Wednesday, August 31, 2011

A CONVERSATION WITH 
SHANNON RAYE MARTINEZ 
OF SAALFELD GRIGGS PC

Co-sponsored by WUCL Career & Professional Development

Tuesday, September 20, 2011, 12:00 pm to 1:00 pm
Kremer Board Room (Room 102), Ford Hall
Willamette University, Salem

As the first female shareholder of Saalfeld Griggs, Shannon Raye Martinez will discuss her experiences with private practice, the transition from associate to shareholder, and how she successfully maintains a work/life balance. The conversation will be informal and all are welcome.

Admission: Free
Brown bag lunches welcome

RSVP to Maryleonardlawsociety@gmail.com

Monday, August 1, 2011


MARY LEONARD LAW SOCIETY PRESENTS:

A CELEBRATION OF THE FREEDOM RIDERS:
THE 50TH ANNIVERSARY
Ron Silver, US DOJ

Please join us as Ron Silver, Civil Chief for the US Attorney’s office in Portland, presents the historical events of 1961, and recounts his own recent experiences at the 50th anniversary celebration for the Freedom Riders in Mississippi.
                                                                                                                                 


Date: Wednesday, August 3, 2011
Time: 12:00 p.m. to 1:30 p.m.
Location: Ford Hall, Kremer Board Room (Room 102); Willamette University

1.5 hours of Access to Justice CLE credits (credit pending)

Cost:
$20 for non-MLLS members
$15 for MLLS members
$10 for post-graduate law clerks
Free for students and those not seeking CLE credits


RSVP to maryleonardlawsociety@gmail.com.
Please indicate your price level when you RSVP. Walk-ins are welcome!

Monday, May 2, 2011

Mary Leonard's Successful Spring Education Events

By Kate Lozano
 
The Mary Leonard Law Society hosted a successful spring mini-series of continuing legal education seminars focused on diversity issues this year. The first in the series was presented on February 15, by Beth Allen, one of Portland's premiere LGBT family law practitioners, and a founding member of Basic Rights Oregon. Ms. Allen gave a fascinating presentation on current developments in marriage equality law. Ms. Allen discussed the impact of a recent continuum of cases, including Tanner v. Oregon Health and Sciences University, English v. Public Employees Retirement Board, Haldeman v. Department of Revenue, State of Oregon, and similar California cases. 
 
Ms. Allen did an excellent job of breaking down the complexities inherent in living under the variety of laws impacting marriage equality, such as the child custody issues faced by lesbian couples who separate, or in which one of the partners dies, prior to registration as domestic partners or in states where no such registration exists. Ms. Allen explained that these rights, for the non-biological mother, may be be dependent upon whether that mother adopted the children, or upon whether the couple could have been legally married at the time the biological mother became pregnant, in which case the non-biological mother's consent to her spouse's insemination controls her later custody rights. Ms. Allen also provided an overview of the addition of sexual orientation and gender identity to Oregon's Non-Discrimination Act and the act's religious exemption, the non-portability of registration under the Family Affairs Act, and the equal protection arguments currently being mounted against the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) including those related to tax code provisions that adopt DOMA, which deny gay and lesbian spouses and registered domestic partners the same estate death benefits as same-sex married couples.  
 
Finally, Ms. Allen discussed the future direction of LGBT legal issues, noting that Basic Rights Oregon's litigation focus has been shifting to transgender equality issues, while they have been addressing marriage equality in a "hearts and minds" campaign for the past year, with person-to-person outreach, and a planned television campaign to explain why marriage matters.    
 
The second seminar in the series was presented on April 12, 2011, by Assistant Professor of Law Keith Cunningham-Parmeter, of Willamette University College of Law, who was also a Skadden Fellow with the Oregon Law Center Farmworker Program. Professor Cunningham-Parmeter's compelling CLE focused on the disparate treatment of immigrants across the nation, as a patchwork of state immigration laws have developed. 
 
