The State Bar Association of North Dakota Spring 2015 Gavel Magazine | Page 2

SBAND PRESIDENT another way to serve all of North Dakota. JACK McDONALD SBAND President It’s been a distinct pleasure to serve as president of the State Bar Association of North Dakota this past year and to work for and with so many fine North Dakota lawyers. One of the eye openers for me in this position was the realization of how many lawyers we now have in the state working in nontraditional lawyer jobs; i.e. positions outside of law firms, private practice or government law. I don’t believe there’s ever been a time in North Dakota when we’ve had so many attorneys working in these areas. No matter where you look, you see attorneys working in private businesses, nonprofits, banks, development companies, home construction, hospital management, private foundations, association management and a myriad of other areas. You name an area and you will likely see an attorney involved. Equally impressive is the number of attorneys throughout the state working with non-law related community benefit and volunteer activities. A very real way for the legal profession to give back to the community and the state. We have several attorneys serving in elective office on the state and federal level, and we had a high-water mark of 10 attorneys in the recently adjourned 65th Legislative Assembly. I hope that the number of attorney-legislators continues to grow. An attorney’s training, I believe, makes them uniquely well suited to serve in the legislature and provides yet 2 THE GAVEL And, speaking of the 64th Legislative Assembly – I know you do little else these days – it was a good session for the legal community. North Dakota’s 64th Legislative Assembly convened January 6, 2015, and adjourned April 29, 2015 – the House at 12:47 p.m. and the Senate about an hour later at 1:28 p.m. – on its 78th legislative day. The Constitution limits the Legislature to meeting 80 days every two years, so the 64th Legislative Assembly put two legislative days in the bank that it can use at any time during the interim to call itself back into session. The Governor also has the authority to call the Legislature back into session at any time. It was a long session any way you look at it. It went for 143 days – about 40 percent of a year. For those of you really into statistics – and aren’t we all – there were 939 bills and resolutions introduced this session, as compared to 918 in 2013. About 57 percent of those passed and will become law. The appropriations finally passed by the legislature totals about $14.2 billion in special and general funds. That is a lot of dollars for North Dakota. There were 289 new government jobs funded by this session. The significance of this number for the legal community is that it includes funding for four new judgeships along with four new court reporters for the new judges. The exact location for these new judgeships hasn’t been determined by the Supreme Court as yet, but they are likely to be in the West – the Bismarck, Dickinson and Williston-Watford City areas. The 63rd Legislative Assembly in 2013 added three new judges, so the judiciary has gained seven new seats since 2013. Quite a change in an area that doesn’t usually see much change or turnover. With these new judgeships North Dakota, by the end of this summer, will have 51 district court judges. The remarkable feature of that figure is that of those 51, 22 or 43.1 percent, will have been elected or appointed since 2010. Again, quite a change in just five years. These new judgeships will enable the legal profession to better serve North Dakota’s rapidly expanding legal needs. The rapid commercial and population expansion North Dakota has experienced the last five years has also driven up the need for greater availability of judicial and legal services. Another reason for the need for additional judicial services is the rapidly expanding legal community in North Dakota. We now have 2,820 licensed attorneys in North Dakota, with an additional bump due this fall after the July bar examination. SBAND will likely top the 3,000 figure within a year or two. This is quite a change for an organization that barely had 1,500 licensed attorneys not all that long ago. With these numbers brings new challenges for SBAND to meet the needs of its members in new ways as we enter an everincreasing digital age. This challenge is heightened by the fact that about half of the licensed attorneys reside out-of-state. SBAND is well positioned to meet these new challenges. We have new offices easily accessible to all attorneys in North Bismarck. SBAND’s staff, headed by executive director Tony Weiler, is well prepared and able to make SBAND not only one of the best professional organizations in North Dakota, but in the country. I want to thank not only the SBAND staff, but also the Board of Directors in place during my term as president. It’s gone the extra mile in working to see that SBAND meets the needs of the state’s legal profession. And, finally, I want to thank all of you for giving me the opportunity to serve as SBAND president. It’s been quite a ride! Don’t forget two big dates coming up soon. June 17-19 SBAND will have its 125th Annual Meeting in Bismarck – an event you will not want to miss. The UND School of Law will formally dedicate its new law school addition Homecoming Weekend in Grand Forks, October 16-17.