www .meckbar.org - Mecklenburg County Bar
Transcription
www .meckbar.org - Mecklenburg County Bar
From the President ..................................................1 Pro Bono Par Excellence.................................cover Atticus Answers.......................................................5 YLS Happenings......................................................4 In This Issue Lawyers in the News ...............................................1 PERMIT NO. 3337 CHARLOTTE, NC PAID U.S. POSTAGE PRSRT STD Foundation Nominations .......................................7 Year-End Reports .....................................................7 Bar Drug Treatment & Family Courts Resolution....................................................6 CLE Courses.............................................................2 Bar and Foundation Updates.................................3 Lawyer Referral Service ..........................................4 Volunteer Lawyers Program ...................................4 MECKLENBURG COUNTY BAR 438 Queens Road Charlotte, NC 28207 DATED MATERIAL Volume 32 No. 1 ALTON L. GWALTNEY III Pro Bono Par Excellence BY July 2005 Alice Richey, a partner with Kennedy Covington Lobdell & Hickman LLP, has been an active volunteer with Legal Services for the Elderly for 10 years. Last year Alice contributed over 195 hours of pro bono support to Legal Services for the Elderly and was recognized as the Legal Services for the Elderly Pro Bono Attorney of the Year. In presenting this Alice Richey year’s award, Mark Henriques, President and Chair of the Board for Legal Services for the Elderly, noted Alice’s commitment to the program’s growth and development over the years as well as her specific work with two clients in 2004. Through her diligent efforts this past year, Alice assisted a client with heart problems in obtaining a release from a fitness center contract and helped another client with an estate dispute. The Volunteer Lawyers Program (VLP) recognized five Mecklenburg County Bar members as Pro Bono Attorneys of the Year for 2004–05. VLP Chair Jeffrey Schwarz presented these meritorious attorneys their awards at the Bar Annual Meeting on May 26, 2005. Legal Aid of North Carolina recognized Kevin O’Brien, an associate of Alston & Bird LLP, as Legal Aid’s Outstanding Volunteer for 2004–05. Over the course of a year, Kevin devoted 212 hours to one complicated subsidized housing case enabling a tenant to stop an eviction and obtain necessary repairs. Kevin and two Alston & Bird colleagues successfully Kevin O’Brien prosecuted a motion for sanctions against the landlord, resulting in a substantial fee award, which the firm donated to Legal Aid. The donation funded a special fellowship for a paralegal. Kevin has also been instrumental in organizing the pro bono efforts of his law firm by setting up in-house CLE training for attorneys and summer associates to handle both landlord-tenant cases and domestic violence protection orders. Robinson Bradshaw and Hinson PA’s Jane Rattere received the Volunteer Lawyer of the Year Award from the Pro Bono for Non-Profits Program. As a participant in the program, Jane and her team at Robinson Bradshaw put in more than 100 hours of work over 15 months to secure a permanent home for the Holy Trinity Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahdo Jane Rattere Church. The church’s Parish Council praised Jane’s work stating, “We are deeply grateful for the privilege of receiving the high degree of professional representation from Jane and the RBH team. Through their help, our parish is now the excited owner of a 3.8-acre tract of land on Idlewild Road, which will house our future sanctuary!” The Council praised Jane’s tremendous work as “counselor, advisor, and educator.” www.meckbar.org continued on page 2 As a civil litigation and worker’s compensation attorney with Hedrick Eatman Gardner and Kincheloe LLP, Michelle Crawford is not always operating on familiar ground when advocating for children caught in impassioned custody battles. Nevertheless, for her competence, energy, and dedication to the Custody Advocate Program, Michelle was awarded Michelle Crawford the Children’s Law Center Pro Bono Attorney of the Year Award. “Michelle conducts herself with the utmost professionalism and sincerity of heart when approaching custody conflicts,” says Tania Archer, attorney-coordinator in the Children’s Law Center, Custody Advocate Program. Even though she has been practicing law for only two years, Michelle has constantly preserved the Children’s Law Center’s reputation for excellent representation of children while handling some of the most difficult cases appointed to the Custody Advocate Program. July 2005 ME July 2005 ENBURG COUNTY B CKL AR E S T 1 9 12 Volume 32 No. 1 From the President My first official column in the Bar newsletter needs to begin with a thank you to Jon Buchan, 2004–05 Bar President. Jon has done much to promote the relevance of the Bar to its members over the past Shirley Fulton, year and I want to MCB President thank him for his leadership. His vision for the Luncheon Series culminated with two events that brought Bar members together to listen to Gene Nichol (previous Dean of the UNC School of Law) and Judge David Sentelle. I look forward to attending the Luncheon Series in this upcoming year as Jon once again helps lead this effort. Jon also helped increase interaction between the bench and the Bar by providing the leadership and support for our first Annual Judiciary Dinner where we had over 400 in attendance honoring our federal judges of the Western District of North Carolina. I, like so many others, look forward to our second Annual Judiciary Dinner, this year honoring the local state judges. Jon provided encouragement for participation in the Crossroads program where we, as members of the Bar, had the opportunity to learn about diversity through the eyes of nonprofits. Jon’s support of the Volunteer Lawyers Program (VLP) helped increase access to justice. Under Jon’s guidance, the VLP increased the number of volunteer hours from just under 1,500 last fiscal year to approximately 2,000 by the end of this fiscal year. That’s an increase of 25%! Jon continued to develop the relationship with the Mecklenburg Bar Foundation, guided by returning President Marion Cowell, to help ensure we are united and that we support each others’ goals and missions. The Patron’s Fund raised over $43,000 this year to help support legal initiatives within our