Committees and public policy The City Bar has over 160 committees that focus on legal practice areas and issues. Through reports,
amicus briefs, testimony, statements and letters drafted by committee members, the City Bar comments on public policy and legislation. The City Bar's Policy department acts as a liaison between the committees and the
New York State Legislature and
New York City Council. Examples of committee activity and issue areas include:
Business/corporate • Report: The Enforceability and Effectiveness of Typical Shareholders Agreement Provisions (February 2010) • Statement to the
Obama transition team on financial regulation. (December 2008)
Civil liberties/security • Letter to
U.S. Senators opposing a provision in the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2011 that would require the Inspector General of the
Department of Defense to investigate lawyers representing
Guantanamo detainees in
habeas corpus proceedings or military commissions. (May 2010) • Amicus Brief: Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, before the U.S. Supreme Court (January 2006) • Report: The Indefinite Detention of "Enemy Combatants": Balancing Due Process and National Security in the Context of the
War on Terror (February 2004)
Consumer affairs • Report calling on regulatory offices, the judiciary, the organized bar and the process service industry to work together to reform process service in New York City. (May 2010) • Report in support of the Consumer Credit Fairness Act, which would strengthen consumer protections in consumer debt collection proceedings. (April 2010)
Government reform • 2014 State Legislation Agenda: representing a portion of the dozens of positions generated by City Bar committees over the course of each legislative session. (February 2014) • Report: Reforming New York State's Financial Disclosure Requirements for Attorney-Legislators (February 2010) • Report on Community Benefit Agreements in New York City, urging the City to define a clear policy for considering agreements during the land use approval process for development projects. (March 2010) • Report identifying issues New York City's Charter Revision Commission should address and encouraging the Commission to conduct a deliberate examination of the entire Charter, and the principles underlying it, in detail. (April 2010)
International • Report of the Mission to China of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York (December 2009) • Report on
the Hague Convention on Choice of Court Agreements (September 2006) • Report: The Prevention and Prosecution of Terrorist Acts: A Survey of Multilateral Instruments (June 2006) • Report:
Human Rights Standards Applicable to the United States' Interrogation of Detainees (April 2004)
Notable events The City Bar produces hundreds of events per year, most of them through its committees. These have included: • Supreme Court Justices
Ruth Bader Ginsburg and
Sonia Sotomayor are interviewed by
Charlie Rose in the inaugural event of the Barbara Paul Robinson Series. (October 25, 2016) •
Sally Yates, former U.S. Deputy Attorney General, gave a keynote address at the White Collar Crime Institute. U.S. Attorney for the E.D.N.Y. Robert L. Capers gave the other keynote. (May 10, 2016) • United Nations Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon delivered a speech on the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the role of the United Nations and the legal community in achieving Goal 16 over the next 15 years. (April 2016) • Supreme Court Justice
Elena Kagan delivered the annual Justice
Ruth Bader Ginsburg Distinguished Lecture on Women and the Law, entitled "Justice Ginsburg's Greatest Hits." (February 2014) • A forum was held with the New York City Mayoral Candidates, including future Mayor
Bill de Blasio. (June 2013) •
Chen Guangcheng, Chinese legal activist and Distinguished Visitor at
NYU Law School's U.S.-Asia Law Institute, was presented with City Bar Honorary Membership. (February 2013) •
Harold Hongju Koh, former Legal Adviser to the U.S.
Department of State, spoke on "International Lawyering for the U.S. Government in an Age of Smart Power." (November 2012) • Hon.
