
California State Bar Adopts New Meeting Rules to Improve Public Access and Accountability
At its meeting in late July, the California State Bar Board of Trustees adopted a streamlined set of parliamentary rules and discussed changes to expand and standardize public comment procedures as ways to improve both public access to meetings and overall accountability.
THE BOARD IS ADOPTING Rosenberg’s Rules of Order to replace Robert’s Rules of Order as its governing parliamentary procedures. Adopting a simpler set of rules that are easy for all policy body members and the public to understand and use will assist in the smooth, effective conduct of Board business. Guidelines for expanding and standardizing opportunities for public comment were discussed and will be voted on at a later meeting.
“These actions are examples of the numerous ways in which this Board and staff leadership are demonstrating a commitment to expanding public involvement in meaningful ways, in alignment with our new five-year strategic plan,” said Board Chair Ruben Duran. “From adopting parliamentary rules that are clear and accessible to all to expanding recruitment for State Bar committees – particularly for public members – to innovating new ways to broaden how we gather written public comment, to thinking carefully about
how we invite and agendize public comment before and during meetings, we
are making proactive changes to elevate the public’s voice in our
work.”
Progress on State Auditor Recommendations
The
Board also heard a progress report from Chief Trial Counsel George
Cardona on the State Bar’s implementation of recommendations from the
State Auditor in their report focusing on the discipline system, issued
in mid-April.
Of the
State Auditor’s 14 recommendations to the State Bar, seven have been
fully implemented, and steps to implement many of the other
recommendations are expected to be completed by the end of July. Steps
taken in response to the State Auditor’s recommendations have included:
• Implementing policies and procedures requiring conflict checks by investigators and attorneys at case assignment and closing
•
Better integrating a conflicts of interest database with the State
Bar’s case management system to improve monitoring of conflicts
•
Revising closing letters for complaints related to client trust
accounts (CTAs) and bank reportable actions (overdrafts) to include
resource information for attorneys
• Updating policy so that
cases resulting from smallamount bank reportable actions are not closed
without investigation if the attorney has a pending or prior (within the
last two years) bank reportable action or client trust account-related
complaint
• Updating
policy related to the current semiannual random audits of closed cases
to ensure the independence and objectivity of the external auditor and
establish formal oversight by the Board to ensure that the external
auditor’s findings are addressed, as recommended by the State Auditor
•
Creating a consumer alert that will notify the public on the State
Bar’s website when other jurisdictions have determined that an attorney
licensed in California presents a substantial threat of harm to the
public
Started on
August 1, 2022, the State Bar launched a pilot program addressing the
State Auditor’s recommendations on investigations of bank reportable
actions and CTA violations, such as requiring staff to obtain bank
statements and the attorney’s reconciliations of the CTA to determine if
relevant transactions are appropriate.
Meanwhile,
steps to fully implement three of the State Auditor’s other
recommendations are expected to be completed between October 2022 and
April 2023.