community. Over the years, we as a Bar have grown from just a few in number to a number that exceeds the population of some small towns. At last count, we were over 3600 and growing. Over 65 attorneys were sworn in at our Spring Ceremony this year—a record number. We are an organized mandatory Bar and, as such, our mission is to serve the public and the Bar members in improving and preserving the administration of justice as well as to assist the North Carolina State Bar as described by statutory requirements. We seek to accomplish our mission through the goals we set for ourselves. As we look toward the coming year let us remember the established goals of the Mecklenburg County Bar: 1) promoting the highest standards of professionalism, competence, and ethical behavior among our members; 2) promoting the administration of justice; 3) assuring access to legal service regardless of social, ethnic, or economic status; 4) promoting public education in the community on legal issues, the Bar, and the legal system; 5) providing our members educational and support services; and continued on page 3 July 2005 by Robert P. Johnston Harrington Elected Co-Chair of Lawyers’ Committee Board Rob Harrington has been elected to a two-year term as co-chair of the Board of Directors of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights, commencing in September 2005. The Lawyers’ Committee is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization formed in Robert Harrington 1963 to involve the private bar in providing legal services to address racial discrimination. The principal mission of the Lawyers’ Committee is to secure, through the rule of law, equal justice under the law, according to a press release from Harrington’s firm, Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA. Harrington joined the Committee’s Board of Trustees in 1998 and was elected Southeast Region Vice Chair in 1999. He has also served as a member of the organization’s Executive Committee since 1999. Co-chair of the Bar’s Special Committee on Diversity, Harrington also serves on the Board of Directors of the Levine Museum of the New South and has also served on the Board of Directors of Seigle Avenue Partners. He is a graduate of Duke University and Duke Law School and has a law practice that focuses on civil, commercial, and class action litigation. U.S. District Court Judge Updates Judge Vorhees prepares Judge Conrad Robert J. Conrad, Jr., was sworn in June 3 as the Western District of North Carolina’s latest U.S. District Court Judge. Judge Richard Vorhees presided at the in-chambers event. A more formal investiture, open to the public, is scheduled for July 15 at 3:00 p.m. in Courtroom 2 of the Federal Courthouse. Judge Conrad was immediately assigned over 300 cases. His trial calendar for July includes over 100 matters. U.S. Attorney for the Western District of North Carolina from 2001–04, he thereafter joined Mayer Brown Rowe & Maw LLP. He is a graduate of Clemson University and the University of Virginia School of Law. In other Federal Court-related news, Frank Whitney, U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of North Carolina, Charlotte native and resident, and former Mecklenburg County Republican chair, has won the backing of Senators Elizabeth Dole and Richard Burr to fill the District Court seat formerly occupied by the late Judge Brent McKnight. His confirmation schedule is not currently known. Defense Attorneys Elections The North Carolina Association of Defense Attorneys (NCADA) elected Mel Garofalo president at its recent annual meeting. Founded in 1977, the NCADA brings together defense attorneys to promote the exchange of information, ideas, and litigation techniques, according to the organization’s website. An attorney with Hedrick Eatman Gardner & Kincheloe LLP, Garofalo focuses his practice on complex and general civil litigation. He was on the Board of Directors of NCADA from 1998–2001 and has held a variety of positions in the organization since then. Garofalo received his undergraduate degree from University of Dayton and his law degree from Wake Forest University. His goals include increasing the strength of www.meckbar.org various practice groups and broadening the organization’s base, together with increasing its membership from its current 920 to over 1,000. David Allen and Todd Brown were elected to the NCADA’s Board of Directors at the annual meeting. Martha Surles is currently a member of the Mel Garofalo Board. Former NCADA presidents from Charlotte include Jim Cooney, Jack Gardner, John Golding, and Charlie Tompkins. continued on page 5 1 Pro Bono Par Excellence continued from cover Codes of Judicial Conduct CLE Credit: Date: Time: Location: Fee: 2.5 hours Ethics Friday, September 16, 2005 Reg. 8:30 a.m. Program 9 a.m.–11:30 a.m. MCB Center, 438 Queens Road $90 attorney rate From Cruzan to Schiavo: Lessons for the Future CLE Credit: Date: Time: Location: Fee: 1.0 hour Ethics Thursday, September 22, 2005 Reg. 5:45 p.m. Reception and Book Signing 6:00 p.m. Dinner 6:45 p.m.–7:30 p.m. Program 7:30 p.m.–8:30 p.m. Hyatt SouthPark, 5501 Carnegie Blvd. $60 dinner only or $90 dinner with CLE credit WDNC Bankruptcy Chapter 13 & Chapter 7 CLE Credit: Date: Time: Location: Fees: 6.0 hours General Friday, September 23, 2005 Reg. 8:30 a.m. Program 9 a.m.–4 p.m. Four Points Sheraton, 201 S. McDowell $210 attorney rate $130 paralegal rate New New Lawyer Lawyer Orientation Orientation Sponsored Sponsored by by the the Young Young Lawyers Lawyers Section— Section— Mark Kutny YLS CLE Chair Mark Kutny YLS CLE Chair Date: Date: Time: Time: Location: Location: Fee: Fee: Thursday, Thursday, September September 29, 29, 2005 2005 Reg. 8:30 a.m. Reg. 8:30 a.m. Program Program 99 a.m.–1 a.m.–1 or or 22 p.m. p.m. Spirit Square, 345 N. Tryon Spirit Square, 345 N. Tryon Street Street TBA TBA The The Search Search for for Accountability Accountability in in Domestic Domestic Violence Violence Cases Cases CLE CLE Credit: Credit: TBA TBA Date: Friday, Date: Friday, October October 14, 14, 2005 2005 Time: Reg: 7:30 a.m. Time: Reg: 7:30 a.m. Program Program 88 a.m.–4 a.m.–4 p.m. p.m. Location: CMPD Shopton Road Location: CMPD Shopton Road Facility Facility Fee: TBA Fee: TBA Psychology Psychology 101—Family 101—Family Law Law Issues Issues CLE CLE Credit: Credit: 4.0 4.0 hours hours General General Date: Friday, Date: Friday, October October 21, 21, 2005 2005 Time: Reg. 12:00 p.m. Time: Reg. 12:00 p.m. Program Program 12:30 12:30 p.m.–4:30 p.m.