Louise Arbour was elected to Honorary Membership "in recognition of her courageous commitment to justice as Chief Prosecutor for the
International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia and for
Rwanda, and for her unwavering leadership as
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights." (May 2012) • The first legal clinic for the reopened
September 11th Victim Compensation Fund was held at the City Bar. (November 2011) • Under-Secretary-General of the
United Nations, and President of
Chile,
Michelle Bachelet reported on the progress of gender equality and empowerment of women. (June 2011) • Leaders of nearly two dozen New York bar associations gathered at the City Bar to urge that legislation be passed to end discrimination against same-sex couples who wish to marry in New York. (May 2011) •
Preet Bharara,
United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, delivered a lecture on the future of white collar criminal enforcement. (October 20, 2010) • Retired U.S. Supreme Court Justice
Sandra Day O'Connor delivered the annual Arps Lecture at the City Bar, speaking on the topics of judicial independence and civic education. (April 5, 2010) •
Robert Khuzami, Director of the Securities and Exchange Commission's Division of Enforcement, gave his first major policy speech at the New York City Bar. (August 5, 2009) •
Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist
Linda Greenhouse delivered the Justice
Ruth Bader Ginsburg Distinguished Lecture on Women and the Law. (November 18, 2008) • Honorary membership was presented to Pakistan's former Chief Justice
Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, who had become a symbol of the movement for judicial and lawyer independence in
Pakistan. (November 17, 2008) •
John Lennon held a press conference in the City Bar's Stimson Room on April Fool's Day to respond to the U.S. government's efforts to deport him as a "strategic countermeasure" to his mounting criticisms of U.S. policy in Southeast Asia. At the press conference, Lennon produces a "birth announcement" for Nutopia, "a new conceptual country with no laws other than the cosmic," where anyone could be a citizen merely by thinking about it. (April 1, 1973) • Dr.
Martin Luther King Jr. gave a speech in the City Bar's Meeting Hall on "The Civil Rights Struggle in the United States Today." (April 21, 1965)
Member services The City Bar's member services include career development workshops; networking events; a Small Law Firm Center; the Lawyer Assistance Program, which provides free counseling for members and their families struggling with substance abuse or mental health issues; a
law library; discounts on
Continuing Legal Education courses; insurance and other benefits; and contact info for the City Bar's 25,000 members.
Continuing legal education The City Bar Center for Continuing Legal Education is an accredited provider in the States of
New York,
New Jersey,
California and
Illinois, offering over 150 live programs a year, as well as audio and video tapes, for members and non-members.
Pro bono and access to justice Through its nonprofit affiliates, the
City Bar Justice Center and the
Cyrus R. Vance Center for International Justice, the City Bar provides
pro bono legal services in New York City and supports the creation and expansion of pro bono and access to justice in other countries.
Legal referral service The New York City Bar Legal Referral Service (LRS) is the oldest lawyer referral service in New York State, and the first one in New York City approved by the
American Bar Association. The LRS is a not-for-profit organization, founded by the New York City Bar Association (est. 1870) and the New York County Lawyers' Association (est. 1908). The LRS is one of the few in the United States to have attorneys answering calls and online requests. The attorney referral counselors help clients determine if they will benefit from working with a lawyer or refer clients to other helpful resources that might be better or more cost-effective. There is no charge to speak with an attorney referral counselor. LRS also serves the public by sponsoring the association's Monday Night Law Program providing free client consultations in various areas of the law, and by sponsoring a Request a Speaker program that can provide an office, community group, school, or organization with an experienced lawyer who will give a free presentation on a legal topic.
Evaluation of judicial candidates The City Bar's Judiciary Committee evaluates candidates for judgeships on New York City's
courts, and announces its finding of either "Approved" or "Not Approved." The City Bar's Executive Committee, working with the Judiciary Committee and the Committee on State Courts of Superior Jurisdiction, evaluates candidates for New York's highest court, the
Court of Appeals, issuing a finding of "Well Qualified, "Not Well Qualified" or "Exceptionally Well Qualified." The Executive Committee, working with the Judiciary Committee, also considers the qualifications of the President's nominees to serve on the
U.S. Supreme Court, issuing a finding of "Qualified," "Unqualified," or "Highly Qualified."
National Moot Court Competition The City Bar has sponsored the
National Moot Court Competition in conjunction with the American College of Trial Lawyers since 1950. Over 150 law schools compete each year in the regional rounds throughout the United States. The winners advance to the final rounds, which are held at the House of the association. == Awards ==