Out-of-state lawyer proposal not likely to fly


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  • | 12:00 p.m. September 21, 2015
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A proposal that would let out-of-state lawyers get licensed in Florida without taking the state’s Bar exam is likely dead, but that didn’t stop opponents from piling on during a Florida Bar meeting Friday.

Reaction to the “admission by motion” proposal at Friday’s forum echoed the overwhelmingly negative response to the recommendation since it was first floated by the Bar’s Multi-jurisdictional Practice-State Focus Committee earlier this summer.

Also known as “reciprocity,” the proposal has spawned fear among lawyers in small or individual practices and divided the legal community. Not a single legal association in the state has supported it.

The plan is “ill-conceived and little more than an attempt to allow large firms to flood wherever they wish with lawyers,” said Charles Morehead, a Fort Lauderdale lawyer and president-elect of the Broward County Bar Association.

Several lawyers also complained about the $96,000 the Bar paid a public relations firm this summer, accusing the Bar of spending lawyers’ dues to push an agenda many don’t agree with.

Jay Cohen, a member of the Florida Bar’s Board of Governors who also opposes admission by motion, sat alone on a dais Friday afternoon as the Bar’s designee for the forum. More than two dozen lawyers, nearly all of them opposed, railed against the plan.

About a dozen Bar governors sat in the audience, but missing from Friday’s afternoon session was Florida Bar President Ray Abadin. Abadin has remained publicly neutral on the plan.

About 40 other states allow some sort of entrance for lawyers without taking the exam, and to Abadin, reciprocity could be a way to modernize the legal profession in an increasingly mobile age.

Palm Beach Gardens lawyer Lloyd Schwed launched the campaign against the proposal and sent dozens of emails to thousands of lawyers urging them to speak out against it.

Under the criteria suggested by the Bar committee, out-of-state lawyers who have been practicing for at least five of the past seven years before they apply would be eligible. Also, admission by motion would only be available to lawyers who are from states that allow Florida Bar members to practice without a written or oral exam.

In addition, admission by motion would only be available to lawyers who haven’t failed the Florida Bar exam within five years of applying. Applicants would have to have a law degree from law schools approved by the American Bar Association at the time they graduated.

The proposal created such an uproar that the Bar set up a special email account to take input on the issue, and Abadin last month issued a public statement trying to quell fears that the matter had already been decided.

About 500 lawyers showed up at a Hillsborough County Bar Association meeting this week to hear from Abadin on the issue.

Cohen predicted that the Board of Governors would vote next month to reject moving forward on the proposal.

Charles Tiffany, a Kissimmee lawyer, made the sole pitch in favor of the plan on Friday.

 

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