–4:30 p.m. p.m. Location: Junior Location: Junior League, League, 1332 1332 Maryland Maryland Avenue Avenue Fees: $120 Fees: $120 FLS FLS attorney attorney rate rate $150 $150 attorney attorney rate rate Federal Federal Securities Securities Arbitration Arbitration CLE Credit: 3.0 hours CLE Credit: 3.0 hours General General Date: Friday, Date: Friday, October October 21, 21, 2005 2005 Time: Reg. Time: Reg. 8:30 8:30 a.m. a.m. Program Program 99 a.m.–12:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. p.m. Location: MCB Center, Location: MCB Center, 438 438 Queens Queens Road Road Fee: $110 Fee: $110 attorney attorney rate rate ANNUAL REVIEW Reserve the Date NOW! CLE Credit: Date: Location: Fee: 12.0 total hours (2.0 Ethics, 1.0 Substance Abuse, and 9.0 General) fulfilling one year of NCSB-mandated CLE hours Friday, February 10, and Saturday, February 11, 2006 Four Points Sheraton Hotel, 201 S. McDowell Street $395 attorney rate Coming Attractions Annual Banking and Finance Forum Federal E-Filing Substance Abuse/Mental Health Seminars—Live, Video, and Online Options Ethics/Professionalism Seminars—Live, Video, and Online Options Section Courses EDITORIAL POLICY The Mecklenburg Bar News accepts editorial and advertising material of general legal interest to the practicing Bar of the 26th Judicial District. The implicit purposes of the newsletter, website, and related methods of communication are to educate members of the Mecklenburg County Bar and to create and maintain shared communication with its members. The Communications Committee reserves the right to accept, reject, or edit all material. Legal Services of Southern Piedmont awarded Margaret “Meg” Maloney of the law firm of Hamilton Fay Moon Steel & Martin PLLC this year’s Volunteer Attorney Award. Meg has been an active volunteer for Legal Meg Maloney Services for many years. Providing almost 100 hours of legal assistance, Meg represented a disabled person in an appeal of the denial of disability insurance benefits, gaining a remand for new hearing. Meg has provided volunteer advice and counsel to 10 clients in recent years. She has also supported Legal Services by serving as an officer and member of the Board of Directors, assisting with grant presentations, and working on the annual campaign. The Volunteer Lawyers Program congratulates these dedicated attorneys and thank all who provided pro bono legal services during the past year. NC State Bar Synopsis of Council Action is now available online at www.ncbar.com. Correction In the 2004–05 Membership Directory, in the Support Services section under Printing-Office Supplies-Machines, the contact information for Imperial Printing was incorrectly reproduced. The correct phone number for Imperial Printing is 704/554-1188 and the correct address is 750 Imperial Court, Charlotte, NC 28273 as given on the page 1 ad. We deeply regret the errors and any inconvenience it may have caused. DISCLAIMER Efforts will be made to provide information of interest that is timely, accurate, and relevant to the legal community. The Mecklenburg County Bar is not responsible for misprints, typographical errors, or misinformation in The Mecklenburg Bar News. The views and opinions are not necessarily those of the 26th Judicial District Bar. Communications Committee: John Lassiter, Chair, Judge Bob Johnston, Corby Anderson, Mike Daisley, Porter Durham, Alan Edmonds, Will Esser, Mark Gott, Larry Grayson, Allison Karp, Charles Keller, Valerie Munei, Nancy Roberson 2 www.meckbar.org July 2005 Judge Shirley Fulton Is Bar President The Mecklenburg County Bar is honored to welcome Shirley L. Fulton as its new President! Judge Fulton is the first AfricanAmerican woman to serve in this role. She graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration from North Carolina Shirley Fulton A & T State University, received her Juris Doctorate from Duke University School of Law, and has a Masters of Business Administration from the McColl School of Business at Queens University. Her distinguished career includes serving as Assistant District Attorney, District Court Judge, Resident Superior Court Judge, and Senior Resident Superior Court Judge for Mecklenburg County. She is currently a Partner with Tin Fulton Greene & Owen PLLC, primarily practicing corporate/business law, community/economic development law, and alternative dispute resolution. Judge Fulton’s experience and initiatives as a Superior Court judge and as a private citizen committed to improving her community should prove invaluable as she guides the Bar through 2005–06. In her tenure on the bench, she was instrumental in ensuring the new Courthouse would be built; participated in collaborative efforts to improve the information sharing of all agencies in the court system and to address disparate treatment and diversity in the court system; and chaired the Conference of Superior Court Judges committee that examined court organization, management, and administration. Her volunteer commitments have included revitalizing her Wesley Heights home and community (with a five-year stint as president of the Wesley Heights Community Association), developing an After-School Tutorial Program, helping develop consensus and recommendations for the medical community on accepted standards of treatment for adjuvant breast cancer therapy, serving on the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools Task Force, and participating in the Echo Foundation initiative to improve the quality of life for Charlotteans. Judge Fulton also serves as Chair of the Board of Trustees for the Charlotte School of Law. Marion Cowell Continues as Foundation President The Mecklenburg County Bar Foundation is delighted and grateful that Marion Cowell will continue to serve as Foundation president in 2005–06. This will be Mr. Cowell’s seventh year with the Foundation and his second as president. Marion Cowell He received both his Bachelor of Science in Business Administration and his Juris Doctorate from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Prior to his current position with the Charlotte office of Kilpatrick Stockton, he was Executive Vice President and General Counsel with First Union Corporation (now Wachovia Corporation). He specialized in corporate governance, mergers and acquisitions, and banking regulation. In addition to Mr. Cowell’s legal and corporate background, his volunteer experience has been extremely helpful to furthering the mission of the Foundation. For his encouragement of pro bono