Edward D. “Ned” Spurgeon, founder and co-director of the Borchard Foundation Center on Law and Aging, is the 2016 recipient of the John H. Pickering Award of Achievement, presented by the Senior Lawyers Division of the American Bar Association.
Spurgeon will be recognized at the Senior Lawyers Division annual Pickering Award dinner on Thursday, Aug. 4 during the ABA Annual Meeting in San Francisco.
As president of the Albert and Elaine Borchard Foundation in Woodland Hills, Calif., Spurgeon founded the center in 1998 in Salt Lake City, Utah. It is the only law-related organization whose central mission is to improve the quality of life for older persons through education, research and service, especially those who are impoverished or otherwise disadvantaged.
Spurgeon, who practiced law for 15 years and holds degrees from Princeton, Stanford and New York University, also is a director and past president of Justice in Aging (formerly the National Senior Citizens Law Center), and was a co-founder of the Utah Legal Services Senior Lawyer Volunteer Project.
Spurgeon, 76, also had a lengthy career as a legal educator and administrator with various appointments at the law schools of the University of Utah, the University of Georgia, New York University and Stanford University. At the Pacific McGeorge School of Law, he held the Gordon D. Schaber Chair in Health Law and Policy.
The Pickering Award is being presented to Spurgeon “in recognition of (his) significant contributions to improving justice for all,” says retired Arizona Judge Louraine C. Arkfeld, chair of the ABA Senior Lawyers Division.
“I cannot think of anyone who better captures the spirit and achievements of John Pickering than does Ned Spurgeon,” wrote University of Missouri law professor David M. English. “Ned…has been a major catalyst for change in the field of elder law, very much in the way that his older colleague, John Pickering, was a major catalyst for change. I cannot think of a more worthy nominee for the Pickering Award.”
The late John H. Pickering, cofounder of the Washington, D.C. law firm then known as Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering (now WilmerHale), was a former District of Columbia Bar president known for his long record of pro bono work in the areas of civil rights, the financing of legal services for the poor, doctor-assisted suicide, and on behalf of the elderly. The award has been given since 2007 in recognition of Pickering’s dedication to the cause of equal justice for all and the highest standards of ethics and professionalism in the law.
- Posted June 08, 2016
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Borchard Foundation president to receive Pickering Award
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