The State Bar Association of North Dakota Spring 2014 Gavel Magazine | Page 18

ABA POSITION CHANGE FOR 2014 who have joined the ABA, North Dakota has only two positions in the House of Delegates. In a unique set of circumstances I have come to hold both positions for a brief time this winter. JIM HILL ABA Delegate As we approach summer 2014 and the ABA Annual Meeting this August, there is much change being planned at the leadership level of the ABA. The Governance Commission, as constituted by the President of the ABA, has commenced its work to review the representation of various constituencies within the ABA family. North Dakota is unique to most States. Its size fairly defines the extent of its representation within the ABA House of Delegates (HOD). North Dakota is part of District 10 which also includes the States of Wyoming, Nebraska and South Dakota. One person from those four states serves by election to the ABA Board of Governors for a threeyear term. The position rotates. It literally takes nine years for the position to come back around to North Dakota. I recently completed that term as a member of the North Dakota Delegation. Because of its lawyer population size and the membership of those lawyers 18 THE GAVEL The first position is identified as the North Dakota State Bar Association Delegate (SBAND Delegate). Every organized State Bar Association is allowed by the ABA Constitution and By-Laws to have one slot on the House of Delegates. That position is elected every two years by those lawyers attending the General Assembly at the SBAND Annual Meeting. I have been privileged to hold that position for a number of terms. It has been an honor to have done so and by being in that position for that number of years I was able to run for and was elected the Board of Governors of the ABA. The whole process unfortunately takes years of tenure but the process has been extraordinarily rewarding. My term as SBAND Delegate ends with the completion of the Annual Meeting of the ABA in August which takes place in Boston. I would have to stand for re-election. The other position that is allocated to North Dakota by way of the ABA Constitution and By-Laws is referred to as the State Delegate. It is a position elected by the lawyers in North Dakota who are actually members of the ABA. That position had been held until last August by the Honorable Kermit Edward Bye, who did not seek re-election. When that happened the time came for me to consider moving from the SBAND Delegate spot (which also commits the person to sit with the SBAND Board of Governors) and consider running for the State Delegate slot. I did so and I began my three-year term in that position after the last Annual Meeting in August 2013. The time is now appropriate to step away from the SBAND position while continuing in my role as North Dakota State Delegate. I will not run for another term as the SBAND ABA Delegate. This will allow North Dakota to have its full contingent in the HOD. Chief Justice Gerald VandeWalle sits as well representing the Conferences of Chief Justices but his membership in the HOD is based on his election from the Conference of Chief Justices rather than from a vote in North Dakota. That is the extent of our Delegation given the size of our state our total bar membership. It will in all likelihood remain that size. The ABA By-Laws relating to the size and composition of the House of Delegates, the ABA Board of Governors and the Nominating Committee is now under review. Article 16.1 of theABA Constitution requires a decennial review of the size and composition of these entities to ensure appropriate representation of constituencies. That falls to a s X