participation, Mr. Cowell received the National Public Service Award from the Business Law Section of the American Bar Association. He received the President’s Award from the North Carolina Association of Black Lawyers for special service to the North Carolina Minority Counsel Program. He has been a dedicated volunteer with the North Carolina Bar Association, involved as a member of its Investment Committee and its Board of Governors as well as chairing its Professionalism Committee, its Pro Bono Committee, and its Senior Lawyers Division. He also served as a member of the American Bar Association President’s Advisory Council on Diversity. Mr. Cowell is an Emeritus Fellow of the American College of Mortgage Attorneys and a Fellow of the American Bar Foundation. He currently serves on several community and legal boards: the North Carolina Board of Transportation, the Art Institute of Charlotte, Legal Services of North Carolina, the Southern Environmental Law Center, The Lawyer’s Committee for Civil Rights under Law, and North Carolina IOLTA. He is an active member of the Bar’s Special Diversity Committee. Mr. Cowell and his wife Norma have been married for 17 years. They have six children and six grandchildren. From the President continued from page 1 6) increasing involvement in all sectors of the legal profession in this Bar. As a Bar with voluntary leadership and a small staff, we have made miraculous headway in achieving our goals. We have managed this through the able leadership of past presidents such as Jon Buchan and through the 27 committees and 11 sections where we have phenomenal contributions of time, energy, and financial support from many of our members. While it is my intention to continue to strive towards achieving all of our goals, I think that we have grown to the point and time where we need to take a pause to be introspective about our future. It is time to look at how much our staff actually does for us and identify ways to work with staff leadership to prioritize our work so that we may be assured that all efforts are well spent in helping us to achieve our goals. It is time to assess how we are doing as an organization and to determine how to move to the next level in the efficiencies and economies of all that we do. As a focal point of my tenure, I will continue to seek to assure access to justice through our Volunteer Lawyers Program by increasing the number of lawyers who volunteer. I will also seek to promote public education in the community on legal issues, the Bar, and the legal system by increasing our outreach efforts. There are many opportunities for collaboration among various groups of our membership as well as the community. It is my desire to be tap into these opportunities and, with the able leadership of Kobi Brinson, to make substantial headway in bringing this collaboration to fruition. It is my vision that increased communication and cooperation among the Leary Bar, the Hispanic Bar, the Women Attorneys, the Young Lawyers, and all other members of the Mecklenburg County Bar will lend synergy to this undertaking. We will continue as a Bar to provide quality continuing legal education to our members under the able leadership of John Buric. We will continue to explore ways to reach out to those among us in need of support in whatever way necessary to make sure that they don’t stumble and fall. And last, but certainly not least, I will continuously seek out and encourage involvement from all spectrums of the Bar. I pledge to have an open line policy and to be accessible to our membership. I am proud to be a lawyer, and I am extremely honored to serve as your President. I look forward to the coming year and to the accomplishments we will achieve together. Welcome and Congratulations! Bar Center Updates Valerie Munei is the new Communications and Events Coordinator. A native of the island of Oahu, Hawaii, she attended the University of Hawaii at Manoa and received her degree from the University of Chicago. She worked in Chicago as an editor for Encyclopædia Britannica and later for the Joint Commission on the Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations and one of its subsidiaries. Valerie has been in Charlotte since 1995, drawn to North Carolina in part by her love for whitewater kayaking. After working as an editor and project manager for InterNET Services Corporation, she formed her own company, Luminous Communications, and did writing and editing for a variety of companies. Jennifer Taylor is the new Assistant to the Executive Director. A May graduate of UNCC with a degree in Organizational Communications, she began at the Bar in mid-May. A native of WinstonSalem, Jen has recently begun skydiving. She formerly worked as an office assistant at Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson. July 2005 Jennifer Howle, formerly Assistant to the Executive Director, is new Volunteer Lawyers Program Coordinator. She began working for the Bar in July 2004 and began her new position in mid-May. Jen will also help process Grievances. Michelle Marblo, who had worked part-time for the Bar, is now serving full-time as a receptionist/ administrative assistant. She moved here a year ago from Albany, New York, where she attended paralegal school for two years. As part of her added duties, she will now take on the role of reserving the CLE and Board rooms at the Bar Center for meetings. We’re glad to see Lue Ann Whitten has returned from medical leave. She will continue to handle arrangements for the Sections and From left to right— some Committees as well as process Back row: Jen Howle, Lue Ann Whitten, and Michelle Marblo Fee Disputes. Front row: Valerie Munei and Jen Taylor www.meckbar.org 3 LRS Celebrates 2004–05 Accomplishments LRS Attorney of the Year Jeff Garis (left) shares his award with his family and assistants. The Lawyer Referral Service (LRS) held its annual reception at the VanLandingham Estate on June 28, 2005. It was a wonderful opportunity to thank LRS panel members and, this year, their assistants as well as to celebrate the tremendous financial success of LRS in 2004–05. Approximately 60 attended the evening’s festivities. The highlight of the reception was honoring Jeff Garis as the Lawyer Referral Service Attorney of the Year. The award is given each year to one attorney for exemplary effort on behalf of LRS. Mr. Garis moved to North Carolina in 1996 as the Assistant Clerk of the Superior Court of Mecklenburg County. He is a certified arbitrator and mediator