The Oklahoma Bar Journal January 2025

THE OKLAHOMA BAR JOURNAL 4 | JANUARY 2025 This client-driven expectation presents multiple problems for law firms but is a real-world example of the necessity of adaptation. As both Past Presidents Brian Hermanson and Miles Pringle stated in their opening messages to the association, we are going through a time of tremendous change and at a seemingly accelerating pace. I am now serving in my 48th year as an Oklahoma-licensed attorney. Now more than ever, I am worried about the undue influence of politics on the structure of our independent judiciary. I am concerned about the lack of public understanding of the role of the courts in our system of government. I also do not recall a time when access to justice has been more out of the reach of individuals and small businesses than now. I do not recall a time when our rural counties had greater challenges in attracting and retaining new lawyers than now. As a result, my hope and plan for this bar year is for us to have a conversation about these challenges. I am aware of at least one state where their supreme court conducts remote hearings in different regions of the state for the express purpose of engaging the local populations, students and businesses. They do this to tear away the veil of isolation from the perspective of the general population under which appellate courts operate. Please share with me your thoughts and suggestions regarding how Oklahoma can protect its independent judiciary. Both the OBA and the Oklahoma Bar Foundation are aware of the “legal des- erts” that exist throughout the state. Past President Pringle wrote about legal deserts in his March 2024 message to our association. “ADAPT OR PERISH, NOW AS EVER, IS nature’s inexorable imperative,” is a quote attributed to H.G. Wells, author of classic science fiction novels. The quotation comes from Mr. Wells’ last book, Mind at the End of Its Tether, an incredibly pessimistic read so unlike some of his other classic science fiction that I enjoyed in my youth, such as The First Men in the Moon, The Time Machine and The Food of the Gods and How It Came to Earth, to name a few. I recall but cannot locate the science fiction novel (loosely based upon Great Britain’s historical forced immigration of convicts to Australia, among other places) in which I first saw an iteration of the quote, i.e., “Adapt or die,” which was a warning given to involuntary immigrants. Both quotations are harsh but instructive. I was reminded of those quotes while listening to a keynote speaker at the 2014 OBA Annual Meeting. Richard Susskind, an author and futurist, spoke about his 2015 book, Tomorrow’s Lawyers: An Introduction to Your Future. Mr. Susskind was then much more optimistic about the future of the legal profession and has continued to write about his predictions. One of his more recent books, The End of Lawyers?: Rethinking Legal Services, is a bit bleaker. Mr. Susskind predicts that artificial intelligence and other market alternatives will force traditional law firms to adopt such practices or become obsolete. He also views the “more for less” challenge to be a specific threat to the traditional law firm business model. “More for less” is the expectation our clients have that our legal services should be increasingly more efficient at a lower cost to them. An aspect of this client-driven expectation is that clients are increasingly refusing to pay for the training of new lawyers. Are You Available for Some Conversation? From The President By D. Kenyon “Ken” Williams Jr. D. Kenyon “Ken” