The Michigan Supreme Court and State Bar of Michigan recently announced the creation of the Task Force on Well-Being in the Law. The new Task Force responds to studies indicating that lawyers, judges and law students suffer from higher-than-average rates of problem drinking and substance use, anxiety, depression, and stress. Members (see list below) include representation from the judiciary, law schools, regulatory agencies, bar associations, law firms, and allies in the field of mental health.
The Task Force will work to identify stakeholders and the role they can play in reducing the stresses to mental health in the legal profession; eliminating the stigma associated with help-seeking behaviors; educating judges, lawyers, and law students on well-being issues; and taking incremental steps to instill greater well-being in the profession.
Visit the Institute for Well-Being in Law website at https://lawyerwellbeing.net.
Help is also available through the State Bar of Michigan Lawyers and Judges Assistance Program (LJAP), which offers virtual support groups, clinical assessments, training on practicing wellness, and referrals to mental health providers.
For information on LJAP, call 800-996-5522, e-mail contactLJAP@michbar.org, or visit michbar.org/generalinfo/ljap.
Michigan Task Force on Lawyer Well-Being (organized by stakeholder category):
• Michigan Supreme Court and the State Bar of Michigan
Justice Megan K. Cavanagh, Michigan Supreme Court
Dana Warnez, president, State Bar of Michigan
Peter Cunningham, executive director, State Bar of Michigan
Andrea Crumback, deputy legal counsel, Michigan Supreme Court
Molly Ranns, director, Lawyers and Judges Assistance Program, State Bar of Michigan
• Judiciary
Judge Donald Allen, 55th District Court, Mason
Chief Judge Carol Kuhnke, Washtenaw County Trial Court
Judge Curtis Bell, Kalamazoo County Probate Court
Chief Judge Mabel Mayfield, Berrien County Trial Court
• Law Schools
Abijah Taylor, assistant dean for Student and Academic Affairs, Michigan State University College of Law
Margaret Hannon, clinical professor of law, University of Michigan Law School
Amy Timmer, associate dean of Academic & Student Affairs, Western Michigan University Cooley Law School
Ieisha Humphrey, director of Student and Faculty Services, University of Detroit Mercy School of Law
Rebecca Robichaud, director of Clinical Education, Wayne State University Law School
• Law Students
Adriana Lopez-Torres, incoming co-president of the Latinx Law Student Association, University of Michigan Law School
• Mental Health
Kelly Arenz, DO, program director, Family Medicine Residency, St. Joseph Mercy Livingston
Laurie Orlando, attorney; licensed professional counselor, Orlando Counseling Services PLLC
• Law Firms
Sean Siebigteroth, The Williams Firm; chair, Lawyers and Judges Assistance Committee, and Member, Representative Assembly, State Bar of Michigan
Katherine M. Stanley, fair housing education manager, Legal Services of Eastern Michigan; advisory board member, Crim Fitness Foundation Mindfulness Initiative
Jennifer Colagiovanni, Wachler & Associations PC; founder, Michigan Chapter of the Mindfulness in Law Society
Richard E. Hillary II, Miller Johnson
• Young Lawyers
Kristina Bilowus, assistant director for Career Services, MSU College of Law; chair, Young Lawyers Section, State Bar of Michigan
• Regulation
Wendy Neeley, deputy director, Michigan Attorney Discipline Board
Kimberly Uhuru, deputy administrator, Michigan Attorney Grievance Commission
Judge Pablo Cortes, 62A District Court, Wyoming; Member, Judicial Tenure Commission
• Tribal Courts
Judge Matthew Fletcher, chief justice of the Pokagon Band of Potawatomi Indians, appellate justice for the Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians, Match-E-Be-Nash-She-Wish Band of Pottawatomi Indians, and Nottawaseppi Huron Band of the Potawatomi
• Supreme Court
Administrative Office (SCAO)
Monique Smith, Human Resources Director
Staff from Field Services and Councils/Commissions