
Vol. 77, No. 8, August 
2004
A Handful of Years
In its five years, the State Bar Center has seen 1,400 State 
Bar-sponsored meetings and more than 800 member-reserved meetings ... 
and no parking tickets. This truly is a members' building.
 
by George C. Brown,
State Bar executive director
 Last month, we repaired 
and resealed the State Bar Center parking lot. While hardly a remarkable 
feat in itself, it is symbolic of the amount of time the "new" State Bar 
Center has been operating. This month marks the fifth anniversary of the 
opening of the State Bar Center.
Last month, we repaired 
and resealed the State Bar Center parking lot. While hardly a remarkable 
feat in itself, it is symbolic of the amount of time the "new" State Bar 
Center has been operating. This month marks the fifth anniversary of the 
opening of the State Bar Center.
Much has changed since July 1999, the last full month in the old Bar 
Center. In fact, there was not one "old" Bar Center. There were three. 
In addition to the old Bar Center building in downtown Madison, we 
operated a print and mail facility on the far south side of the city and 
made regular trips to a warehouse several blocks away for materials. 
This made for much inefficient, and therefore more costly, work.
Since moving into the current State Bar Center, we have been able to 
streamline many of our operations. For example, one of our staff members 
in the marketing division spent most of his time preparing materials for 
shipment to or from our southside print facility. After the move, he no 
longer needed to do that, and his job was repurposed to fill a different 
existing need, which meant we did not have to hire another staff person. 
We have continued to look for these efficiencies. That is one of the 
reasons why there are fewer staff members working in the Bar Center 
today than when we moved in five years ago.
We have witnessed tremendous changes in technology in the last half 
decade. The State Bar Center was wired with state-of-the-art fiber optic 
cable when it was built. But that and the metal racks that hold the main 
computer components are about all that remains. Servers that we have to 
buy to replace those that burn out cost one-sixth the price of the 
originals and operate many times faster. We depend on two principal 
software platforms instead of five, making usage easier and maintenance 
more cost effective. All State Bar CLE seminars now are digitally 
recorded and can be sent over the Internet. This magazine is laid out on 
computer and sent electronically to the printer. WisBar, the State Bar 
Web site, was three years new when we moved into the current Bar Center. 
We will soon launch a completely restructured and redesigned Web site 
that will be more useful and easier for you to use.
Today, you can actually attend a CLE seminar or a State Bar meeting 
at the Bar Center - at the old Bar Center most meetings were held in 
hotels because there virtually was no meeting space and no parking. Even 
when a meeting could be held at the old Bar Center, most attendees were 
forced to park on the street and were surprised when they did not 
receive a parking ticket. Now, the Bar Center has a parking lot that 
holds 200 cars rather then the 24 at the old Center. And no parking 
tickets have been issued, even on occasions when the lot has been full 
and attendees have had to park in the street.
In the last 60 months, nearly 1,400 State Bar meetings, including 
seminars, sections, divisions, committees, and the Board of Governors, 
have been held at the State Bar Center. In addition, members have held 
more than 800 meetings, depositions, negotiations, mediations, and 
arbitrations at the Bar Center. And that is the best part. The State Bar 
Center is again a members' building. If you need a neutral space for a 
client meeting, a negotiation, or a deposition, just call the State Bar 
Center to reserve a conference room. As one of your member benefits, 
it's free for your use. So is the coffee.
Wisconsin 
Lawyer