Improving the Present
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Educating Our Members
State Bar CLE continued its commitment to provide quality
legal education to Wisconsin attorneys. In addition to producing
the familiar and highly regarded State Bar books and seminars,
the Bar is exploring ways technology will affect the delivery
of CLE. At present, Wisconsin lawyers can peruse the State Bar
CLE Books catalog, search an interactive CLE Seminars calendar,
and place their orders and register online. The Bar added an
information technology staff attorney to help develop technology-based
systems for the delivery of continuing legal education, including
an online CLE index and searchable database of material published
by the State Bar, and an online practice reference library.
CLE Books continued to spotlight the expertise of some
of Wisconsin's most talented attorneys as more than 350 lawyers
volunteered to serve as authors or reviewers. Wisconsin Trial
Practice was copublished this year with the State Bar's Litigation
Section. The new book picks up where Wisconsin Civil Procedure
Before Trial leaves off, covering issues that arise at every
stage of jury and bench trials, from pretrial conferences to
post-trial motions.
LLCs and LLPs: A Wisconsin Handbook, also published
in FY 99, is a completely revised edition of one of CLE Books'
most popular practice books. Other notable revisions include
The Marital Property Classification Handbook and the Wisconsin
Attorney's Desk Reference. Ten other revisions, 27 supplements
to existing publications, and a new statutory compilation - The
Real Estate and Real Property Codebook - rounded out the
CLE Books' publication list for the fiscal year.
Finally, CLE Books'
comprehensive elder law book, Advising Older Clients and Their
Families, was recognized this year by the international Association
for Continuing Legal Education (ACLEA). ACLEA granted the two-volume
work its highest award for a CLE publication, the Award of Professional
Excellence.
CLE Seminars presented nearly 80 live programs during
the past fiscal year. It also offered video replays in 11 locations
across the state, along with six telephone seminars, offering
a total of 408 credits and reaching more than 15,661 registrants.
More than 250 Wisconsin practitioners volunteered their time
and expertise as seminar faculty.
Every year the CLE Seminars department collaborates with State
Bar sections and committees, other legal organizations, and interdisciplinary
professional groups to provide substantive and practical CLE.
This year, the State Bar Appellate Practice Section and the CLE
Seminars department put on a highly successful Appellate Advocacy
Workshop. Supreme court justices and court of appeals and
federal court judges provided personal, one-on-one coaching and
commentary to a small group of appellate practitioners to help
them develop and refine their advocacy skills.
The State Bar also cosponsored CLE programs with the Corporate
Practice Institute, the Wisconsin Institute of Certified Public
Accountants, the American Board of Trial Advocates, the Wisconsin
Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers, and the Wisconsin Psychological
Association.
In FY 99 alone, State Bar CLE Seminars
served the education needs of 15,661 registrants. The nearly
80 live programs, video replays, and telephone seminars offered
a total of 408 continuing legal education credits. |
The theme for last year's Midwinter Convention at the
Midwest Express Center in Milwaukee was "Tools for 2000."
The convention offered 31 CLE seminars on topics ranging from
alternative dispute resolution to "Truth-in-Sentencing"
legislation. The Bar also offered programs on stress management
for lawyers and year 2000 computer problems. At the annual Member
Recognition Luncheon, Outagamie County Circuit Court Judge Harold
V. Froelich was honored as State Bar Judge of the Year.
The State Bar's Annual Convention, held in Green Bay,
offered "More Tools for 2000." Chief Justice Shirley
S. Abrahamson swore in Leonard L. Loeb as the new State Bar president.
At the annual President's Luncheon, Hon. Patrick Sheedy and Hon.
Peter Pappas were corecipients of the Lifetime Jurist Achievement
Award. Justice Jon P. Wilcox presented the awards and noted
that between the two, they have served the public, the bench,
and the bar for more than 102 years. Also recognized was Charles
"Chuttie" Senn, who received the Heffernan Award
for his long commitment to law-related education. Susan Steingass
awarded three members with the Distinguished Service Award,
including John Macy, for his work on the Finance Committee; Nathan
Fishbach, for chairing the "Building the Future" Campaign
Cabinet; and Gary Yakes, for his many years on the Board of Governors.