who has provided excellent service to his clients with his experience in a variety of practices. This outstanding dedication and care has helped elevate LRS’s reputation and contributed to its growing success. The Lawyer Referral Service sincerely thanks Charlotte Copy Data, Lawyers Mutual Liability Insurance, Ocean Creek Resorts, Sun Trust Bank, and Carolina Legal Staffing for generously enabling the Service to hold this event at such a beautiful location this year. A special thank you also goes to Ocean Creek Resorts for its getaway gift certificates. YLS Happenings BY MICHAEL C. MASCIA & JOHN C. NIPP YLS Holds Wine Tasting The Young Lawyers Section (YLS) of the Mecklenburg County Bar held its annual Summer Social and Wine Tasting on June 16. Reid’s Fine Foods hosted the event, which was sponsored by Document Technologies, Inc. and Alston & Bird LLP. Collin Brown and Heather Gregg organized this social, as well as many others throughout the past year. Outgoing YLS Chair Mark Wilson received a plaque for his years of service to YLS. The Section members also elected the following officers to serve during 2005–06: John Nipp (Chair), Mitchell Kelling (Vice Chair), and Ben Sidbury (Secretary/ Treasurer). Heather Gregg, Greg Carlin, and Yolanda Trotman were elected as new YLS Board members. In his remarks to those in attendance, new YLS Chair John Nipp encouraged all young lawyers to get involved in the many YLS volunteer and social projects. “YLS is a great way to plug in to the Bar and meet other young lawyers in a casual setting,” he said. YLS membership is available to all Mecklenburg lawyers age 36 or under or in practice three years or less. Eligible lawyers interested in helping with YLS’s many community service projects and social events should contact John Nipp at jnipp@dmpm.com. Chris Lam Named Young Lawyer of the Year Kids in Bad Circumstances Volunteers Needed for School Proceedings Representation BY PHILIP J. PENN The Mecklenburg County Bar has a program that allows lawyers to sign up to volunteer under the Children’s Law Center Children in School Proceedings Representation. This Volunteer Lawyer program is one way to serve this much neglected and underserved population in a critical area of need. The Charlotte community needs volunteer/pro bono legal representation of young students who are suspended or in danger of being excluded from school long term. These children may face consequences not only at school, but also in the juvenile justice/criminal justice system. Some have characterized the problem as being one of dealing with “bad kids” or “bad behavior.” But these behaviors often have other explanations, such as difficult home situations involving poverty; lack of food, transportation, or heating; illiteracy; substance abuse; physical, mental, or sexual abuse; neglect; family history of incarceration; homelessness, instability in living arrangements, or overcrowded living situations; and mental illness, learning disabilities, and other impediments to learning. The truth is that very few of the discipline cases in schools are about “bad kids.” Really, the issue is one of how we, as a society, appropriately deal with children who are dealing with difficult situations manifested as problems at home, at school, and in the community. Lawyers have an obligation to assist those who are least in our society. These children count among those we must assist, especially those children facing legal consequences for their behavior at school. If you are interested in helping these at-risk youth, you can volunteer by e-mailing us at vlp@meckbar.org. For further information about pro bono opportunities relating to school representation, contact Philip Penn at the Children’s Law Center at 704/331-9474, extension 1086, or at ppenn@childrenslaw.org Paralegal Legal Services of Southern Piedmont, dynamic non-profit legal aid and poverty advocacy agency seeks paralegal for Immigrant Justice Program. Bi-lingual English and Spanish required. Salary $23,000+ DOE, generous leave and benefits. Detailed information about position and application instructions at www.lssp.org. Questions by email to kens@lssp.org or by mail to Director, LSSP, 1431 Elizabeth Avenue, Charlotte, NC 28204. 4 www.meckbar.org Chris Lam (middle) receives the first Young Lawyer of the Year Award from 2004–05 YLS Chair Mark Wilson (right) and YLS Board Member Mike Mascia (left) Chris Lam of Kennedy Covington Lobdell & Hickman LLP was awarded the first ever Young Lawyer of the Year Award by the Section at its annual Summer Social and Wine Tasting. In addition to serving as a member of the Continuing Legal Education Committee of the Mecklenburg County Bar, the Justice Bobbitt Inn of Court, and the Bar Candidate Committee of the North Carolina State Bar Board of Law Examiners, Chris contributed over 1,000 pro bono hours in representing Washington and Beaufort Counties in their effort to block a U.S. Navy plan to construct a landing field on land that lies in both counties. The counties contend this landing field would harm the local economy, uproot many families who have farmed the land for generations, and upset the local ecosystem. Lam worked with a team of other lawyers at Kennedy Covington to obtain a permanent injunction blocking the Navy proposal. The YLS would also like to recognize the following young lawyers for their outstanding contributions to the Bar and community in 2004–05: Kenny Coble of Dozier Miller Pollard & Murphy LLP for his service as Corporate Sponsor Chair of the Mecklenburg County Relay for Life for the benefit of the American Cancer Society, Anne Randall of Alston & Bird LLP for outstanding pro bono work and contributions to the YLS, Tom Gates of Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA for outstanding service to the Catawba Lands Conservancy and other extensive community involvement, and David Saye of Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice PLLC for extensive and successful pro bono representations. July 2005 by The Lawyer Support Committee Perfectionist or OCD? Increasingly, when I am engaged in a project at the firm, I just can’t seem to let it go. If it’s successful, I strive to make it perfect. If it was a bust, then I ruminate for days on end over every mistake I made along the way. During law school through my first few years of practice, this dogged determination to make things work served me well. But lately, I feel like I can’t let myself turn my mind off. How can I tell whether I am just being a good