law and the public often
generates in-depth study and passionate discussion by leaders and
members that results in
Board of Governors actions:
- In response to the Wisconsin Supreme Court's final draft
revisions to SCR Chapter 20, the Board creates the Ethics 2000
Review Committee, to solicit member feedback, make
recommendations, and provide input to the court. The court makes the
rules effective on July 1, 2007.
- Issues surrounding the unauthorized practice of
law (UPL) continue to occupy the Board's attention, leading
the Bar to collect evidence of how
UPL harms the public, UPL Policy Committee work to develop a rule
defining the practice of law and a system to administer the rule, and
taking a public
policy position to support legislation prohibiting notary publics
from misleading the public about whether the notary is licensed to
practice law.
- Following supreme court imposition of a mandatory $50 assessment
- beginning in FY 2006 - on all active-licensed Wisconsin lawyers
payable to
the Wisconsin Trust Account Foundation (WisTAF), the Bar creates the
Access to Justice Study Committee to study the civil
legal needs of poor
residents and recommend long-term solutions, and to study issues
related to the court's assessment order, including whether to seek rule
modification to allow
contributions to entities other than WisTAF. The study committee
report is expected in December 2006.
- The Board opposes an Office of Lawyer
Regulation (OLR) petition seeking an additional assessment
on all lawyers to cover costs assessed
against respondents in OLR proceedings; approves the Bar's
Lawyer Regulation Study Committee proposed rule on
proceedings before a referee and
assessment of costs, with an amendment to the rule relating to
reinstatement.
- The Board approves amicus filings by the
Criminal Law Section (support Criminal Justice Reform legislation),
Individual Rights &
Responsibilities Section (oppose federal legislation to deny
"terror" detainees petition and hearing rights), and the
Public Interest Law Section (oppose legislation that
weakens consumer protections).
- The Board approves actions or other activities that
influence law or
policy undertaken by the Bar (oppose legislation to allow
real estate brokers
to provide legal advice), the Trust Account Rule Working Group
(amend trust account rules), the Legislative Oversight Committee (affirm
decision on
section advocacy), the ADR Section (approve filing of amicus brief),
the Children & the Law Section (termination of parental rights), the
Appellate Practice
Section (contents of appellate briefs), Public Interest Law (oppose
legislation that weakens consumer protection) and, on request of the
Bench Bar Committee, adopts
a public policy position in support of judicial independence.
- The Board previously approved legislative work of the Bar's
lobbying sections. In FY 2006 important work, much of
it years in the making, results in new or amended laws:
Real Property Probate & Trust - the Uniform Principle & Income
Act and UCC Ch. 5; Children & the Law - protecting children in
foster care; Construction Law - lien statutes revisions; Elder Law -
three laws affecting guardianship, protective services and placement,
and adult protection
systems; Business Law - Chapter 180 revisions; Criminal Law -
criminal justice procedures reform.
- More than 16,000 members participate in the Bar's 26 sections -
from Administrative & Local Government Law to Taxation - to assist
in improving the Bar
and the legal system, make important contributions to the laws
affecting Wisconsin citizens, and gain in-depth knowledge of
practice-related issues.
Improve Public Understanding of and Access to the
Legal System
The Bar, with vital volunteer assistance from lawyers, judges, and
the public, improves public access to the legal system through pro bono
and public
service projects; educates the public about the value lawyers bring to
their clients and communities; and informs citizens about their role in
society through
law-related education programs.
An October 2005 survey of Bar members' pro bono
contributions reports that respondents provided
110,736 hours of free legal services in the preceding
12 months, valued at about $18.3 million. By comparison, federal Legal
Services Corporation funding in Wisconsin last year was a little over
$4 million. In related action, the supreme court votes tentatively to
reject its Ethics 2000 Commission recommendation to require mandatory
reporting of pro
bono work.
The Wisconsin Pro Bono Initiative - a major Bar
initiative to improve public access to the legal system and increase the
availability of pro bono
resources for low-income residents - funds locally developed new or
innovative pro bono projects, particularly in rural areas. In FY 2006,
the program:
- grants $27,000 to seven local pro bono
projects, including training for pro bono volunteers, and
welcomes 100 new lawyers to the program, increasing the
availability of pro bono lawyers for low-income residents
- provides free CLE credit to 50 members in
exchange for a commitment to accept one pro bono referral during the
following year, and pays liability
insurance for volunteers
In FY 2006, the Local Bar Grant
Competition program awards a combined $6,000 to the
Dane, Tri-County (Buffalo, Jackson, Pepin, Trempealeau), and
La Crosse county bar associations for public service projects on
domestic abuse and resources for pro se litigants.
