Thursday, May 26, 2011

The Big Picture

Holistic Law is expanding its purposes in the hopes of providing a wider-client services base.  As you may already know, holistic law is this idea that instead of regarding clients in a narrow ways, the holistic lawyer focuses on legal issues through the lens of the whole person.  This means that other professionals should be part of the Holistic Law Group's network.

Holistic Law Group is looking for therapists, accountants, lawyers who specialize in bankruptcy and estate planning, social workers and other supportive service providers to compliment Holistic Law Group and its commitment to the whole person.

While our justice system is an adversarial one, with the right supports in place, the process can be, potentially "win/win."  The holistic lawyer -- along with the client and other professionals -- asesses the client's role, works with the client to draw a client-focused solution, and gauges the effect of the problem on both the client and the community.

Comments:  
Want to be part of a whole-person approach to legal issues?  Interested in referrals?  Please comment or contact Jenna.

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Changing Times

Barbara Lenk has won confirmation for a seat on the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court.  Justice Lenk becomes the first openly gay or lesbian person to sit on Massachusetts’s highest court.  Justice Lenk’s biography, featured below, is edited from the Massachusetts Appeals Court’s website where she sat as a judge prior to being elevated to the Supreme Judicial Court:
Associate Justice Barbara A. Lenk was born in Queens, New York.  She received a B.A., magna cum laude, from Fordham University in 1972;  a Ph.D. in political philosophy from Yale University in 1978;  and a J.D. from Harvard Law School in 1979.  She began her legal career in 1979 at the Boston law firm of Brown, Rudnick, Freed & Gesmer where her practice specialized in First Amendment matters.  In 1993, she was appointed to the Superior Court, where she served until 1995, when she was appointed to the Appeals Court.  Justice Lenk has served on the Board of Directors of the Volunteer Lawyers Project of the Boston Bar Association;  as Chair of the Board of Editors of the Boston Bar Journal;  and as a member of the Judicial Administration Council of the Massachusetts Bar Association.  She currently serves as a Trustee of Western New England College and as a member of the Boston Inn of Court.
And, she's a lesbian.  This openness of Justice Lenk's is a sure sign of openness of the populous.  In the days before the Stonewall Riots in June of 1969, the appointment of an openly gay judge was unthinkable.  But today, thoughts are different.  Congratulations Justice Lenk.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Limited Representation: Why do it?

There has been a recent shift in thinking in the minds of some lawyers that "limited representation" is a new way to be helpful to clients.  In fact, it has been around for a long, long time in the form of "counsellor-at-law."  While many lawyers like the tradition of the lawyer representing ALL interests for a client's ENTIRE matter, some clients want a different arrangement.

With so many possibilities, there simply cannot be a one-size-fits-all way to represent a client's interest.  Lawyers need to be accommodating and flexible in their representation and offer flat-fee billing.     


A survey conducted in 1998 by the Boston Bar Association indicated that in over two thirds
of cases, one or both of the litigants are pro se.  This means that clients are going it alone.  Why?  And, what might be the up-shot? 
 
In many cases, self-represented litigants don't finish their family law action due to lack of understanding of the process.  They give up, feeling hopeless.  Most litigants do not qualify for legal aid, or live in areas where the legal aid resources are insufficient to meet their needs.  These litigants are forced to go pro se because they cannot come up with a huge retainer.  They feel as though they are forced into a financially-bound corner.  Others find that while they can afford to pay for some legal assistance, the cost of full service representation is simply prohibitive.  Then, there are some who desire to retain more control over their cases, and turn to attorneys to coach them, or assist with their paperwork.  These litigants retain primary control over their legal matters and appear in court by themselves. 

Comments?
Is approaching a multi-faceted case like a "pick-and-choose menu" a smart way to have a client-lawyer relationship?

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Connecting to the Client

Recently, I have been working with a clients whose personal stories are emotionally traumatic.  Both from the perspective of any compassionate human but also, more existentially, to the person who's telling it.  Details emerge about trauma suffered at the hands of a sexually-abusing spouse, of a prison guard, of a father deserting his children.  Really ugly events left to stew in the minds of those victimized.

My clients frequently say, "I'm sorry to unload this on you."  My response, "Don't be."  And, I mean it.  If a lawyer cannot do the hard work of being both an attorney and counsellor at law, then she should get out of the business.  Clients, while interested in sage legal advice, want to be heard emotionally.

Clients need to be able to trust their chosen advocate with the ugliness of their pasts. 

The only way for this trust to authentically germinate demands the emotional risk a lawyer must take to be "present" with the client.  This risk-taking need to happen before the client arrives for the initial consultation.  Extra time needs to be put aside in the estimated "hour" to accommodate not only the "get-to-know-you" small talk but also the "you-may-unload-that-on-me" discussion.

Be advised:  A generous and compassionate heart will result in more time, better trust, and a more meaningful lawyer-client relationship.  Clients deserve emotional connections to their lawyers.

Comments?
 Is it important for you to have emotional chemistry with your attorney?