The Atlanta Lawyer March 2014 | Page 5

metro Atlanta, or of the ten million people now living in our state? Our collective experience and Justice Thompson’s report answer that question. Based on the number of calls I get in my own office from people who cannot afford counsel, I believe I could spend all my time providing free services. That would be almost as hard as…as....wait for it…being a bar president--but that is a subject for another column. fundamental right of citizenship. Once a consensus on that idea forms, and it is forming rapidly, the status quo will yield. Come senators, congressmen Please heed the call Don't stand in the doorway Don't block up the hall For he that gets hurt Will be he who has stalled There's a battle outside And it’s ragin' It'll soon shake your windows And rattle your walls For the times they are a-changin'2. How can we do better? Providing access to justice to me is the greatest challenge the legal profession faces. I suggest that in order to provide meaningful access for all our citizens we have to come up with a better way to finance basic legal services. Somehow the cost has to be spread out among more people either through some kind of insurance or taxation or some combination of both. At this point I expect some of you have recoiled in horror at my suggestion and have uttered the dreaded S word 1 as an expletive. Yet we cannot just sit back and let the current situation continue. If we do not devise a solution, someone or something will devise one for us. One need only look to our brethren in the medical profession to see that change is c