President's Perspective: Let's succeed this year - together
By Susan R. Steingass
It is now my turn to join in the 120-year tradition of this great Bar 
and its leadership. I follow in the steps of President Steven Sorenson 
and his predecessors, and walk with President-elect Leonard Loeb who 
next takes this step. I am humbled and challenged by the year to 
come.
I want you to know what's on my mind for this year.
 As you know, as a mandatory bar, we have the 
highest responsibility to provide service to our members. Our success or 
failure turns on how we meet our members' needs. During my campaign and 
during my year as president-elect, I have had the pleasure of meeting 
with the majority of the 55 local and 23 specialty bars around the 
state. Among them there is a common thread of commitment to clients, to 
the highest standards of the legal profession, and to community.
As you know, as a mandatory bar, we have the 
highest responsibility to provide service to our members. Our success or 
failure turns on how we meet our members' needs. During my campaign and 
during my year as president-elect, I have had the pleasure of meeting 
with the majority of the 55 local and 23 specialty bars around the 
state. Among them there is a common thread of commitment to clients, to 
the highest standards of the legal profession, and to community.
I want to reach out to local bars. For those of you in local and 
specialty bars who believe that the State Bar is remote, I want to 
change your minds. We have undertaken a statewide survey of local and 
specialty bar leadership to ask how we can serve you. We will respond to 
your needs.
It is uniquely apt, in Wisconsin's sesquicentennial year, that we 
remember and honor the contribution of lawyers to this state over the 
last 150 years. I am pleased to announce that the State Bar is 
sponsoring a dinner event on Oct. 28, 1998, at the Monona Terrace 
Convention Center in Madison, honoring the first 150 women lawyers in 
Wisconsin. The response of our volunteers to this project is 
overwhelming! Throughout the state, lawyers, judges, historical 
societies, friends, and relatives are writing biographies of these 
women. Of the first 150 women lawyers, more than 25 are still living, 
and some are still practicing. The stories of their times, their 
struggles, their achievements and the people who mentored, trained, and 
encouraged them are pieces of living history and remind us of the larger 
story of the legal profession in Wisconsin.
Member service alone is not enough. We are a service profession. We 
need to be out front on the issues that face the legal profession. I do 
not need to tell you about declining respect for our profession. Nor do 
I need to tell you that we are, almost to the man and woman, 
hard-working, decent, and honorable people who give not only to our 
clients and our profession but to our communities.
We have a right to expect our State Bar to provide leadership on the 
issues that affect the legal system and the regard with which we as a 
profession are held. Topping that list is the delivery of legal 
services. Funding cuts at the national level, fueled in significant 
measure by lawyer bashing and lack of understanding of the pivotal role 
lawyers play in the justice system, have left our legal service 
organizations unable to provide the most basic necessary legal services 
to those who cannot afford them.
In 1996, Past President Skilton's Delivery of Legal Services 
Commission recommended, with considerable foresight as these subsequent 
events have shown, that an ambitious private fund-raising effort be 
undertaken, with the support of the State Bar, to bridge the gap between 
reduced funding for legal services and the ever-increasing need. The 
Equal Justice Coalition, a voluntary fund-raising group comprised of a 
broad-based coalition of attorneys, is actively engaged in this effort. 
It has already generated significant funds for legal services. With 
recent developments, this effort becomes even more critical. We must 
continue and renew our support for these efforts. Lobbying efforts to 
reinstate secure funding for legal services is important, but so are the 
efforts of State Bar members who give of their time and resources to 
provide legal services for those who cannot pay for them.
For this year, I have tailored my ideas to the reality that we 
already have a great deal on our plates. During this year, we will see 
our new home, our new Bar Center, take physical shape northeast of 
Madison. Though we are funding this center in part through the sale of 
our existing building and our own monies, we need to raise funds from 
our volunteers and friends in the community. Thus, we are launching a 
fund-raising effort. Nathan Fishbach, who guided the successful campaign 
for the new Milwaukee Bar Center, has agreed to chair this effort, and 
former Chief Justice Nathan Heffernan will serve as honorary chair. Dean 
Dietrich from Wausau will cochair the northern region campaign, and Jim 
Friedman from Milwaukee will cochair the southern region campaign, with 
the assistance of a statewide campaign cabinet. The true value of our 
new center is not bricks and mortar but the space it provides us to 
enhance service to our members and our profession.
I look forward to this year with anticipation, humility and, I admit, 
some trepidation. We are fortunate to have as competent, committed, and 
professionally excellent a Bar staff as we could hope for. With their 
help and yours, I will do everything I can to serve you well.
I want to hear from you. I want your ideas and your involvement. To 
leave a voice message for me at the State Bar, dial (608) 250-6182 or 
(800) 444-9404, ext. 6182. Or call me at my office in Madison at (608) 
255-6663, or email me.
Let's succeed this year - together.
Wisconsin Lawyer