
Vol. 77, No. 12, December 
2004
MISSION POSSIBLE
FY04 Annual Report, July 1, 2003 - June 30, 2004
 
Sidebars:
"Your mission, should you choose to accept it," a disembodied voice 
intones ..., and so begins another episode of the popular 1960s-70s TV 
series, "Mission: Impossible."
Just as actor Peter Graves led a talented and diverse team to achieve 
whatever "impossible" mission it accepted, the State Bar accepts its 
mission to improve the administration of justice and the delivery of 
legal services in Wisconsin and to promote the professional interests of 
Wisconsin lawyers.
A Sampling of Key Achievements During FY04
offering CLE Seminars via webcast technology, 
allowing registrants to "attend" from any location, saving time and 
money
launching Marketplace on WisBar, providing users a 
secure, efficient online registration and product ordering system
partnering with Loislaw to offer State Bar CLE books 
online, providing direct access to primary law to increase 
users' online research efficiency
hosting the first "Building for Success Institute," 
offering guidance on developing a successful law practice
conducting a Bench-Bar survey to gather opinions on 
various issues of importance to judges and lawyers
publishing the national award-winning 
Critical Terms in Criminal Proceedings in Spanish and 
English, helping attorneys to better guide their 
Spanish-speaking clients through the criminal justice system
airing the pilot project "Wisconsin Lawyers Make a 
Difference" TV spots, continuing the Bar's long-term effort to 
educate the public about the value lawyers bring to their 
communities
forming the Agricultural Law Section to bring 
together State Bar members who have a special interest in agriculture 
and related businesses
developing new programs that will debut in FY05, including the 
statewide pro bono initiative to encourage lawyers' pro 
bono efforts through training, insurance for volunteer 
attorneys, and other program support; the Law Office 
Management Assistance Program to help lawyers meet business 
planning, personnel, facilities, and operations management; and the 
expansion of the WisLAP and ethics hotline programs
working with the Family Law Section to revise Wisconsin's 
child support guidelines, among other significant legislative 
efforts and issues affecting the practice of law in Wisconsin
 
The State Bar meets this challenge by engaging the expertise and 
problem-solving skills of its diverse membership and professional staff. 
One only need skim the achievements outlined in this annual report to 
the membership to understand what is possible through the hard work and 
dedicated service of lawyers in partnership with their association.
PROVIDE 
Relevant and Useful Services to Members
The State Bar regularly seeks member input to assess the climate in 
which members work and to effectively anticipate members' evolving 
needs. Through this research, the State Bar is better positioned to 
focus its efforts in delivering the products and services its members 
want.
In FY04, attorneys and judges responded to the Bench-Bar 
Survey, sharing their opinions on various issues of importance 
to the bench and the bar, such as the impact of mandatory CLE on 
professional competence; whether arbitration is a fair, efficient, and 
inexpensive method to provide justice; standardizing local rules of 
civil procedure; abuses in the civil discovery process, and more. An 
article providing a snapshot of the survey appeared in the November 2003 
Wisconsin Lawyer.
Continuing Legal Education continues to be rated by 
members as one of the top values of State Bar membership. In FY04, 
CLE Seminars collaborated with sections, committees, 
and professional organizations to produce 70 different titles, resulting 
in 62 live seminars and 583 video presentations serving more than 11,000 
registrants. With an emphasis on providing current, relevant, and 
practical legal information in a convenient and timely manner, an 
average of 70 to 80 programs are offered annually.
Using new technologies, the State Bar saves members time and money by 
offering CLE seminars via phone, the Internet, and video. In September 
2003, the Bar offered the first webcast of a CLE Seminar, delivering 
seven webcast titles in FY04. Webcast registrants can "attend" from 
home, the office, or even on the road when they receive a live video 
stream via a link accessed through their computers. To meet the 
"right-now" demands of the legal profession, CLE Seminars also is 
investigating technology to allow for portable audio playback at the 
member's convenience.
CLE Books released Critical Terms in Criminal 
Proceedings in Spanish and English, which won a 2004 Award of 
Outstanding Achievement in Public Interest Activities from the 
Association of Continuing Legal Education Administrators. The Bar also 
formed a partnership with Loislaw to offer most CLE Books 
online,making electronic research easier and faster. The online 
books include links, through the Loislaw global database, to all cases, 
statutes, and regulations cited in State Bar CLE books.