Professor Cunningham-Parmeter entitled his thought-provoking presentation, "State Immigration Experimentation" and he focused on the interesting tensions that have developed between different states, as well as between the states and the federal government, as what are termed either "restrictionist" states or "sanctuary" states, create widely differing legislation impacting immigrants. Prof. Cunningham-Parmeter explained that, on the state level, sanctuary states like Oregon have adopted laws keeping immigration matters largely outside of the state's purview, under the rationale that immigration is a federal matter and that such a position will encourage immigrants to communicate and cooperate with state and local law enforcement. He described sanctuary laws as those like ORS 181.850, which prohibits the use of state monies, equipment, or personnel for detecting or apprehending persons whose only violation of law is an immigration violation. On the other side of the spectrum, Prof. Cunningham-Parmeter discussed restrictionist states like Arizona, which have adopted laws that create "cooperative" immigration enforcement with the federal government, under the rationale that they are compensating for gaps left in federal immigration law and enforcement practices. He pointed to well-known Arizona laws in this vein, like the 2010 law requiring the police to verify the immigration status of persons involved in any lawful stop and requiring police to hold all arrested persons, to verify those persons' immigration status.
 
Prof. Cunningham-Parmeter analyzed some of the state/federal tensions created by these different state statues including which federal immigration laws may expressly or impliedly preempt which state immigration laws and, whether the citizens of restrictionist states actually pay the costs of their own statutes -- e.g., it is theorized that Arizona migrants now simply migrate to other states, and that all U.S. citizens pay increased Homeland Security costs because Arizona's Federal Homeland Security Support Centers have become overburdened with the influx of unauthorized immigrants transferred from state law enforcement.  Last, Prof. Cunningham-Parmeter  drew a parallel between the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986, which provided amnesty, greater border security, and employment verification mechanisms for what was then a population of 2 to 3 million undocumented aliens, and the current situation, where the same issues have returned to the front of the national immigration debate, but in the face of an undocumented population that -- far from being legalized, returned, and excluded by the 1986 legislation, has now increased to 12 to 13 million.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

MLLS Spring CLE: State Immigration Experimentation

The Mary Leonard Law Society proudly presents its Spring CLE:

State Immigration Experimentationwith Professor Keith Cunningham Parmeter, Willamette University College of Law.

In his presentation, Professor Cunningham-Parmeter explores the value of state-based immigration experimentation, noting that, from sanctuary states to restrictionist states, fifty immigration laboratories are now experimenting with different versions of enforcement.

Date:  Tuesday, April 12, 2011
Time:  12:00 to 1:00 p.m.
Location:  Alumni Lounge, third floor, Putnam University Center, Willamette University
Price: $15 for non-MLLS members, $10 for MLLS members, $5 for post-graduate law clerks, and free to students and those not seeking credit.  Please indicate your price-level when you RSVP.
RSVP:  maryleonardlawsociety@gmail.com
1.0 general credit hour

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Third Annual Silent Auction & Soiree Against Hunger - May 19, 2011

5:30 to 8:30 p.m. - Mission Mill Spinning Room


The Willamette Valley American Inn of Court and the Marion County Bar Association (MCBA) are proud to join the Mary Leonard Law Society (MLLS) in its third annual soiree against hunger. For the past two years, MLLS and its co-sponsor MCBA have brought the local legal community together for a soiree and silent auction benefiting the Marion-Polk Food Share. Join us for hors d'oeuvres, wine, and live music, while perusing our fabulous auction items. And, stay tuned for more information on a food collection at the event.  We hope you can join us for an enjoyable evening benefiting a very good cause. More details to be circulated soon!