Of 32,000 phone calls to the Lawyer Referral and Information
Service and 4,476 contacts through
LegalExplorerTM, the Bar's consumer Web
site, legal assistants refer 9,743 prescreened clients to panel
attorneys and give information or refer remaining callers to community
agencies or other legal
resources. LRIS Lawyer Hotline volunteers statewide
provide 500-plus consumers with free answers to simple legal questions.
LRIS offers a valued, visible
public service and a way for attorneys to build their client base.
The Wisconsin Lawyers' Fund for Client
Protection, through an annual assessment to Wisconsin
attorneys of up to $25, reimburses people who
lose money due to dishonest acts by Wisconsin attorneys. This year,
the fund's administering committee pays $465,045 on 90 claims against
16 attorneys. The
legal profession stands alone in providing voluntary reimbursements
for client losses.
The Bar continues statewide rotation of its "Wisconsin
Lawyers Make a
Difference" TV spots, which eventually will air
30-second spots in each
major TV market in the state to inform the public about the value
lawyers bring to their communities. In FY 2006, spots showcasing
lawyers' public service work
rotate to 28 northern and 11 southeastern counties, reaching a
potential viewing audience of 1,279,000 people. Supplemental spots air
statewide during U.W.
men's Badger basketball games, and a U.W. vs. Marquette game, to reach
a potential total viewing audience of more than 2 million households per
game.
The State Bar promotes Law-related
Education programs and curricula to give school-age youth and
other community members an understanding
and appreciation of the law, the legal system, and their rights and
responsibilities as citizens through the use of practical and
experiential learning. A sampling of
this year's programs includes:
- the 23rd Mock Trial Tournament, involving 600
lawyers and judges, 120 teachers, and 25 regional coordinators, develops
critical thinking and
public speaking skills of 1,800-plus high school students.
- 37 teachers gain a deeper understanding of the court system to
enhance their civics curricula during the Judicial Teaching
Institute, taking part in
a sentencing exercise and moot court activity with assistance from
supreme court justices, judges, attorneys, and university professors.
- "We the People" programs promote civic
competence and responsibility among students in state schools, including
the "Project Citizen" competition, generating
14 public policy portfolios from 14 middle schools and a team of
students from Ecuador, which is starting a similar program. The
Ecuadorian
students presented their portfolio to a panel of Spanish-speaking
judges.
- Governor proclaims Life Planning
Week (May 22-26) to support State Bar activities that
remind families of the importance of preparing for future
health needs. To help communicate this message, the Bar translates
its publication A Gift to Your Family: Planning Ahead for Future
Health
Needs into Spanish; English and Spanish-speaking attorneys
participate in radio interviews; and the Bar distributes 1,000 free
copies of the guide. Since 1999 more than 250,000
print copies have been distributed to the public; since 2003 more
than 30,100 copies have been downloaded from LegalExplorer.com.
- In FY 2006, new or updated public education publications include:
Farmers Guide to the Law, a joint project of the Young Lawyers
Division and
Wisconsin Department of Agriculture; the Media-Law Relations
Committee publications Wisconsin Lawyers Guide to the News
Media and the Wisconsin News Reporters Legal Handbook;
and the Communication Committee's consumer pamphlet series. The
publications provide basic legal information and describe the need for,
and role of, attorneys.
Executive's Message
Members are the Association's Lifeblood
People join together in associations to accomplish goals they cannot
accomplish alone. Thus, the members are the association's owners. The
members
expect to receive goods and services from that association that will
help
them accomplish those goals. Thus, the members are the association's
customers.
The members also are called on by the association to actively
participate in
accomplishing the association's goals. Thus, the members also are the
association's workers.
This year's annual report reflects the efforts of State Bar members
to
help each other provide greater service to their clients and to the
public. It
also reflects the efforts of the State Bar and its staff to help other
bar
associations in need because of destruction caused by the Gulf Coast
hurricanes of
the last year and because of the continuing needs of those less
fortunate in
our state.
Major initiatives supporting these efforts include President
Guerin's
creation of the Access to Justice Study Committee to assess the unmet
civil
needs in Wisconsin, the training of more than 40 frontline responding
attorneys
participating in the Wisconsin Lawyer Assistance Program to help those
dealing with drug and alcohol abuse or depression, the implementation
of
the Practice411TM program to provide business assistance to
lawyers in all
practice settings, and the donation of wireless enabled and programmed
laptops to
the New Orleans Bar Association to aid displaced lawyers trying to
help their
clients and rebuild a devastated justice system infrastructure.