CLE Books worked with more than 300 volunteer authors who contributed 
their expertise in producing:
- 36 supplements or new editions, including supplements to Probate 
System, Criminal & Traffic Benchbook, Organizing a Wisconsin 
Business Corporation, and Appellate Practice and 
Procedure; and new editions of the Probate, Family, Employment, 
Criminal & Traffic, Real Estate, Civil Litigation, Traffic Law, 
Public Utilities, and Children's & Juvenile 
codebooks
- Six new titles, including Public Records & Open 
Meetings handbook, and OWI Pocket, Business 
Law, and Guardianship codebooks
- Eight revisions, including Guardianship & Protective 
Placement, Easements, Real Estate Transactions System, Marital Property, 
Traffic Law & Practice, Hiring & Firing, and Employment 
Discrimination
Nearly 1,000 members gathered in Madison for the 2004 Annual 
Convention at the Monona Terrace Convention Center to share 
expert advice and to network. Registrants earned up to 16.5 CLE credits 
at programs sponsored by sections, divisions, and committees. Julian 
Bond, chair of the NAACP, provided the keynote speech as he reflected on 
the 50th anniversary of Brown v. Board of Education.
WisBar, the State Bar's member-focused Internet 
site, averaged nearly 1 million page views per month in FY04, providing 
electronic access to legal resources and information. In addition, 
nearly 6,400 members subscribe to the popular CaseLaw 
Express, receiving free weekly case law updates by email. 
According to a June 2004 survey, 55 percent of respondents visit WisBar 
at least once a month, while 36 percent visit several times a month.
WisBar's new Marketplace provides secure online 
transactions using up-to-date encryption features and allows members to 
efficiently purchase products and register for seminars online. In 2005, 
the State Bar will launch a redesigned WisBar, including an improved 
search engine and navigation and the ability to track CLE credits.
According to a readership survey conducted this year, the nationally 
recognized Wisconsin Lawyer magazine and 
Wisconsin Lawyer Directory continue to provide 
reliable, timely information. The monthly, peer-written and -reviewed 
Wisconsin Lawyer provides practical guidance on issues the 
profession faces. State Bar members receive a free copy in January of 
the Wisconsin Lawyer Directory, which facilitates communication 
within the profession. The readership survey showed that 48 percent of 
respondents use the Wisconsin Lawyer Directory at least once 
per week, making this the directory of choice for Wisconsin's legal 
profession.
As part of its support of local bar efforts, the State Bar hosted the 
annual Wisconsin Bar Leaders Conference for more than 
80 leaders representing 39 local and specialty bar associations. 
Programs centered on helping to build membership and program 
involvement, designing programs for public service, and enhancing 
leadership and communication skills to help leaders keep in touch with 
their members.
IMPROVE
Public Access to the Legal System
A recent State Bar member survey revealed that the estimated annual 
value of time donated to public service/pro bono activities by Wisconsin 
lawyers actively practicing law is more than $86 million. Lawyers help 
their communities in myriad ways and the Bar supports lawyers' efforts 
with programs to assist lawyers in delivering pro bono and public 
service. Highlights in FY04 include:
- developing the Wisconsin Pro Bono Initiative, a 
coordinated statewide program to support and increase the volunteer 
legal efforts of Wisconsin attorneys. The Initiative, in collaboration 
with the judiciary, legal services providers, and local bar 
organizations, works to improve public access to the legal system and 
increase the availability of pro bono resources for low-income Wisconsin 
residents.
- developing a CLE Pro Bono program to offer a free 
CLE seminar certificate to attorneys who sign up for State Public 
Defender (SPD) appointments and take five cases. The program assists the 
SPD to meet the increasing need for additional private appointment 
attorneys.
- supporting the Appellate Law Section's effort to provide pro bono 
assistance for civil and criminal appeals; the Business Law Section's 
efforts to provide low or no-cost advice through its Nonprofit Business 
Assistance and Business Assistance programs on nonprofit law issues and 
to emerging businesses, respectively; the Young Lawyers Division One 
Child, One Lawyer project to assist those affected by FEMA-declared 
disasters; the Environmental Law Section's project to provide legal 
assistance to citizens who face problems with environmental issues; and 
the Elder Law Section's WisPACT (Wisconsin Pooled and Community Trust) 
initiative to provide Wisconsin's first pooled supplemental needs trust 
and advisory services for the elderly and disabled.