lawyer or if I am taking this thinking too far? Signed, C’est Moi Q Dear C’est Moi, In general, a strong desire to get things right is not in and of itself tantamount to mental illness. We lawyers often tend to be perfectionists. Such a tendency enables us to better serve our clients. We get paid to be detail-oriented or, as Jerry Seinfeld once said, “the only ones playing the board game are the ones who read the rules on the back of the box.” But when does a tendency towards perfectionism cross the line to being an actual disorder? You may have heard the term obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) and may be worried that your behaviors make you a candidate for such a diagnosis. It may soothe your mind to compare yourself to a more typical presentation of OCD as recounted on the website for the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill (www.naimi.org): “A lawyer insists on making coffee several times a day. His colleagues do not realize that he lives in fear that the coffee will be poisoned, and he feels compelled to pour it down the drain. The lawyer is so obsessed with these thoughts that he spends 12 hours a day at work—four of them worrying about contaminated coffee.” Other common manifestations of OCD to watch for include any of the following: 1. repeatedly checking things in order to feel secure, 2. fear of potential to harm others, 3. fear of being dirty or contaminated, 4. constant arranging/ordering of objects, 5. exaggerated concern with physical imperfections, 6. fascination with numbers, believed to possess good and evil qualities, and 7. perseveration on sin and/or blasphemy. OCD is thus characterized primarily by profoundly irrational thoughts or whimsical and time-consuming rituals; otherwise, a clinical case of OCD is not supported. Of course, your own thoughts will usually seem rational and nonwhimsical to you, so it is always a good idea—if you really are concerned about these issues—to seek input from trusted friends or family members in order to help you see what you may not be able to see in your own life. If you do feel a compulsion to exercise excessive mental or interpersonal control over everyday life (in the form of an unhealthy preoccupation with details, lists, rules, orderliness, and perfectionism), it is possible that you may have symptoms of obsessive-compulsive personality disorder (OCPD)—which is distinct from, more common than, and more manageable than true OCD. According to Medicor Lab’s The Health Center (www.thehealthcenter.info/ emotions/perfectionism), the signs and symptoms associated with perfectionistic tendencies or an obsessive compulsive personality disorder include: • emotional isolation, • inflexibility and rigidity, • a tense, “uptight” attitude toward life, • excessive attention to minor details, • miserliness, • abandonment of personal projects, and • a desire for complete personal effectiveness and competence. There are in fact a number of coping strategies that one can adopt to help deal with OCPD or its milder cousin perfectionism. Consider the following coping strategies suggested by The Health Center (www.thehealthcenter.info/emotions/ perfectionism): 95% Solution—Reset your personal standard of success for 95%, rather than 100%; let yourself enjoy the success of a very good result that may fall short of sheer perfection. Approximation—As with the game of horseshoes, in life, points are often scored for getting near the stake. Go for the attainable, not the elusive standard of “perfection.” Criticize the Critics/Doubt Your Doubts— Criticism, especially from oneself, can generate unrealistic expectations. Examine the “thinking behind your thinking”: Is it really true that this project must be letter-perfect? Is everything that I am presuming or living for truly riding on this one deal or case? Is my ultimate happiness truly tied to this person’s approval of me? Find the Equator—Be flexible in your expectations of others, and learn to meet them halfway. Good Parent—Put to bed the notion of being a Super Parent. Strive to be a good-enough parent— of both your children and your files! No parent is equally effective in everything at all times, and often how the child, or case, turns out is beyond the parent’s control. Recognize that absolute control—of anything or anyone—is an illusion. People Pleaser No More—Accept the reality that you cannot please all of the people all of the time—and neither can anyone else! Ego Diet—The earth is not the center of the universe, and neither are you. Shrink your ego such that you need not demand perfection of those around you—including yourself—in order to be happy. Consulting a counselor, physician, life coach, clergy person, or trusted friend may be prudent when troubling thoughts, feelings, or behaviors arise. In the meantime, do not worry about it, C’est Moi, at least not incessantly. Signed, Atticus “Atticus Answers” has been brought to you by the dedicated members of the Lawyer Support Committee: Don Carroll; Kevin Davis; Tom Dickinson; G.H. Dornblazer, MD; Michael Hall; Peggy Hey; Cheryl Isley; Michael Kahn; Amanda Mingo; Chris Osborn; Joe Parisi; Sara Pressly; Nancy Roberson; and Cassandra Tydings. Please remember that any member of the Committee is available to talk about anything. Your conversation will be privileged and confidential. Lawyers in the News continued from page 1 Nine Attorneys Among “40 under 40” Nine attorneys were among the Charlotte Business Journal’s “40 under 40.” According to the Journal, the yearly selections include 40 people under 40 years of age “who are making major strides in their careers and impacting their communities.” The recipients, (with their last book read) include: David Armistead, general counsel of CT Communications (The Biography of John Adams); Dianne Chipps Bailey of Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson (Your Two-Year-Old: Terrible or Tender); Kimberly Cacheris of McGuireWoods LLP (The Nanny Diaries); Jeffrey Hart of Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson (Three Days in August); Carlos Pauling, vice president and assistant general counsel of Wachovia Corp. (Rich Dad, Poor Dad); Paul Steffens of Kennedy Covington Lobdell & Hickman LLP (Green Mansions); W. DeVane Tidwell of Helms Mulliss & Wicker PLLC (Our Kind of People: Inside America’s Black Upper Class); Whit Wilks, senior vice president of US Trust Co. (The Kite Runner); and Stacy Wood of Parker Poe Adams & Bernstein LLP (Therapy). July 2005 Poyner & Spruill Participates