Thousands of lawyers were actively engaged to fulfill these and the
hundreds of other goals, projects, programs, and services provided to
members and to
the public this last year. Thank you for your service.
George C. Brown, State Bar executive director
President's Message
Taking Our Measure
This has been an interesting year. The Wisconsin Supreme Court
responded to the needs of underrepresented people by imposing an
assessment on active
Bar members. While lawyers alone cannot and should not represent the
entire solution to problems of poverty and the disparate treatment of
citizens,
as lawyers we have to recognize that this gap in legal services to
poor people
is a threat to our members and to the people they represent. The need
for
legal services, like any vacuum, will be filled, either by honorable
people or
by dishonorable people marketing forms or do-it-yourself divorces,
real
estate closings, and the like. Obviously, our profession and the
public are
best served by trained lawyers providing legal service.
The Bar's Legal Needs Study Committee continues to assess the needs
of
Wisconsin residents and, more importantly, decide how to meet those
needs.
The committee is working diligently to devise practical solutions that
can be
implemented.
A committee has been appointed to review the State Bar's structure
and
status. It will study where the Bar is and where it should be to meet
the
future needs of lawyers and the people they serve. As futurists remind
us,
periodically we must have the conversation that we do not want to
have. For the
State Bar, that conversation is - are we going to continue to be
relevant to
society and, if so, how must we be positioned to do that.
While I mentioned only a few major study groups, all of the
divisions,
sections, and committees continue to pursue their missions to advance
the
profession and deliver high quality legal services. Our competent
professional
staff supports and gives continuity to these groups, to the Board of
Governors
and officers, and to individual members.
It has been a genuine pleasure to have stepped into the role of
spokesperson for the State Bar. I continue to believe that lawyers
represent the
greatest profession. I also believe that as lawyers we sometimes feel
sorry for
ourselves. We fail to recognize how important we are to the public and
that
the community has respect for lawyers.
Finally, remember that the most important people in your lives are
members
of your family. Even if you think no one else cares, remember that
your
family respects the hard work, long hours, and professionalism that
you put into
serving your clients and the public.
D. Michael Guerin, president, State Bar of Wisconsin
July 1, 2005 - June 30, 2006
President-elect's Message
Change the World
When I ran for State Bar president-elect, I raised several issues
that I
want to follow through on in my year as president: whether State Bar
membership should be voluntary rather than mandatory; whether
nonresident Bar
members should receive full representation on the Board of Governors;
whether
Wisconsin should continue its current dual system of requirements for
bar admission
- diploma privilege for in-state law school graduates, bar exam for
all other
law school graduates; and how to make the Board of Bar Examiners more
user-friendly regarding bar admission and CLE requirements.
I will be working hard as State Bar president - and for as long as
it takes
- to provide you the chance to vote on the voluntary/mandatory Bar
issue,
to provide nonresident Bar members with full rights and
representation, to end
the discriminatory aspects of Wisconsin's diploma privilege, and to
improve
all aspects of Wisconsin lawyers' lives vis-à-vis the Board of
Bar Examiners.
I'll also do all I can to help the Bar continue to provide the
quality,
cutting-edge services to members that we have come to expect - law
office management,
the lawyer assistance program, continuing legal education, pro bono
assistance,
the whole gamut.
A vibrant, meaningful State Bar requires new ideas and new members
willing
to participate and contribute. Get involved, get active, get going.
The Bar
needs you and your new ideas - even if you disagree with the direction
you see
the Bar going. (Actually, especially if you disagree with Bar
policies, get
involved.) A section or committee is waiting for you and your ideas.
One
individual's act, however small, can benefit a Wisconsin lawyer and
his or her
client, and change the world. Do that act. Change the world.
Steve Levine, president-elect, State Bar of Wisconsin
July 1, 2005 - June 30, 2006
FY 06
Allocation of State Bar Dues and Supreme Court-imposed
Assessments
For FY 2006, of the total fee ($429.66) collected from active, full
dues-paying members, 52 percent ($224) was for State Bar dues, while
the remaining 48
percent ($205.66) fulfilled mandatory supreme court assessments to
fund the
Office of Lawyer Regulation, the Board of Bar Examiners, the Wisconsin
Trust
Account Foundation (WisTAF), and the Wisconsin Lawyers Fund for Client
Protection.
This Annual Report represents how your State Bar dues dollars work
to
support you, the public, and the legal system. Due to space
constraints, the
report highlights some of the many activities that State Bar members
and staff
come together to provide.
Wisconsin
Lawyer