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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT Seattle Attorney David J. Burman Receives Washington State Bar Association Award of Merit
Mr. Burman, who was admitted to the Washington State Bar Association in 1980, is a partner in Perkins Coie LLP's Seattle office. He was a co-recipient of the Award of Merit with Nicholas P. Gellert and Kathleen M. O'Sullivan, also of Perkins Coie; and Maureen A. Hart, Senior Assistant Attorney General. The four received the award in recognition of their significant pro bono efforts, under Mr. Burman's leadership, in Brown v. Legal Foundation of Washington. "They contributed over 4,000 hours of free legal services to the Legal Foundation of Washington, they won the case in the United States Supreme Court, and they saved IOLTA not only for Washington but for the entire nation," wrote Jay Carlson of Preston Gates & Ellis. As a result of the team's efforts, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of Washington's IOLTA program, thereby preserving a major funding source for legal representation for low-income people. "Through his extraordinary and tireless representation of the Legal Foundation of Washington in a six-year battle to defend the integrity and constitutionality of Washington State's Interest on Lawyers' Trust Accounts (IOLTA) program," wrote Scott Smith, chair of the Access to Justice Board, "Dave Burman did what many thought impossible . . . persuaded the U.S. Supreme Court that Washington State's IOLTA program was constitutionally sound." "These attorneys worked tirelessly to preserve both the funding for programs providing legal representation for those who cannot afford counsel and the Washington Supreme Court's ability to regulate the practice of law," wrote Attorney General Christine O. Gregoire in her nomination letter. "The result is the preservation of the programs and rules of professional conduct not only in Washington, but throughout the country." About the Washington State Bar Association The governance of the WSBA is vested in its 14-person Board of Governors. There are three governors from the seventh congressional district; one from each of the other eight districts; and three at-large members, one of whom represents the Young Lawyers Division. The 2002-2003 president is J. Richard Manning of Seattle, and 2003-2004 David Savage of Pullman. The board meets every six weeks at various locations around the state, and its meetings are open to the public. Much of the work of the WSBA is carried out through its 23 standing committees, 24 sections, and a Young Lawyers Division. # # # |