Vol. 70, No. 3, March
1997
John H.Lederer
Personal
- Married; three children
- Residence: Oregon, Wis., since 1975
Education
- Secondary: Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass.
- Undergraduate: U.W. Madison
- Graduate: U.W. Law School, J.D. (1973), Wisconsin Law Review editor,
legal writing instructor, Legal Assistance to Inmates intern
Practice
- Law clerk to Hon. Walter E. Hoffman, U.S.D.C. (E.D. Va.) 1973-75
- Joined DeWitt law firm in Madison, 1975, partner, 1976, retired 1992;
general practice, ranging from defending against car repossessions to complex
trial litigation in several states, appellate work before the Wisconsin
courts, four Federal Circuit Courts of Appeal, and U.S. Supreme Court (briefed
and argued three cases). Practice also included representation before legislative
committees or agencies in 20 states and federal agencies. Active in law
firm management.
- Supervisor, U.W. Law School, Legal Assistance to Inmates Program, 1978-79
- Lecturer in anti-trust, U.W. Extension, 1980-87
- Retired from practice of law after open heart surgery; in process of
resuming active status
Professional activities
- State Bar of Wisconsin: Chair, Technology Resource Committee,
1991-96; member, Ad Hoc Technology Committee, Electronic Bar Services Committee,
Office Management and Intellectual Property sections; chair, Directory
Online Subcommittee; author, several seminal Avision memos for State Bar;
author or co-author, several articles on citation reform; co-author, Technology
Resource Committee Report on Citation Reform; worked with staff on technology
issues, creation of WisBar web site; speaker on citation reform at numerous
conferences and debates nationwide; speaker, numerous CLE courses involving
technology
- Speaker, technology and organization issues at numerous conferences,
including Comdex (Las Vegas), Networld (Dallas and Las Vegas), National
Association of Bar Executives (Orlando)
- Member, National Academy of Science committee evaluating transportation
safety studies, 1988
- Active participant in ad hoc coalition that defeated legislative attempt
to create private publisher property interest in federal case law, 1996
- Chair, Union for Public Domain,
1996-present, international public interest organization on copyright and
intellectual property issues
- Author of online
essays, several of which have been republished in various legal journals
and newsletters
- Member, Wisconsin, Virginia, numerous federal bars
The problems we face
The profession has major problems. The legal system is not working well,
despite efforts of many good lawyers. We are not able to perform well our
role in society as counselors, resolvers of conflict, and protectors of
rights. We cost too much, we take too long, we work too hard. We have an
adversarial system that has expanded beyond its rational boundaries.
We appear to have halted in our progress toward our ideals of equal justice
and a government of laws rather than men.
The causes of the problems are complex. Many relate to society rather
than just to the profession. Nonetheless, until we do our job better, we
will continue to suffer low public esteem and low self-satisfaction.
The State Bar's principal problem is that, save for CLE, most lawyers
regard it as irrelevant to them. It is not effectively addressing the problems
of the profession. That is dire for a Bar such as ours, which is larger
and more expensive per lawyer than our neighboring states' bar associations.
The core of my candidacy is this: I want to work to solve the first problem,
and in the process, solve the second. I want the State Bar to be a relevant
part of solving the problems of the profession.
The opportunity
The State Bar is in the information business. Over the
next five years it will undergo a major change in the way it does business;
so will everyone in the information business. That change offers great opportunity
and great risk.
The opportunity is to use the expanded communications that the Internet
and similar technology offer to make the profession a different, tighter
and more effective community. The technology can be used to reduce the cost
of practicing law with benefits to lawyers, clients and society. It can
be used to provide lawyers with common resources such as case law, statutes,
brief banks, new developments, and CLE at considerably reduced cost.
The changes can create an increased ability to draw upon one another
for help and experience. It can reduce reinventing the wheel. It can be
used to provide a small solo rural practitioner the same access to specialist
resources that a large urban firm enjoys. It can make the State Bar a principal
provider of current, timely, useable information tailored to an individual
lawyer's particular needs. It can make the Bar a more potent political force.
The risk is that the State Bar, encumbered with internal politics, slow
to change, and confused about its mission, will not make the changes that
it needs to make in a timely and coherent manner. If it fails to do so,
the State Bar will become less rather than more relevant.
Anyone involved with technology and organizations knows that the technology
part is easy. It is the organizational change that is hard.
Getting people to agree on the goals and getting them to rise above parochial
interests and unify in reaching those goals is the principal problem. That
is what I would work for in my presidency.
Why me? We all come to the table with different abilities, experiences
and temperament. I have advantages and disadvantages. Both of my opponents
are good, capable people. Whether I am the right person to lead the State
Bar really depends upon what you think the job is that needs to be done.
If you agree with me on the need for change, I suggest that you consider
my candidacy. I believe I have a grasp of where we need to go and a knowledge
of what we need to get there.
I anticipate a turbulent presidency, if you elect me. Change is stressful.
But I think you will later regard it as something good to have happened
for the profession, the State Bar and yourself.
If you want more information, you can obtain it at my
website, or by calling (608) 252-9250 and asking for a printed copy
of the website materials. The material there is extensive and is straight
and direct. |