The State Bar continued to award Local Bar Grants to 
local and specialty bar associations that develop public service 
projects that serve as models for other local bar service projects. In 
FY04, $8,000 was awarded for grant projects, including:
- Douglas County Bar for a script for a videotape and handouts on 
"Going to Court: Tips and Advice for Representing Yourself in the Legal 
System"
- LaCrosse County Bar for an educational videotape on child custody 
evaluation
- Marathon County Bar for a brochure, "Transitions: An Immigration 
Legal Resource Guide 2005," in English, Spanish, and Hmong
- Portage County Bar for "Justiceworks," a volunteer-driven, public 
service-oriented initiative that educates the public about the justice 
system using related community needs as a basis for understanding.
In FY04 the public continued to benefit from attorneys registered 
with the State Bar's Lawyer Referral and Information 
Service (LRIS). This year, of the 35,000 phone calls and 5,688 
contacts through LegalExplorer, the Bar's consumer Web site, LRIS legal 
assistants referred 11,848 prescreened clients to panel attorneys; the 
remaining callers were given information or referred to a community 
agency or other legal resource.
The State Bar also conducted 48 Lawyer Hotlines 
statewide, with 150 lawyer volunteers providing free information or 
advice on a variety of legal problems to nearly 500 callers. 
LegalExplorer, with an average of 35,000 page views per 
month, provides public access to State Bar programs like LRIS, and to 
legal and consumer information.
Wisconsin attorneys subsidize the supreme court-created 
Clients' Security Fund through an annual assessment of 
up to $25, to reimburse people who lose money due to dishonest acts by 
Wisconsin attorneys. This year, the supreme court approved petitions to 
change the fund's name to the Wisconsin Lawyers' Fund for Client 
Protection, and to require that attorneys petitioning for law license 
reinstatement make restitution or settle all claims of persons injured 
or harmed by the attorney's misconduct and reimburse the fund for all 
payments made before a law license can be reinstated.
In FY04 the committee acted on 37 claims against 18 attorneys. Of 
these, 22 claims were approved for reimbursement totaling $83,053. The 
FY05 assessment is set at $10.
ASSIST
In developing the law
At its core, the State Bar's government relations 
program is a member and public service. The Board of Governors, 
section governing boards, and the government relations staff engage in a 
variety of legislative activities, from monitoring bills introduced in 
the Legislature, to coordinating research related to law reform, to 
working to protect individual rights. The program was successful in FY04 
on several important issues, including:
- restoring positions in the State Public Defender's Office
- working to keep funding for federal and state civil legal 
services
- modifying the cost statutes to more adequately provide for recovery 
of actual costs by successful litigants in a court action
- working to defeat a bill to adopt the Daubert standard for 
admitting lay and expert witness testimony in civil cases and 
administrative hearings
- working with the Family Law Section to revise Wisconsin's child 
support guidelines
- working with the Real Property, Probate & Trust Law Section to 
revise estate tax law to avoid an economic drain to Wisconsin when the 
state death tax credit under federal law expires
- working with the Real Property, Probate & Trust Law Section to 
enact the Uniform Prudent Investor Act in Wisconsin
The Individual Rights & Responsibilities Section was especially 
active, by providing comments and positions on 35 pieces of legislation 
introduced during the 2003 legislative cycle to assist in developing and 
improving the law; for example, the section worked to defeat legislation 
regarding felon employment discrimination and voter photo 
identification.
The Lawyers Legislative Action Network (LLAN) is a 
free legislative grassroots program that keeps Bar members informed on 
developing legislation. LLAN volunteers ensure that the state 
Legislature and U.S. Congress are aware of the impact of legislation on 
the courts, the profession, and the public.
The State Bar also produces Capitol Update, 
an online service on WisBar that informs members about federal and state 
legislation that affects the legal profession and justice system. 
Capwiz, an online grassroots advocacy tool that will 
keep members apprised of hot issues brewing in the Legislature and link 
members to their lawmakers, will debut in FY05.
In FY04, the Board of Governors acknowledged elected government 
representatives for their advocacy on issues important to the Bar and 
the public. The Board recognized Congressman David R. Obey's advocacy to 
fund the federal Legal Services Corporation and presented the first-ever 
Scales of Justice Awards to state Rep. Terri McCormick for authoring 
legislation to ensure indigent criminal defendants receive counsel and 
to state Rep. Mark Gundrum for his efforts to reform the criminal 
justice system and to prevent wrongful convictions.