Friday, February 4, 2011

02/14/11 Erin Greenawald on Strangulation, Misdemeanor vs. Felony Crime

The Women's Law Caucus and PAD proudly present Erin Greenawald on Strangulation, Misdemeanor vs. Felony Crime.
With more than a decade of experience, Erin Greenawald was hired in by Attorney General John Kroger to lead the Department of Justice's efforts to stop domestic violence. Erin Greenawald will be giving a discussion on the reclassification of strangulation from a misdemeanor to a felony crime.
Day:  Monday, February 14, 2011
Time: 11:30AM - 12:30PM
Location: Willamette University College of Law, room 217
Price: Free

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Mentorship and Career Building: A Panel Discussion

The Mary Leonard Law Society proudly presents Mentorship and Career Building: A Panel Discussion.

Panel members include:
The Honorable Darleen Ortega, Oregon Court of Appeals
Shenoa Payne, Haglund Kelley Horngren Jones & Wilder LLP
Kateri Walsh, Oregon State Bar


Date:  January 18, 2011
Time:  noon to 1:00 p.m.
Location:  Willson Room, Goudy Commons, Willamette University

The event will be a FREE brown-bag lunch.  Food is available for purchase from Goudy Commons.

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

New website for pro bono attorneys


The Oregon State Bar and the three Oregon Law Schools proudly announce a new tool to both support lawyers who provide pro bono services to clients and to give law students an additional venue to work with practicing attorneys: 


This website is designed to connect lawyers handling a pro bono matter with law students who can provide pro bono student help. Lawyers from across the state, as well as students from all three law schools—Lewis and Clark, University of Oregon and Willamette—have access to the website.
The site is user-friendly for both lawyers and law students. Lawyers can list the help they need by area of law, then answer a series of questions including the level of law student whose help you’d prefer, special skills needed, and how soon the project needs to be completed. Law students from all three schools can access the site by contacting their career services office for a password.
Attorneys receive capable assistance that allows the attorneys to offer more complex legal services for free. Law students receive an opportunity to gain real-world experience while helping the underprivileged obtain desperately-needed legal services.

Monday, December 6, 2010

12/6/10 - CLE Child Abuse Reporting with Helen M. Hierschbiel, General Counsel to the Oregon State Bar, noon - 1 pm

Location: Ford Hall Board Room, Willamette University
Price: $15 for non-MLLS-members; $10 for MLLS members; $5 for post-graduate law clerks; and free to students and others not-seeking credit.

This year's MLLS holiday charity is Liberty House, Marion County's only child abuse assessment center, the only place providing special medical assessment services for children. Liberty House is a neutral child abuse assessment center. It also provides information and support for non-offending caregivers. An opportunity to donate to this worthy organization will be provided at the end of the CLE.

Biography of Helen M. Hierschbiel

Helen M. Hierschbiel is General Counsel of the Oregon State Bar where, among other things, she gives ethics guidance to lawyers.  She started working at the Oregon State Bar in December 2003 in the Client Assistance Office, screening complaints against lawyers.  While at the bar, she has written numerous articles and given dozens of presentations regarding lawyers' ethical obligations.  Prior to working for the Oregon State Bar, she worked at Dunn Carney Allen Higgins & Tongue in Portland, Oregon and for DNA-Peoples Legal Services on the Navajo and Hopi Reservations in Arizona.  She received her JD from Lewis & Clark, Norwesthern School of Law, in 1991.


CLE Materials

Questions and (Some) Answers About Mandatory Child Abuse Reporting
Child Abuse Reporting Phone Numbers
Child Abuse Reporting Hypotheticals


Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Building Female Citizenship Beyond Suffrage: Early Women Candidates and Office Holding in Oregon..

by Jill Tanner

..was the title of Professor Kimerly Jensen's entertaining and educational presentation at the November 16, 2010, Mary Leonard Law Society monthly meeting. Professor Jensen briefly recapped Oregon’s forty year history culminating in women suffrage in 1912, which was eight years before the federal amendment giving women the right to vote in 1920. She explained that to be an office holder one needed to be a voter and “suffrage was a vital bridge to expand women’s rights.” 

In 1862 the Oregon legislature passed a law allowing women to vote in school elections:  “Women who are widows, and have children and taxable property in the district may vote, by written proxy or in person at such meetings, if they choose.”

