Wisconsin Lawyer
Vol. 79, No. 8, August
2006
What Happened, Why, and What Next?
A historic State Bar election sets the tone for a year of studying
issues on mandatory bar membership, nonresident lawyer representation,
the diploma privilege, and more.
by Steve Levine
Astounding, historic, unprecedented, unthinkable. These are some of
the adjectives I've heard used to describe the State Bar president-elect
election of 2005. But whatever term is chosen, it might be useful to do
some armchair analysis of the meaning of last year's election at the
beginning of my term as president and to set out what I'd like to
accomplish this year. If my year as president-elect is any indication,
this year will fly by. So little time, so much to do.
What happened? According to a CNN/Wall Street Journal exit poll, it
looks like a number of constituencies within the bar came together to
make the plurality that elected me - lawyers who favor a voluntary bar,
nonresident lawyers, government lawyers, lawyers who graduated from
schools outside Wisconsin, lawyers who oppose the supreme court's recent
WisTAF assessment, and lawyers who have "concerns" about the operation
of the Board of Bar Examiners, among others. (Some of these groups
overlap, of course.) The election showed the power that distinct
segments within the Bar can have when they are brought together by
candidates who raise issues important to these groups.
I promised each of these constituencies to address the issues that
are important to them, whether it takes one year as president or a
decade of hard work, and over the next few months I'll write about these
issues and action I'd like to see taken by the Board of Governors. The
camel in the tent, of course, is the issue of whether State Bar
membership should be voluntary. This was the major issue that I raised
during the election, and I'd like to see the Board give all of you the
opportunity to express your opinion on the issue by holding a referendum
as part of next April's election on this question: Should the State Bar
petition the Wisconsin Supreme Court to make Bar membership voluntary
for a 10-year trial period, to see if a voluntary bar is feasible?
Nonresident lawyers make up 23 percent of Bar membership - 30 percent
if inactive members are included. Yet nonresident members are allowed
just 8 percent representation on the Board of Governors, when compared
to the other Bar districts. [Note: Nonresident members comprise
District 17 for purposes of member representation.] I hope to bring this
issue, as well as others affecting Nonresident Lawyer Division members -
such as easier continuing legal education compliance through a CLE
comity rule - to the Board of Governors for action. (A CLE comity rule
would allow nonresident Bar members to satisfy Wisconsin CLE
requirements by certifying that they have complied with mandatory CLE in
the state in which they reside.) Full dues should mean full rights. With
about one-quarter of the Bar's dues revenues coming from outside
Wisconsin, nonresident lawyers are not a group to be taken for granted.
I very much favor the interstate practice of law and will work hard to
make it easier.
The diploma privilege is Wisconsin's secret in the basement. The last
diploma privilege stalwarts of Mississippi, Montana, and West Virginia
threw in the towel years ago, leaving Wisconsin as the sole diploma
privilege holdout. So, the time has come to reexamine the fairness of
this state's two standards for bar admission - one for U.W. and
Marquette law school graduates and one for everyone else. I believe
there should be one standard for every recent law school graduate -
either diploma privilege or bar exam - and I'll be appointing a special
study committee to address this subject. The WisTAF assessment, the
Board of Bar Examiners, and other issues I raised during the campaign
are subjects I'll also write about in the next few months.
The past year as president-elect has flown by faster than I could
ever imagine. There's so much to do, and only a year to be State Bar
president. And the position is as much ceremonial as it is substantive.
I have only one vote on the Board of Governors, just like every other
member of the Board. But if my election encourages Bar members who are
interested in change to become active in Bar committees, sections, and
on the Board of Governors, that's a great beginning. Thanks to everyone
who voted for me and who will begin that process of change over the next
few years. So, grab your brief cases, and on to the barricades.
Please feel free to comment directly to me at steven.levine@charter.net.
Wisconsin
Lawyer