in Alzheimer’s Walk Michelle Hunt, Marshall Yoder, and other personnel from Poyner & Spruill LLP, together with friends and family, participated in the Alzheimer’s Association Mecklenburg County Memory Walk on June 4. Seton Hunt of Kennedy Covington Lobdell & Hickman was also part of the “team.” The participants raised donations to support research and effective treatments and to improve the lives of people affected by Alzheimer’s. The Alzheimer’s Association is a voluntary health organization dedicated to finding preventions, treatments, and, eventually, a cure for Alzheimer dementia. This is the first year a team from his firm has participated, according to Yoder, who hopes it will become an annual event. “It was a pleasant walk for a good cause,” he says. Poyner & Spruill Memory Walkers www.meckbar.org 5 to Discuss Bar Supports Drug Treatment Colby Right-to-Die and Family Courts Ethics The Mecklenburg County Bar’s Judicial/Court Funding Committee, chaired by and composed of Ozzie Ayscue and Bob Henderson, drafted the following resolution to support proper funding of the Drug Treatment Court and Family Court. Jon Buchan, then-president of the Bar’s board presented it for the MCB to review on May 26, 2005. The MCB is in full support of the resolution. RESOLUTION Twenty-Sixth Judicial District (Mecklenburg County) Bar Mecklenburg County, North Carolina WHEREAS, the North Carolina Senate has released a proposed budget that eliminates $1,000,000 in funding, or essentially all staff and treatment services, from the Drug Treatment courts and $492,994, or approximately eight positions, from the family courts; WHEREAS, these programs help the community by addressing multiple underlying problems, rather than merely resolving the legal matter brought before the court; WHEREAS, Mecklenburg County has achieved outstanding success in using its ten-year-old Drug Treatment Court, which has become a model for the State, where other countries have duplicated it, and to the nation, to help straighten out the lives of people whose continued addiction and related crimes would have burdened the entire justice system—from law enforcement, to the courts, and ultimately to the penal system, where the recidivists, the people who are not cured, become wards of the State; WHEREAS, family courts, by assigning one judge to deal with entire dysfunctional families, help save children, our most precious resource, both from growing up in neglect and ultimately from repeating the pattern of their parents’ lives, while steering their parents away from conduct that often spirals downward into criminal conduct; WHEREAS, the key component for success of these programs is the coordination of services and the ability to hold all parties accountable through court staff, the partnership between the judge and case manager in these courts forms the very nucleus of the program, and removing that nucleus from the rest of the team will cause either the demise of the program or its serious weakening; WHEREAS, the proposed cuts will have a tremendous adverse, negative impact upon the overall administration of criminal and civil justice in not only the Twenty-Sixth Judicial District, Mecklenburg County, but throughout the State of North Carolina; The Bar joins the Mecklenburg County Medical Society, Bioethics Resource Group, and Hospice & Palliative Care Charlotte Region in cosponsoring a Mecklenburg Bar CLE program by William H. Colby: “Cruzan to Schiavo: Bill Colby Lessons for the Future.” Mr. Colby, who represented the Cruzan family in that famous right-to-die case, will discuss the ethical issues from his experience with the Cruzan case and his observations on the tragically similar Schiavo case. Author of The Long Goodbye: The Deaths of Nancy Cruzan, Mr. Colby is currently a Fellow at the Midwest Bioethics Center. He received his Bachelors of Arts from Knox College in Galesburg, Illinois, and his Juris Doctorate from the University of Kansas School of Law. He then clerked at the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals and practiced law in Washington, D.C., and Kansas City. Mr. Colby also taught at the University of Kansas School of Law. The dinner program will start at 5:45 pm (registration) and continue until 8:30 pm on Thursday, September 22, 2005, at the Hyatt SouthPark. Fees are $60 for the dinner only and $90 to receive one hour of CLE ethics credit. WHEREAS, these cuts will have particular negative impact upon the poor, the disadvantaged, and the addicted, and further hinder their ability to become productive taxpaying citizens: NOW, THEREFORE, the Board of Directors of the 3,600-member Twenty-Sixth District (Mecklenburg County) Bar, HEREBY RESOLVES that: 1. All members of the Mecklenburg County delegation in the General Assembly be advised that the Mecklenburg County Bar strenuously opposes the proposed elimination of funding for Drug Treatment Court and Family Court; and, 2. Funding should be restored for these programs that reduce recidivism and save Mecklenburg County and the State of North Carolina money that would otherwise be spent for additional prison and jail facilities. 3. Any new revenues generated through an increase in court fees ought in fairness go to the direct benefit and maintenance of services furnished by the Judicial Branch, and not be allocated to purposes unrelated to the courts that produce them. This is 26th day of May 2005. Jonathan E. Buchan, President Twenty-Sixth Judicial District (Mecklenburg County) Bar Join or Renew Your Section Memberships! Remember to check and add the annual dues for your Section of interest on your annual Membership Invoice to sign up for 2005–06. Most Section memberships are $25.00; Young Lawyers Section membership is just $10; Criminal Justice membership for Assistant DAs and Assistant PDs is $10; judges’ fees are waived. What about Committees? More on Committee membership sign up coming next month! Reserve the Date for Fall Swearing In New admittees to the North Carolina State Bar will be sworn in on Thursday, September 29, 2005, at Spirit Square. A reception at Spirit Square will immediately follow the ceremony. 