The Board of Governors studies, debates, and 
responds to issues that have an impact on the profession, the delivery 
of legal services, and the judicial system. State Bar sections provide 
key information about issues before the board. Among the many actions 
taken in FY04, the Board of Governors:
- approved changes to the State Bar's rules and bylaws, to enable the 
Bar to be more responsive to the issues facing the association and 
profession
- approved in principle the Multijurisdictional (MJP) Practice Group 
recommendations for use in drafting a petition to the supreme court to 
provide Wisconsin lawyers the ability to practice on a temporary basis 
in other states and lawyers from other states the right to practice on a 
temporary basis in Wisconsin
- approved the Administrative & Local Government Law Section's 
request to file a section amicus brief in a case before the supreme 
court affecting the attorney-client privilege
- approved a draft mission statement for a proposed supreme 
court-appointed commission that would define the practice of law and 
create an administrative body to help administer a rule protecting the 
public from the unauthorized practice of law (UPL)
- supported a proposed rule to cap fees that health care providers can 
charge for reproducing patient health care records, regardless of 
whether a lawsuit has been commenced
- studied the supreme court's Ethics 2000 Committee proposed 
amendments to the Rules of Professional Conduct for Attorneys
- petitioned the court to clarify the supreme court rules on trust 
accounts and to amend procedures of the Office of Lawyer Regulation
- supported a petition requiring mandatory training for guardians ad 
litem for adults
- opposed a petition regarding the written communication of fees
- opposed legislation that attempted to amend the Revised Uniform 
Arbitration Act in Wisconsin
ADVANCE
The Ethical Values of the Legal Profession
The State Bar works with the supreme court, the Office of Lawyer 
Regulation, the Board of Bar Examiners, the Clients' Security Fund, and 
the legal profession on ethical issues affecting Wisconsin lawyers and 
barriers to obtaining CLE credits, especially for nonresident members. 
CLE Seminars and section-sponsored programs often have an ethics 
component, helping members to satisfy mandatory ethics and professional 
responsibility credit (EPR) requirements.
The Strategic Goals that Support the State Bar's 
Mission
1. Provide services that are relevant and useful to members.
2. Improve public access to the legal system.
3. Assist in the development of the law.
4. Advance the ethical values of the legal profession.
5. Increase public understanding of the rights and responsibilities 
of citizens under the law, and of the vital roles of courts, judges, 
jurors, and lawyers in the administration of justice.
6. Increase diverse membership in the legal profession.
7. Improve the operations of the Bar.
8. Improve financial stability.
 
The State Bar offers an Ethics Hotline to help 
lawyers quickly interpret and apply the Rules of Professional Conduct 
for Attorneys to their practice situations. In FY04 the Ethics Hotline 
attorney handled 1,435 calls, while Professional Ethics Committee 
members fielded another 300 calls. In FY05, the hotline will expand its 
hours with a full-time ethics attorney. Professional Ethics 
Committee members also write articles for the Wisconsin 
Lawyer, another important source of ethics guidance. Throughout 
FY04, committee members participated on the supreme court's Wisconsin 
Ethics 2000 Committee to study and propose amendments to the Rules of 
Professional Conduct in response to the ABA's Ethics 2000 Commission 
changes to the ABA Model Rules, on which Wisconsin's rules are 
based.
In FY04 Wisconsin Lawyers Assistance Program 
(WisLAP) volunteers continued to provide confidential assistance to 
lawyers, judges, law students, and their families in coping with 
depression, alcoholism and other chemical addictions, acute and chronic 
anxiety, and other problems related to the stress of practicing law. 
WisLAP's trained volunteers can help callers avoid ethics and discipline 
violations.
Also in FY04, the Lawyer-to-Lawyer Directory was 
updated to include 700 lawyers, listed in specific practice and 
geographic areas, who agree to assist other lawyers in free brief 
telephone consultations. This network of service to colleagues helps 
increase the profession's competence. The Lawyer-to-Lawyer Directory is 
published each January in the Wisconsin Lawyer Directory.
INCREASE
Citizens' Understanding of Their Rights and Responsivilities, and of 
the Professions' Role in Administering Justice
To help prepare young people for their role in society, the Bar, with 
critical assistance from hundreds of volunteer lawyers, judges, and 
teachers, undertakes many law-related education (LRE) programs.
