Tuesday, February 28, 2012

WVU ADR Society hosting Anita Casey, Executive Director of WV State Bar



The West Virginia University College of Law's ADR Society is honored to be hosting Anita Casey, Executive Director of the West Virginia State Bar, on Monday, March 5 at noon in Room 164. She will be discussing ways to get involved in mediation at the various levels. Thanks to Jennifer Dempsey for providing the short bio below:
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Anita Casey is a native of Charleston, West Virginia. She attended the University of Kentucky where she received undergraduate degrees in english and education and a master’s degree in library science. After working as a librarian early in her career, Mrs. Casey decided to go to law school. She travelled to WVU where she earned her law degree in 1982.

After graduating from the WVU College of Law, Mrs. Casey practiced law for 25 years. As a partner at what became MacCorkle, Lavender & Casey PLLC, Anita focused primarily on civil defense litigation and worked extensively as a mediator. She has conducted hundreds of mediations and arbitrations, both in her private practice and while serving as a panel member for United States Arbitration and Mediation, Resolute Systems Inc., JAMS/Endispute, and Justus/MANA. She was selected as a “Super Lawyer” in the West Virginia Super Lawyers magazine and was recognized four consecutive years (2005-2008) as one of the Best Lawyers in America. In addition to practicing and mediating, Mrs. Casey has spoken numerous times for the National Business Institute, WVU College of Law’s Continuing Legal Education Program, the WV State Bar, WV Trial Lawyers, the Defense Trial Counsel of WV, and Kanawha County Schools, among others.

In 2008, Anita Casey became the first female Executive Director of the West Virginia State Bar and she still holds this position today. Apart from her work in and out of the courtroom, Anita regularly volunteers with her church and her son’s Boy Scout troop. She also served as an officer for various athletic organizations and on the Keep-A-Child in School board of directors. 
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Feel free to email me with any questions. Hope to see you there!


Alicia Lauderman
President, WVU Alternative Dispute Resolution Society
alauderm@mix.wvu.edu

Thursday, February 9, 2012


WEST VIRGINIA STATE BAR SPONSORS MAGISTRATE MEDIATION TRAINING AT WVU COLLEGE OF LAW 


January 28, 2012 – Morgantown, W. V.  – The West Virginia State Bar, in cooperation with the WVU College of Law and the West Virginia University College of Law Alternative Dispute Resolution (“ADR”) Society provided mediation training for more than 65 law students, alumni, and attorneys on January 28th 2012. The training, hosted at the WVU College of Law and coordinated by Professor Tom Patrick, utilized the skills of attorney volunteers Mike McDowell, Dan McDowell, Brian Corcoran, Shannon Smith, Jonathan Board, Earl Maxwell, Burton Hunter, Desiree Lyonette, and Debra Scudiere, Chair of the West Virginia State Bar ADR Committee, as well as Harrison County Magistrate Tammy Marple and Monongalia Magistrate Clerk Caroline Stoker to provide training and coaching for WVU law students and a handful of Wesleyan students at the all-day event. There were also several experienced student mediators on hand to assist with coaching and training: Dee Simmons, John Hickey, Brady Christopher, Jeremy Cooper, Jaime Ritton, Marianne Monkam, Alicia Lauderman, and Richard Karnes.

Once trained, trainees can mediate cases in the Magistrate Courts in Harrison, Marion, Monongalia, Preston, and Upshur counties, as well as other participating counties throughout the state. Mediation is a process where a neutral third party, the mediator, assists the parties to a dispute in negotiating a mutually beneficial agreement. If an agreement is reached, then the case need not be adjudicated. 

“Mediating cases helps lighten the docket in the counties in several ways” said Harrison County Magistrate Tammy Marple. “Clearly if a case settles, then there is one fewer case on the docket, but the mediation process often helps expedite the proceedings for those cases that don’t settle, because the parties have sat down and thought through the issues with a mediator beforehand.” Law students also benefit from mediation. Mediation fosters useful lawyering skills and provides perspective into the point of view of the disputing parties.  

Mediations take place in each of the five participating counties once a month. Students and local attorney volunteers travel to the counties and mediate cases in the late afternoon. Mediation is also a significant part of Circuit Court proceedings. In West Virginia Circuit Courts, mediation is required in most civil matters.

West Virginia State Bar’s ADR Committee focuses on building the base of attorneys in West Virginia who have skills in the area of mediation, arbitration, and negotiation. The mediation training available to law students helps to further the Committee’s goals, while also providing community service and skills training opportunities to the students.

The ADR Society is a student organization dedicated to promoting student interest in ADR at the West Virginia University College of Law. The Society helps students gain an understanding of and promote the use of ADR as an effective alternative to litigation. The Society provides students with the opportunity to hear from prominent ADR experts in the field and to organize and participate in local mediation trainings and competitions. Additionally, the group is instrumental in maintaining the Magistrate Court mediation program in West Virginia by organizing and volunteering for monthly mediation.