The Atlanta Lawyer May 2015 | Page 12

From the Bench Asian Pacific Americans in the Georgia Bar By Hon. Alvin T. Wong DeKalb County State Court I was asked to comment on diversity in the legal profession from the Asian Pacific American (APA) perspective in Atlanta and across our state as we celebrate Asian Heritage Month in May. Please understand this is my recollection of events-life in my own rear view mirror. When I was admitted to the Bar in 1976, Ted Chow was only other APA lawyer practicing in Atlanta. Ted was a business and immigration lawyer. He moved to New York shortly after I became a lawyer. For better part of the next 10 years, I do not recall ever seeing another Asian attorney in the various courthouses I frequented. When the Atlanta Bar Association published a minority and women attorneys referral booklet in the late 80s, I complained to Reese Smith, a long time Atlanta Bar board member, that the publication only referred African American and women attorneys. Several weeks later, Reese called to inform me that I was to serve on the State Bar’s Women and Minorities in the Profession Committee. He told me to “put your money where your mouth is.” The committee was newly formed and it was chaired by Judge Alice Bonner. That assignment led to the opportunity for me to practice law at Gambrell & Stolz (now Baker Donelson) where four members of the firm served as State Bar Presidents - David Gambrell, Irwin Stolz, Linda Klein and Bryan Cavan. In those days, the judges were predominately white males. It was not until Governor Zell Miller appointed a number of African Americans to the bench to resolve the federal voting rights litigation filed by Representative Tyrone Brooks was there any significant movement in diversifying the judiciary. In early 1993, upon her return from an ABA meeting, Paula Fredrick who was the deputy general counsel for the State Bar, called to ask if I was interested in forming an Asian bar group. Paula introduced me to Natsu Saito who was an associate at Troutman Sanders in their financial practice group. She is now a tenured law professor at Georgia State. Over lunch, Natsu and I poured over the State Bar Directory looking for lawyers with Asian sounding names. 12 THE ATLANTA LAWYER May 2015 We cold-called and boldly asked the not so politically correct question whether they were Asians and would they be interested in starting an Asian bar association. From those phone calls, we gathered 13 signatures for a charter to start the Atlanta chapter of the National Asian Pacific American Bar Association (NAPABA). Last year, GAPABA (Georgia Asian Pacific American Bar Association) celebrated its 20th year with its first Gala Dinner at the Trolley Barn. This year’s Gala is scheduled for May 14, 2015, at the Fernbank Museum of Natural History. By all indications, attendance and the support from the legal community will far exceed last year’s. I am proud to report the community of APA lawyers have grown to a point that there are now several Asian bar groups in addition to GAPABA - The Korean American Bar Association (KABA), the South Asian Bar Association (SABA), and the Vietnamese Bar Association (VABA). One of the first projects undertaken by GAPABA was the removal of an English proficiency exam requirement1. Pursuant to the 1992 rules, in order to take the Georgia Bar Exam, the applicant must pass an English proficiency examination if the applicant was a graduate of a foreign college even though the applicant had earned a law degree from a U.S. law school. GAPABA brought this inequity to the attention of the Georgia Supreme Court. On August 18, 1994, Justice Norman Fletcher wrote on behalf of the court to advise that the English proficiency rule had been eliminated. I believe that is still one of most significant accomplishment of the chapter. GAPABA also started a free legal clinic.2 We papered cars in shopping centers on Buford Highway with flyers, rounded up volunteer lawyers and interpreters, secured donated lunch boxes and anxiously waited for the community to show up at our monthly clinic at the City Hall of Chamblee. Because free legal help was unheard of, attendance was spotty at best but our enthusiasm remained high nonetheless. The clinic was the precursor to the People’s Law School developed by Albert Bolet who had just formed the Hispanic Bar Association and GAPABA President Bobby Woo of King & Spalding. The Official News Publication of the Atlanta Bar Association