Oregon State Bar

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Oregon State Bar
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Logo of the Bar
Agency overview
Formed 1935
Jurisdiction Oregon
Headquarters Tigard, Oregon, USA
Employees 80
Annual budget $8.3 million
Parent agency Oregon Judicial Department
Website www.osbar.org

The Oregon State Bar (OSB) is a government agency in the U.S. state of Oregon. Founded in 1890 as the private Oregon Bar Association, it became a public entity in 1935 that regulates the legal profession. The public corporation is part of the Oregon Judicial Department. Lawyers are required to join the OSB in order to practice law in Oregon.

History

In 1890, lawyers in Oregon established the Oregon State Bar Association.[1] The group began using national standards pertaining to education and entrance examinations for admittance in 1922, and in 1941 began requiring a law degree.[1] In 1935, the Oregon Legislative Assembly created the Oregon State Bar as a public corporation to regulate, license, discipline, and support those practicing law.[2]

In 1972, the organization joined a multi-state examination and started twice-yearly tests for admittance in 1976.[1] Oregon signed agreements with neighboring Idaho and Washington to allow lawyers who passed the bar exam in any of the states to join the bar associations of any of the three states without taking an additional examination.[1]

Details

Oregon has an "integrated bar": all attorneys in Oregon are required to join the Oregon State Bar if they desire to practice law in Oregon.[2] Membership fees and program fees from the 16,000 active members fund the entire $8.3 million budget of the agency.[2] OSB has approximately 80 employees and is overseen by a Board of Governors.[2] This 16 person board group along with the 20-member House of Delegates and the Oregon Supreme Court provide governance for the agency’s activities.[2]

OSB also administers a board on attorney discipline and the Board of Bar Examiners.[2] Additionally, the bar makes recommendations for filing mid-term judicial vacancies in the courts of the Oregon Judicial Department.[3] These recommendations are given to the Governor of Oregon who makes the final appointment decision.[3]

Lawyers in private practice are also required to participate in the Oregon Professional Liability Fund, a self-funded insurance program.[4] As of 2006, the program premium was $3,000 per year for $300,000 in coverage.[4] Oregon was the first state to adopt the mandatory insurance scheme for attorneys.[4]

Disciplinary records

In 1973, the Oregon Legislature passed the Oregon Public Records Law.[5] Oregon Court of Appeals judge Jason Lee filed to run for an open seat on the Oregon Supreme Court in 1975.[6] This led reporter Russell Sadler to request Lee's disciplinary records from the OSB.[6] They refused, even after the Oregon Attorney General ordered the agency to release the files under Oregon's public records disclosure law.[7] Sadler then sued OSB, with a jury finding in the OSB’s favor, but the Oregon Supreme Court overturned the decision and all attorney discipline files became a matter of public record.[7] The state was the first in the nation to provide complete access to all records, including grievances from clients.[8]

Form B resignation

A Form B resignation is the functional equivalent of being disbarred from a Bar association, and means that the submitting member of the bar resigned while facing disciplinary charges from the bar tribunal. Members of the Oregon State bar who enter a Form B Resignation are not eligible to be readmitted to the bar again.[9][10] Form B is available only in Oregon,[11] and it allows resignation from the bar even if there are charges pending.[11]

Oregon is not the only US state where it is possible to resign from a bar even if you have pending charges, although the procedure is different and has different names.[11]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Celebrating 125 Years of Outstanding Legal Education and Bar Leadership. Editor Anne Marie Becka, Willamette University College of Law, 2008. p. 87-88.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 Oregon State Bar General Information. Oregon State Bar. Retrieved on October 5, 2008.
  3. 3.0 3.1 “Here come the judges”, The Oregonian, March 16, 2004, Editorial, p. B8.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Cooper, Alan. “Virginia State Bar's Web site: Mandatory insurance mulled”, Virginia Lawyers Weekly, March 27, 2006.
  5. Thomas, Dick. “Opening the public files”, The Oregonian, February 23, 1992, Forum, p. C7.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Vollmar, Valerie J., Amy Morris Hess, and Robert Whitman. An Introduction to Trusts and Estates. American casebook series. St. Paul, MN: Thomson/West, 2003. p. 201-207.
  7. 7.0 7.1 Sadler v. Oregon State Bar, 275 Or. 279, 550 P.2d 1218 (1976).
  8. Hyman, Mark “Dealing with misbehaving lawyers; In Oregon, grievances are public record; not so in Maryland”, The Baltimore Sun, May 28, 1996, p. 1A.
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External links

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