6 www.meckbar.org July 2005 Nominating Committee Report 2004–05 Year-End Reports Fee Dispute Resolution Committee BY BRETT J. DENTON, CHAIR The Mecklenburg County Bar Fee Dispute Resolution Committee is comprised of 25 volunteers, 18 lawyers, and 7 lay members. The Committee investigates, mediates, and arbitrates fee disputes between attorneys and their clients. In the period from May 20, 2004, to May 31, 2005, 94 files were opened and 64 files were closed. Of this year’s files, 26 were resolved by settlement or binding arbitration; 28 were closed without resolution, leaving the parties to pursue legal action; and 20 files remain open. The disputes were most heavily concentrated in the domestic practice area (20 files), and the remaining fee disputes encompassed other practice areas such as criminal, real estate, employment, tax, probate, personal injury, bankruptcy, and immigration. The amounts in dispute ranged from $90 to $228,807. Five files involved disputed fees in excess of $10,000. The average resolution figure (either by refund of payment) was $1,787. The Bylaws of the Fee Dispute Resolution Committee are posted on the Bar’s website. Any attorney wishing to become a member of the Committee or having questions about the Committee’s procedures is invited to contact Chair Brett Denton. Grievance Committee BY ROBERT DORTSCH JR., CHAIR The local Grievance Committee is, in effect, the investigative arm of the North Carolina State Bar Grievance Committee. The Committee investigates grievances and makes recommendations to the State Bar Grievance Committee whether or not probable cause exists to believe that the respondent attorney has violated one or more provisions of the Rules of Professional Conduct. The State Bar always makes final disposition of the grievance. Currently, there are 16 members of the 26th Judicial District Grievance Committee. The majority of members are attorneys who volunteer their time to handle investigations. There are also 3 lay members who lend their expertise and make recommendations, but do not investigate specific cases. The majority of cases are processed through the Mecklenburg County Bar (MCB) office. The MCB receives approximately 25% of its cases from the State Bar. Most grievances filed will initially be investigated by the MCB Grievance Committee, except those that allege misappropriation of funds, conduct relating to practice in another county, or cases when multiple grievances are being filed against the same attorney. During fiscal year 2004–05, the Grievance Committee assigned 35 cases for investigation. Fifteen of these cases are still under investigation. The Committee made recommendations of no probable cause on 15 cases last year. There were eight findings of probable cause. Two cases were transferred from the Grievance Committee to the Fee Dispute Resolution Committee. Bar Foundation Grants BY CHRISTOPHER M. VANN The Mecklenburg Bar Foundation is a charitable organization created in 1962 to advance public understanding and respect for the rule of law and the role of the legal profession; to promote the highest ideals of professionalism, public service, and access to the legal system; and to support the goals of the Mecklenburg County Bar. In keeping with its mission, the Bar Foundation awarded the following grants in 2004–05: 1. $3,740 to the Office of the Public Defender to send investigators to the National Defender Investigator Association Conference in Chicago. Sylvia Summers, an investigator with the public defender, said that the conference was “wonderful.” The attendees were able to network with other investigators from across the United States and participate in several classes to learn techniques on operating more efficiently. Each Mecklenburg attendee went to different sessions of the conference, then they met as a group to share what they learned. Sylvia hopes to attend next year’s conference. 2. $2,500 to the Drug Treatment Court for a public awareness gala in recognition of the Court’s 10th anniversary. Mecklenburg County has the first drug treatment court in the state. The Court accepts offenders charged with non-violent drug charges and provides 12 to 24 months of treatment with biweekly court sessions to monitor progress. The normal recidivism rate for a drug offender is 44%. The Drug Treatment Court has a July 2005 recidivism rate of 11.3%. The Court is also cheaper than jail. It costs $2,500 a year for each offender to go through the Court, while it costs $25,000 a year to house one offender in jail. More than likely, the offender leaves jail with his drug addiction intact. Janeanne Tourtellott, program administrator of the Drug Treatment Court said that 175 people attended the gala in April, including Judges Shirley Fulton, James Lanning, and Phillip Howerton, who were instrumental in establishing the Court. The guest speaker was Judge Harvey Hoffman, a district court judge from Charlotte, Michigan. There was also a presentation from graduates of all 10 years of the program. 3. $10,000 to the Lawyer Support Committee to provide loans to Bar members who are without insurance coverage or adequate funds to afford treatment for mental illness and addiction. 4. $22,000 to the Bar Leadership Institute, which provides training for lawyers for leadership opportunities within the Bar and the community at large. 5. $5,000 to the Carolina Center for Civic Education to cover the costs of the 2005 National High School Mock Trial Championships, which Mecklenburg County hosted in May. 6. $250 to help with the costs of Jury Appreciation Week 2005. The Mecklenburg County Bar Foundation looks forward to receiving grant proposals for 2006 consistent with its mission statement. www.meckbar.org Bar Foundation Officers/ Directors for 2005–06 The Nominating Committee of the Mecklenburg Bar Foundation proposes that the following individuals be nominated for the indicated positions for the year 2005–06: Officers: Marion A. Cowell Jr.–President James R. Bryant III–Vice President Claire Rauscher–Secretary Cassandra H. Tydings–Treasurer and Chair, Finance & Investment Committee DeWitt F. (Mac) McCarley–Chair, Planning & Development Committee Maria Long–Chair, McMillan Fellowship Fund Committee Directors–Class of 2008 Current Directors to be re-elected to second term: Martha G. Barber Carolyn Mints Claire Rauscher New Nominees: James R. Bryant III Maurice O. Green (MCB Appointee) Alice K. Moore Randel E. Phillips Bar Financials 2004–05 Year-end financial information and the 2005–06 approved budget will appear in the August 2005 newsletter Fall Tee Off It may be a little early to think about autumn, but it’s the perfect time to think about golf. The Social/Sports Committee hopes to schedule the Annual Golf Tournament in early October this year. So save those first couple of Mondays and think perfect fall weather for a great game! More on this coming soon. 7