Other honorees at convention were the winners of the Local Bar
Grant Competition Awards. These awards recognize local and specialty
bar associations that have completed public service projects within
the last two years. During FY 99 the Bar Grant Competition Committee
awarded $9,000 in grants to develop a supervised visitation program
in Milwaukee County for statewide use, parenting programs in
Iowa County, a Family Law Information Center at the La Crosse
County Courthouse, and a high school curriculum on obligations
of entering into contracts and loans.
Reaching Outside the Profession
The State Bar is committed to educating the public about the
legal system - reaching the public through the mock trial program,
consumer publications, and legal resources.
The Bar's nationally recognized law
office videotape series provides members an economical and effective
way to educate clients and staff. "Preparing for Your Personal
Injury Case" joined the list of videos for clients in FY
99. |
The State Bar's Law Office Videotape series, respected
nationally for its quality, is an economical and effective way
to educate clients and legal staff. In FY 99 the Law Office Videotape
Committee produced "Preparing for Your Personal Injury Case"
to help clients understand the options available to them and
the process they'll go through when they pursue a personal injury
case.
The Communication Committee oversees development of the 16-title
consumer pamphlet series, providing attorneys with a low-cost
way to dispense basic legal information to clients and the public.
In the past year, nearly 100,000 pamphlets on topics from arrest
to wills and estates reached Wisconsin consumers. New titles
completed during the year include "Guardians ad Litem in
Family Court," which was distributed to family court commissioners
statewide, and "Hiring and Working with a Lawyer."
During the year, staff worked with various consumer education
committees to develop a consumer Web site, www.legalpointers.com,
a "sister site" to the existing WisBar. The goal is
to create a site that allows consumers to easily access information
tailored to their needs, such as finding an attorney, and answers
common questions about the law and our legal system. The public
debut is planned for January 2000.
The Public Service Announcement series, sponsored by
the Professionalism Committee, continued its statewide radio
announcements on such topics as automobile insurance, divorce,
buying a used car, employee rights, drunk driving, eviction,
worker's compensation, child support, and harassment by a collection
agency.
Law Talk, a 30-minute public affairs television program
sponsored by the Cable and Broadcast Outreach Committee, continues
to air on cable access stations in various parts of the state.
Participating cities include Madison, Milwaukee, Whitewater,
Stoughton, Lake Mills, Oshkosh, Baraboo, Mineral Point, Wisconsin
Rapids, and Janesville. The show educates the public about the
legal system and how it works in an easy-to-understand, entertaining
format. This year's topics included "truth-in-sentencing"
legislation, consumer issues, employment discrimination, and
the jury system.
The Clients' Security Fund, established in 1981 by
the Wisconsin Supreme Court, reimburses people who have lost
money through dishonest acts of Wisconsin attorneys. The program
is financed by an annual assessment of all practicing attorneys
in the state. In FY 99 the Fund acted on 32 claims. Of the 24
claims approved for payment, 23 were paid for a total amount
of $214,607.95.
The Lawyer Referral and Information Service refers
citizens in need of legal services to attorneys or appropriate
government and community agencies after careful screening. Last
year, LRIS fielded 50,000 calls. A fourth, full-time legal assistant
was added in FY 99 to increase service to the public and the
members. Attorneys who participate in the service collectively
received $2 million from referrals in FY 99. The Lawyer Hotline
program coordinates volunteer lawyers who answer consumers' simple
legal questions. A State Bar staff member travels to cities across
the state providing attorneys with a unique opportunity to serve
the public by hosting a lawyer hotline. More than 1,500 callers
are served annually by the program.
The State Bar produced a second edition catalog of Volunteers
in the Courts, in partnership with the Wisconsin Supreme
Court. Containing information on more than 200 programs that
use volunteers to aid the work of the courts, the catalog, the
first of its kind in the nation, was recognized by Attorney General
Janet Reno as a successful way to enhance public involvement
in the judicial process.
For the 16th year, the State Bar sponsored the Wisconsin High
School Mock Trial Tournament. Involving more than 1,600 students
and many judges, attorney/coaches, and teachers annually, the
tournament culminated last May with Sheboygan High School placing
fourth in the nation during the National Mock Trial Competition
in St. Louis, Missouri.
The Mock Trial Journalism program offers high school
students an opportunity to attend the state mock trial competition
and test their news- and opinion-writing skills under deadline
pressure. Approximately 25 high school students participated
in FY 99.
