Vol. 78, No. 2, February
2005
Letters
Letters to the editor: The Wisconsin Lawyer
publishes as many letters in each issue as space permits. Please limit
letters to 500 words; letters may be edited for length and clarity.
Letters should address the issues, and not be a personal attack on
others. Letters endorsing political candidates cannot be accepted.
Please mail letters to "Letters to the Editor," Wisconsin Lawyer, P.O.
Box 7158, Madison, WI 53707-7158, fax them to (608) 257-4343, or email them.
Make Pro Bono Count for CLE Credit
Yesterday I received an order from the court in one of my cases.
Although the court's order contained nothing negative to my clients'
interests, I nevertheless found it deeply dismaying.
The case involves an indigent and allegedly disabled prison inmate's
claims under the Americans With Disabilities Act and the U.S.
Constitution. The inmate had petitioned for the appointment of
counsel.
The court's order explained that the judge had spent more than five
months trying to find a lawyer willing to take this man's case on a pro
bono basis. The judge made it known to prospective counsel that she
would allow severing of those claims that the lawyer was willing to
take, leaving the plaintiff to proceed pro se on the remaining claims.
Nevertheless, not a single lawyer in the Madison area agreed to take the
case. The judge then sought help through the 7th Circuit's Office of the
Circuit Executive, but again no lawyer was willing to step forward. As a
result, the court was obliged to make the plaintiff proceed pro se.
As I read the court's order, my first reaction was dismay that no
lawyer was willing to take this man's case. Where were all these lawyers
who wrote their law school admissions essays on how they wanted to go to
law school to represent the poor and disenfranchised?
My second reaction was that we should admit that our pro bono system
is broken and needs fundamental change. Ideally, lawyers should step up
and do pro bono work with no additional incentive, but the reality is
that just not enough of us do so. (Incidental note: I wouldn't urge
anyone to do something I'm not doing myself, so I will mention that I
have done and am doing pro bono work. I am particularly grateful to Bill
Duffin and Bill Levit, two partners at Godfrey & Kahn, who
encouraged and supported my pro bono work when I was employed by that
firm.)
As I thought about the problem, it occurred to me that a potential
solution was sitting in front of me on my desk: my end-of-the-year CLE
reporting form. We Wisconsin lawyers spend at least 30 hours every two
years attending CLE programs. It's an open secret in the profession that
many of those hours are wasted hours spent listening to lectures about
subjects with little if any value beyond getting the CLE credits.
My proposed reform is this: allow pro bono hours to count toward the
CLE requirement. Thirty hours of pro bono work will benefit this state
far more than 30 hours of listening to lectures. The prospect of getting
CLE credit will motivate at least some lawyers who aren't doing pro bono
work under the current system to do so. On the other hand, those lawyers
who find CLEs useful, or who simply don't want to do pro bono work,
won't be required to make any changes.
By making this reform, we will take lawyers out of the lecture halls
and into the world, helping ensure that our profession works "for the
public good" and not just for our own.
(I am required to state that the opinions expressed in this letter
are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views of my employer, the
Wisconsin Department of Justice.)
Tim Kiefer, Madison
CLE Credit for Pro Bono is Misdirected
Tim Keifer should be commended for doing pro bono legal work and for
caring enough about the issue to propose a solution for analysis. The
problem is, the solution creates a new problem.
First, some history. Since the Reagan years, federal funding for
legal services to the poor has declined in real dollars so dramatically
that the organizations that provide such services have reduced staff and
the type of cases they will handle to skeletal proportions. The ability
of low-income people to participate fully in our justice system as a
problem-solving mechanism has been seriously compromised.
Second, the profession, to its credit, has struggled to make up for
this lack of societal commitment in a number of ways, including taking
pro bono cases, participating in advice clinics and "equal justice" fund
drives, and contributing money, to mention a few. All have been somewhat
successful but have only put a dent in the need.
Responding to the repeated requests either for dollars or more pro
bono work, many lawyers rightly ask, "Why is it that we are expected to
meet all the legal needs of the society? Are the doctors asked to donate
50 to 100 hours a year to the poor? Other professionals?" So the first
level of questioning that needs to be resolved is just how much is a
reasonable commitment from the legal profession in making free services
available? As a longtime lawyer, a former legal services attorney, and
someone who handled numerous cases for the poor, the disabled, and the
young during my career, I understand the need. We continue to struggle
with a comprehensive answer, though the Wisconsin Supreme Court recently
granted a petition seeking a $50 assessment per lawyer.
But as we look for solutions, we have to be sure that they are
appropriate to the problem. To give credit for pro bono representation
in the place of continuing legal education is like giving your surgeon
continuing credit for giving shots at the clinic! You want her operating
on you? I don't. I want her at the seminar on the latest, best
techniques for doing safe surgery.
Likewise, the purpose of mandatory continuing legal education,
imposed by the Wisconsin Supreme Court, is to ensure a high quality,
competent profession and thereby protect the interests of the public.
Competence cannot be assured by doing good works, as laudable as they
might be. Therefore, relieving lawyers of an obligation created to
ensure competence in order to enhance their willingness to do good
things is misdirected.
It may well be true that there are lawyers who are bored at seminars
or who try simply to accrue credits to meet the mandatory reporting
requirement. That is indeed an open secret. Let me tell you a few more.
The State Bar CLE Department put on 68 seminar titles in 2004. That's 68
separate topics covering everything from outstanding legal writing,
negotiating, and cross examination, presented by national experts, to
handling legal problems of the aging, real estate issues, and many more.
In addition, we presented those seminars using different technologies -
Webcasts, phone, live, and video - to make them accessible.
The Wisconsin Justice Department puts on a number of highly regarded
seminars. The State Public Defender has one of the best criminal defense
conventions in the country. Moreover, virtually every local bar
association puts on continuing legal education seminars as do several
for-profit companies and specialty bars. Wisconsin is reputed to have
approximately 900 CLE providers. To put it simply, if you can't find a
seminar of interest in your area of the law, you just aren't
looking.
The point of CLE is not credits, and it's not "attending CLE
programs." These are simply vehicles for ensuring that the profession
continues to hone its expertise and competence, providing quality
service to the public. All the other vehicles are after the fact. And
pro bono service, while extremely important, is no vehicle at all.
Thomas E. Dixon Jr., director
State Bar CLE Department
Praise Long-term Care Workers
Bravo to Brian Purtell for a fair, balanced, and informative article!
(See "Issues Affecting Long-term Care," October 2004.) Despite
the often bad press, long-term care workers perform an extraordinary
service for our communities and should be praised for their hard
work.
Thomas J. Kapusta, vice president and chief legal officer
The Evangelical Lutheran Good Samaritan Society
Improper Use of the Guard
I recently read online "Protecting Legal Rights of Activated Guards
and Reservists" by Stephen J. McManus (July 2003). Great article.
I am very concerned about how our military is depending on the guard
and reserve for 70 percent of logistical support during a conflict or
war. I believe we are abusing the law. If we need to increase the active
forces back up to the proper levels, then do it.
We are straining the employer, so that hundreds of employers are
risking law suits just to keep their companies operating. In some towns,
half of the employees are on military leave. We will be facing a bigger
problem. No employer will hire a reservist or guardsperson.
Let's make up our mind. Do we use the guard for state support or do
we use the guard like some employers use temporary job agencies? For
cheap help. The reservist does not receive equal benefits as the active
soldier. There is a great disparity.
Capt. William E. Green, Retired Army Reserve, Ohio
Wisconsin Lawyer