President’s Message: November 15, 2021

Today’s Gratitude Challenge is to write about a memory I cherish. One of the best byproducts of this action item from the 30-Day Challenge was that I sat still for about half an hour combing through wonderful memories, trying to pick just one. Maybe it’s because I am teaching this semester at Thomas Jefferson School of Law and I’ve had the joy of being around law students again, or maybe it’s because bar results were released this past weekend, but I settled on the day I received my bar results. I vividly remember sitting in front of my laptop hitting refresh over and over again as the deadline approached. I felt sick with fear. And when, suddenly, my result popped up – “The above-named person appears on the pass list,” (or something to that effect) – my whole body went numb. It was like one of those scenes in a movie where everything goes silent. There’s no breath. There’s no heartbeat. Then slowly, the sound came back, muted at first, then becoming clearer and louder until it was crashing all around me with an almost physical impact. I was going to be a lawyer!

With that memory fresh, I want to share my sincere congratulations to those new lawyers who became our colleagues this weekend. We are so proud to welcome you to the profession. ¡Felicidades!

I also want to take a minute to share love and commiseration with those who didn’t pass. This is not the end. I have many dear friends, successful lawyers, who took the bar multiple times before passing. It is challenging. And you are up for that challenge. Keep going.

Whether your bar results experience was recent or long past, whether you received your results by mail or by the internet, and whether it was the first or the fifth time you took the bar, we all worked incredibly hard to earn the ability and honor, as lawyers, to help others navigate the legal system.

What we may not have understood when we first entered the profession is that the work does not stop. We continue that work as we educate ourselves on disparities in the criminal justice system and what we can do to foster and effectuate change. I hope you’ll join us this week for our final 2021 Dialogue on Diversity: The Intersectionality Between Race, Poverty and the Criminal Justice System, featuring panelists Hon. Roderick Shelton, Michael Garcia, and Roxana Sandoval, and moderated by Past SDCBA President Jerrilyn Malana.

The SDCBA also celebrates the announcement of our Section and New Lawyer Division election results, including NLD Chair Jake Zindulka who will serve a one-year term on the Board of Directors. You can find the 2022 leadership here. Thank you for your willingness to serve as volunteer leaders.

Additionally, five lawyers were elected to your 2022 SDCBA Board of Directors. Running for the Board is not easy, and I want to thank everyone who put time and effort into standing up and stepping up to undertake the work. We are pleased and proud to welcome:

At-Large Directors:

  • Rebecca Kanter, US Attorney’s Office
  • Tatiana Kline, San Diego County Public Defender
  • Spencer Scott, Office of the Public Defender
  • Fanny Yu, San Diego District Attorney’s Office

South Bay Representative:

  • Leslie Lohelani Abrigo, Leslie L. Abrigo, APC

Finally, I’d like to formally introduce you to your 2022 Executive Committee:

  • David Majchrzak, 2022 President
  • Melissa Johnson, 2022 President-Elect
  • Roxy Carter, 2022 Secretary
  • Michelle Gastil, 2022 Treasurer
  • Renée NG Stackhouse, 2022 Past President

Make sure to register for Stepping Up to the Bar to celebrate the service of our 2021 Board of Directors and to swear in the 2022 Board on December 10, 2021, at the US Grant Hotel.   

Yours,

Renée N.G. Stackhouse
2021 SDCBA President


Reading now: Empath by Judy Dyer
Listening to: Locked out of Heaven by Bruno Mars
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