In FY04, a new Lawyers for Learning program placed 
lawyers in schools to help students learn about the law and to showcase 
lawyers' contributions to communities. The curriculum focused on the 
50th anniversary of Brown v. Board of Education to discuss the 
importance of laws, how to challenge an unjust law in the court system, 
and the central role of Brown in the nation's race relations. 
Wisconsin first lady Jessica Doyle joined LRE Committee members in 
presenting the inaugural program.
More than 600 attorneys and judges volunteered their time and 
expertise to, and more than 130 teachers and 27 regional coordinators 
helped organize, the 158th Mock Trial Tournament, made 
up of 181 high school teams. This year marked the first time a team from 
the Wisconsin School for the Deaf competed. The mock trial program is 
one of the Bar's most visible public education efforts.
In February, 24 high school teachers participated in the fourth 
annual Wisconsin Justice Teaching Institute. Assisted 
by supreme court justices, judges, attorneys, and university professors, 
the teachers took part in a sentencing exercise and analyzed actual 
supreme court petitions, culminating with a moot court activity. The 
institute is a partnership between the State Bar's LRE Committee, the 
Wisconsin Supreme Court, and the U.W. Department of Curriculum and 
Instruction.
During FY04, the State Bar cosponsored the "We the People, 
Project Citizen" competition - a hands-on civics education 
program for middle school students to promote competent and responsible 
participation in state and local government. The competition generated 
public policy portfolios from nine middle schools.
In the "We the People: The Citizen and the 
Constitution" program, five schools participated in a mock 
congressional hearing by testifying at the State Capitol before panels 
of teachers, lawyers, elected officials, and community leaders. Teams 
answered questions about the U.S. Constitution.
The State Bar hosted the weeklong "We the People Summer 
Institute," in which 16 teachers from around the state gained a 
deeper understanding of the U.S. Constitution and Bill of Rights with 
the goal of promoting civics competence and responsibility among 
elementary, middle, and secondary school students.
The Bar works with the state supreme court to promote the awareness 
of our court system in Wisconsin schools. In Courts with 
Class, middle and high school students review the details of a 
real case and then observe the supreme court in session. Students later 
have an opportunity to discuss with justices the case and the court's 
ruling.
State Bar delegates joined legislators, educational leaders, and 
state officials in Washington, D.C., for the First Annual 
Congressional Conference on Civic Education. The goal of the 
national forum is to reinvigorate civics education in public 
schools.
In FY04 the Media Law Relations Committee hosted the fifth annual 
Courts & the Media Seminar, which engaged nearly 40 
legal, judicial, and media professionals in a role reversal exercise and 
discussion to foster better understanding of each other's roles in our 
justice system.
The State Bar also planned events statewide to remind Wisconsin 
families about the importance of planning for future health needs. 
Attorney General Peggy Lautenschlager proclaimed Nov. 24-28 as 
"Life Planning Week." A Gift to Your Family: 
Planning Ahead for Future Health Needs booklets were distributed, 
and lawyer volunteers held free telephone hotlines statewide to answer 
citizens' questions.
INCREASE
Diverse Membership in the Legal Profession
The State Bar recognizes diversity as an important issue for the 
practice of law and for the public. The Bar is working to include and 
build on diverse perspectives in its 30 committees, 26 sections, and 
four divisions, on the Board of Governors, and in other leadership 
positions, as well as working to increase diverse participation in Bar 
activities and programs.
This summer, under the auspices of the Summer Clerkship 
Program, 24 first-year law students from the Marquette and U.W. 
law schools held clerking positions at law firms, corporate legal 
departments, and government agencies. The Committee to Encourage the 
Placement of Minority Lawyers oversees the program, which provides 
practical exposure to legal environments. Now in its 11th year, nearly 
164 students have benefited from this program.
James Potter, vice president, general counsel, and secretary of Del 
Monte Foods Company, was the keynote speaker at the annual 
Celebrating Diversity in the Legal Profession luncheon 
program that showcases diversity efforts in the legal profession. The 
event is a collaborative project of the State Bar Diversity Outreach 
Committee's Diversity Counsel Program and the Wisconsin chapter of the 
American Corporate Counsel Association.
Wisconsin 
Lawyer