The State Bar's Law-related Education Committee teamed up
with the Wisconsin Association of Trial Lawyers (WATL) for its
10th year in presenting 90-minute versions of fictional criminal
and civil trials as part of the State Fair Mock Trial
program. The program educates fairgoers about the jury system,
and shows how judges, lawyers, and lay people operate in a courtroom.
Audience volunteers participate in the trials by acting as the
jury.
Peers in Education Addressing Conflict Effectively (PEACE)
teaches educators conflict resolution techniques to reduce the
level of violence in their schools. PEACE successfully completed
its fourth year, gathering 17 elementary schools from around
the state in Madison for training. Sponsored by the State Bar
and the Attorney General's office, the program trains teachers,
parents, and others to create student peer mediation programs
in their schools. The trained adults then teach the students,
who make the program work.
The Court with Class program gives high school students
an opportunity to attend a Wisconsin Supreme Court oral argument.
The program, cosponsored by the Wisconsin Supreme Court and the
State Bar, attracted more than 850 students last year from both
public and private high schools. To enhance the visit, students
receive a plain-English synopsis of the case they will hear,
and have a chance to visit with a justice afterward.
The Business Assistance Program continued in FY 99
to offer guidance to new and expanding businesses. Participating
attorneys donated legal counseling to businesses and nonprofit
organizations to help them avoid legal problems that could end
in bankruptcy.
The Alternative Dispute Resolution and Business Law Sections
became the first two sections to work together to develop a public
service project, the Y2K Dispute Resolution Program. This
service will offer businesses and other organizations a fast,
low-cost, and confidential method of settling disputes over Y2K
computer problems without going to court. The program uses trained
volunteer attorneys as mediators and arbitrators to settle such
disputes.
The State Bar Media-law Relations Committee and the Wisconsin
Supreme Court cosponsored the first-ever Media-law Seminar
in Green Bay to help the media and the judiciary understand
each other's roles and responsibilities, and to build bridges
between the two. Nearly 40 judges and journalists participated
in a fictional sentencing of a drunk-driving case. The judges
and journalists, who were asked to decide appropriate sentences
and write potential headlines, had a lively discussion.
Special Events
Aside from the day-to-day services and programs that the State
Bar offers, each year the Bar organizes a host of special events
to involve both members and the public.
The Volunteer Lawyer Recognition Celebration
acknowledged the attorneys, judges, law firms, organizations,
and law students who made outstanding pro bono, public service,
or law-related education contributions in FY 99. The event honored
12 individuals and two law firms. |
The State Bar and the Wisconsin Law Foundation annually recognize
outstanding volunteer work by attorneys who provide pro bono
legal services, public service, and law-related education to
the community at the Volunteer Lawyer's Recognition Celebration.
Last year, 12 individuals and two firms were honored at a celebration
held at the Monona Terrace and Convention Center in Madison.
Wisconsin Supreme Court Chief Justice Shirley S. Abrahamson delivered
the keynote address and reminded those present that, "Together,
we can make a huge difference."
The Delivery of Legal Services Symposium, offered during
the Annual Convention, provided a forum to discuss ways to provide
adequate legal services to all citizens, regardless of income.
Topics included the role of law schools in instilling the pro
bono ethic, institutionalizing with bar leadership the importance
of pro bono and delivery of legal services issues as a vital
part of the association and profession, and ethical issues confronting
lawyers who are acting in a pro bono capacity. The State Bar's
Legal Assistance Committee sponsored the event.
The State Bar cosponsored the second-annual Midwest Small
Firm Success Conference in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. The state
bars of Wisconsin, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, and Nebraska
participated in the two-day event that drew more than 200 participants.
The conference provided a forum for rural attorneys and small,
urban practitioners to network and share ideas to improve their
practices.
Nearly 50 local and specialty bar association leaders participated
in the 1999 Wisconsin Bar Leaders Conference (WBLC) sponsored
by the State Bar and the Local Bar Leaders Conference Committee.
For the first time, the conference was held as a stand-alone
event in the spring instead of during the traditional pre-Midwinter
Convention time slot. Participants liked the change and said
that the WBLC provides a great opportunity to meet other bar
leaders in a relaxed atmosphere while discussing issues of mutual
interest.
Preparing for the Future
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