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Gone in 48 Hours
It took major scrambling to cover for Barron County circuit court judge
James Eaton in 1990, when he was called to active duty as a member of
the Army Reserve. With only 48 hours to report to an Illinois base before
being shipped to Saudi Arabia, Eaton had time to do little more than get
a haircut and say goodbye to friends and family. The county and state
court administrators had to figure out a way to cover the court docket
in light of the rather sudden departure of one of the county's two judges.
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Barron
County Circuit Court Judge James Eaton, as a member of the Army Reserve
JAG, was deployed to Saudi Arabia in 1990. Barron County brought in
14 different substitute judges to handle Eaton's share of cases while
he was deployed for five months. |
The remaining judge, Edward Brunner, took on the task of reviewing all cases.
To try what would have been Eaton's share of those cases, "they had 14 different
substitute judges come in while I was gone for five months," Eaton recalls.
"I remember talking to some when I got back that I'd never met before."
Eaton's military involvement dates back to the late 1960s, when
he joined the Army ROTC while at Marquette Law School. After graduation,
he served stateside as an infantry officer and later an intelligence officer
for a few years. When he left active duty, he returned to Rice Lake to take
a job in a law firm. He also joined the Army Reserve, from which he retired
in May 2000, after nearly 30 years of service. For about half that time,
he was an intelligence officer, until he transferred in 1984 to the Army
Reserve JAG, to which he belonged when he was deployed to Saudi Arabia.
There he was one of five lawyers attached to the 416th Engineer Command.
"We'd get in our trucks, with our computers," Eaton says, "and go out
to the units to take care of legal matters that ran from A to Z." He also
was a member of the commanding general's special staff, which involved
such duties as writing up "lessons learned" reports to help the Army avoid
repeating mistakes in the future.
Now that he's retired from the Reserve, Eaton faces no more call-ups.
No more having to use his vacation time to attend summer or one-weekend-a-month
training sessions, as he did for 30 years. Why did he stay so long? "I
loved the people," he says. "I thought I'd hate the Army, but I loved
it."
Of Time and Money
In her 15 years total with the Army Reserve and the Army National Guard,
Wautoma attorney Robyn Blader has never been called up for active duty.
But even the weekend and summer commitments - and she always does more
than the minimum required - take a bite out of her practice, especially
since hers is a two-lawyer firm. "I'd make more money if I sat in my office
and worked all weekend," she says, "and I take another hit when I'm gone
for training in the summer. But the Army gave me a great start in life.
When I graduated from high school, I didn't have the financial means to
pay for college. I feel I owe it back."
So far, Blader hasn't been called up for longer durations of duty, which
she knows would have an enormous impact on her practice. She's done what
she can to minimize the damage. She's hired an associate, who could keep
the firm running, albeit with a smaller caseload and thus a reduced income.
She'd turn many of her current cases over to her associate, plus "I have
two or three attorneys who could handle the more complicated cases," Blader
says. To keep up the business end of the practice, she has a trusted secretary
who has authority to make deposits and write checks.
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In
1999, Army National Guard member Robyn Blader, Wautoma, at left, participated
in a two-week annual training exercise for Active and Reserve units
at Fort Hood, Texas. Blader's weekend and summer Guard commitments,
and the possibility of being called up for longer duty, have prompted
her to design a strategy to minimize the impact on her practice. |
Clients are another concern. "I have to be honest and upfront with them,"
Blader says. "I don't want to spring this on them. My clients have been
very understanding and supportive. No one's been scared away." She's already
prepared a letter to clients to be mailed immediately if she's activated.
Blader figures she'll continue in the Guard for some years to come,
despite the financial drain and the extra time demands. "When you get
home late Sunday night," she says, "and you're back to work right away
Monday morning, sometimes it is tiring."
"But it's a rewarding experience for me," she adds. "Especially in the
JAG Corps, it's a very close-knit group of people. If anyone ever needs
anything, whether it's on the military or the civilian side, everyone
bends over backwards to help."
Closing Shop
Probably no Wisconsin lawyer knows better the trials and tribulations
of balancing a civilian practice and military duties than Green Bay attorney
Jim O'Neil. As a member of the Army Reserve, he spent seven months in
Iraq and Kuwait in the early 1990s. Back then, less than three years out
of law school, he was an associate with a five-attorney firm. Then in
1996, when he was a sole practitioner in a shared-office setting with
five other solos, he was called to Bosnia for seven months. He had to
shut down his practice.
O'Neil has learned a lot from these experiences, which may help other
attorneys who face a call-up this time around. In both instances, he had
to create a network of attorneys who could handle his cases. And both
times, the network had to reach beyond the lawyers he worked for or amidst,
who "were up to their eyeballs in their own work," O'Neil says.
Reassuring clients is equally critical. "Suddenly the small issues become
big issues when clients get notice you're going to be gone," O'Neil observes.
Besides conveying that news by letter, O'Neil recommends calling all clients
and scheduling meetings with some. Meeting with everybody is impossible,
he notes, so set priorities. Which cases have upcoming deadlines, court
dates, or other urgent matters? "You also have to look at each client,"
O'Neil advises. "Oftentimes the clients who have been quiet and have simple,
mundane cases are the ones who suddenly get very nervous." In communicating
with clients, an attorney can suggest another lawyer but also must inform
clients of their right to go elsewhere.
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Jim
O'Neil, Green Bay, a major in the Army Reserve, knows first-hand the
difficulties of balancing a civilian practice and military duties.
O'Neil was activiated twice: seven months in Iraq and Kuwait; and
later, another seven months in Bosnia. |
Even after an attorney leaves, O'Neil suggests keeping some support staff
on the payroll for a while, or at least making sure they're willing to
field questions at their homes or new jobs. Plus, someone, perhaps working
part-time, needs to take care of the bills, receivables, and mail that
keep flowing in.
In his activations, O'Neil had 30 to 60 days' advance notice, during
which he scrambled to tie up a myriad of loose ends, orient other attorneys
to his cases, and, before the second activation, close his office. But
professional concerns are only half the picture, he emphasizes. "You have
only so much time," he says, "and there are competing factors. You want
to spend time with your wife and children. Your clients need reassurance,
so you're scheduling meetings on evenings and weekends. Your unit is gearing
up for the call-up, so you're being assigned additional responsibilities
there. No doubt about it, it's a stressful time."
After Bosnia, O'Neil relaunched his practice. He sent letters to former
clients, many of whom migrated back to him. But it took several months
to get his practice back to where it was. Will he be called now? Unlikely,
he thinks, but it's a question he hears often. "My long-standing clients
know I'm a major in the Army Reserve," he says. "Almost daily somebody's
calling to ask me, 'Are you going to be called up?'"
Preparing to Mobilize
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