HOW IT ALL BEGAN: CONNECTICUT PRO BONO NETWORK (formerly The Law Works For People)
Attorney Susan W. Wolfson was president of the Connecticut Bar Association (CBA)
in 1991. Under the leadership of the Honorable Frank H. D’Andrea, Jr. and
Attorney Wolfson, The Law Works For People program was developed and
implemented. Today, that program has evolved into the
Connecticut Pro Bono
Network and continues to thrive. Here, Attorney Wolfson looks back on the events
and people that contributed to the formation of the CBA’s pro bono program.
During the late 1980s our nation’s environment was unkind to providers of
legal services to the poor. Pro bono committees of bar associations were
languishing and no one was talking about the importance of pro bono work. The
leaders of the CBA decided to make pro bono work and the delivery of legal
services to the poor a priority. In 1989 we illustrated this by naming the vice
president of the CBA to the chair of the CBA’s Pro Bono Committee, a tradition
which continues today. As a result, the Pro Bono Committee experienced a
rebirth.
We had meetings with the National Conference of Bar Presidents at which we
talked with other bar officers about what we could do to help the pro bono
efforts. We were all interested in planning programs that would encourage the
private bar to commit to pro bono work. But how could we accomplish this? We
invited representatives of other state bar associations to CBA Pro Bono
Committee meetings for exploratory talks. As a result of these talks, we
formulated a program in which lawyers would register to do pro bono work. Among
the many benefits we would create was the offer of educational opportunities and
public recognition. We agreed that we needed a public relations program to
encourage lawyers to sign up but a major obstacle to this was the lack of funds.
The executive directors of all the Connecticut legal services organizations
stepped forward and contributed some of their hard won allocations of funds to
our program. This, of course, made it all possible. In 1990 and early 1991 we
brainstormed at Pro Bono Committee meetings, CBA officers’ meetings, and at
Connecticut Council of Bar Presidents meetings. We formulated a public relations
campaign. Governor Lowell Weicker and Chief Justice Ellen Peters agreed to be
the first co-chairs of our program, and this served as the impetus we needed. We
inaugurated The Law Works For People program at a news conference held at the
Capitol. The Governor and Chief Justice spoke to the media and the public about
the need for our community to provide legal services to the poor.
A letter went out to all members of the bar, signed by the Chief Justice and the
Governor, inviting attorneys to register with The Law Works For People program.
At the same time we began a publicity blitz of press releases, newspaper
articles, radio, and television coverage. The public and all members of the bar
became aware of our program and pro bono work actually became "fashionable." The
community was abuzz with talk of our new program and the legal community
responded enthusiastically.
I am so pleased to have played a role in the formation of this program—a
cooperative effort by the judiciary and the executive branches of the
Connecticut government and the Connecticut Bar Association. Fourteen years later
this collaborative effort continues as the Connecticut Pro Bono Network. The CBA
administers the program, the network agencies screen and refer clients, and the
Judicial Branch continues to explore ways that the court system can encourage
pro bono work among lawyers. As the program moves into its next decade of
service, we hope lawyers will continue to sign up to take pro bono cases through
the Connecticut Pro Bono Network. For more information about the program, call
the CBA at (860)223-4400 or visit www.ctbar.org.
|