Sign In
  • December 01, 2003

    Inside the Bar December 2003: Finance Committee to consider possible dues increase for next fiscal year; last increase in 1999

    At its Nov. 14 meeting, the Board of Governors supported the Revenue Review Study Committee's recommendation to allow the Finance Committee to consider a dues increase in preparing the Fiscal Year 2005 (FY05) budget. State Bar President George Burnett directed the committee to study and make recommendations on whether and in what fashion the Bar may increase dues.

    Inside the Bar
    December 2003

    Finance Committee to consider possible dues increase for next fiscal year; last increase in 1999

    At its Nov. 14 meeting, the Board of Governors supported the Revenue Review Study Committee's recommendation to allow the Finance Committee to consider a dues increase in preparing the Fiscal Year 2005 (FY05) budget. State Bar President George Burnett directed the committee to study and make recommendations on whether and in what fashion the Bar may increase dues.

    Gov. Michael Waterman of Hudson listens to Revenue Review Committee presentation.

            "Historically, dues increases occur every four to five years. The last increase was in 1999," committee chair and State Bar President-elect Michelle Behnke told the board. "We must consider all options. Do we raise dues to close the projected deficit, cut programs, or use some combination of dues increase and program cuts?"

            The exact amount and timing of any increase will be determined after the Finance Committee begins its annual budget process, which includes seeking feedback from State Bar groups on proposed and continuing projects and programs for FY05. Committee and division requests will be a discussion item at the January board meeting. Any vote for a dues increase would be scheduled for the March meeting.

            The Revenue Review Committee reported that nondues revenue sources had been pushed to their limit and further revenue generation would require a greater investment in staff and equipment. The committee's presentation also referenced the Long-range Financial Report that was presented earlier in the meeting. That report indicated that due to rising costs, continuing the current public and member services would result in a deficit of nearly $195,000 in FY05.

            The board also heard reports on three new programs proposed for FY05 that, combined, would require an additional $151,900. These are: practice management assistance programs; a statewide pro bono program to address unmet legal needs; and expanding the current Wisconsin Lawyers' Assistance Program (WisLAP), which aids members who suffer from various impairments or dependencies.

            Governors asked whether the Bar was operating as efficiently as possible and if the CLE Department was as profitable as in the past. Referencing Burnett's column in the October Wisconsin Lawyer, Behnke responded, "It costs money to produce a seminar. It takes six to nine months to publish a book." That column also points out that a key part of the Bar's mission is providing quality CLE programming and books to members and that over the past four years the Bar's expenses as a percentage of revenues have declined while the membership census rose by approximately three percent.

            Executive Director George Brown noted that the Bar is unique in that it produces both seminars and books that serve niche areas not generally served by commercial providers. These activities are not always profitable but provide an important service to members. "There also is increasing competition with Web-based programs," said Brown. "The Bar has tried to remain the low-cost professional provider. Even so, we recently raised our prices, but production costs continue to rise."

                The committee recommended forming a subcommittee of the Finance Committee to review revenue sources on a two-year basis. It also recommended that the subcommittee follow the same process that was used during this study: analyze expense trends, explore revenue sources, review membership trends, review programs and projects, and consider financial issues and outside factors such as the general economy and the competitive marketplace. By looking at all these components, the subcommittee will be able to make a rational assessment.

            Other Revenue Review Committee members are State Bar Treasurer and Finance Committee Chair Dean Dietrich, Wausau; Finance Committee member and Board of Governors Chair Grant Langley, Milwaukee; Board member James Quinn, Wisconsin Rapids; and former Board member Howard Bichler, Hertel.


Join the conversation! Log in to comment.
System.NullReferenceException: Object reference not set to an instance of an object. at News.NewsTOCNavigation.NewsTOCNavigationUserControl.Page_Load(Object sender, EventArgs e)

News & Pubs Search

-
Format: MM/DD/YYYY