In November, 1872, The Daily Oregonian reported “The Votes of the Ladies” were accepted but not counted!

In 1878, women who were 21 years of age, Oregon citizens, widows, had children, and owned property were allowed to vote “at a school meeting” in the district, and most important, those women ran and held elective educational offices, primarily in rural Oregon counties like Curry and Umatilla and coastal counties like Clatsop.  Unfortunately, the law permitting women to hold elective educational offices was declared unconstitutional in 1896 when the Oregon Supreme Court held that the Oregon Constitution, Article 6, section 8 required an elector to be a male citizen.  Even though the law was declared unconstitutional, Emma Warren held the office of Clatsop School Superintendant from 1904 through 1908 in what Professor Jensen characterized as “creative civil disobedience,” relying on the lawful election of a man who resigned and appointed Warren to fill the post.

The list of women candidates who ran for state offices from 1914 through 1920 are found in their filed campaign expenditure reports.  Two women, Manche Langley and Celia Gavin, were lawyers, and Marian Towne, who studied law for a term, served as representative from Jackson County from 1914 - 1916.  Langley won the primary but not the general election in her bid to represent the 15th District, Washington County in 1916.  Gavin studied law with her father in The Dalles and served three terms as City Attorney before running as a candidate for Democrat Presidential Elector in 1920.

The candidacy of Bertha Mason Buland in 1916 was characterized by Professor Jensen as giving a woman “an ability to be her own person.”  Buland was a married woman whose husband worked in Washington state and maintained a second residence in Washington during the work week.  He was a registered Washington voter. Her candidacy was challenged because he owned property and voted in another state.  Even though Buland was not elected, the fact that she was allowed to run for office was a “landmark” event in the fight for women suffrage.

The 1920 primary election to represent the Third District in the U. S Congress presented voters with a rare choice in Oregon history:  two female candidates vying for the same elective office.  Two qualified women, Esther Pohl Lovejoy and Sylvia McGuire Thompson, running against one another for the same office, according to Professor Jensen, was a tangible result of expanded female citizenship and was to be celebrated.  Professor Jensen stated that Esther Lovejoy brought considerable credentials to the campaign: Portland City Health Officer 1907-1909, suffrage activist at the local and national levels, wartime service in France, president of the Medical Women's International Association and acting president of the Medical Women's National Association, and director of the American Women's Hospitals, a transnational medical relief organization.  She was an author and local, national, and international figure.

Sylvia McGuire Thompson served in the 1917 and 1919 Oregon legislative  sessions and in the special 1920 session, where her House Bill #1 became Oregon's ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment for federal woman suffrage. 

Lovejoy's national and international experience, according to Professor Jensen, won out. She garnered 57 percent of the primary vote. Unfortunately, Lovejoy lost the general election to Republican incumbent C.N. McArthur but received a strong 44 percent of the vote.

Everyone was disappointed when it was time for Professor Jensen to conclude her presentation. There is so much history waiting to be shared!  Professor Jensen received her Ph.D. from the University of Iowa in women’s and U.S. history and teaches history and gender studies at Western Oregon University.  She is the author of Mobilizing Minerva: American Women in the First World War  (University of Illinois Press, 2008) and coeditor,with Erika Kuhlman, of Women  and Transnational Activism in Historical Perspective (Dordrecht: Republic of Letters, 2010). Her current research and writing focuses on Esther Clayson Pohl Lovejoy (1869-1967), an Oregon public health and suffrage activist, organizer and first president of the Medical Women’s International Association, pioneer in transnational medical relief, and historian of women in medicine.

To read more about Oregon women suffrage and share Professor Jensen’s on-going research and exciting historical discoveries visit her blog:  kimberlyjensenblog.blogspot.com.  Professor Jensen invites everyone to collaborate to make next year’s suffrage centennial spectacular.

Mary Leonard Law Society sincerely thanks Professor Jensen for taking time out of her busy schedule, especially when the Fall college term was coming to a close, to relive Oregon women’s suffrage history.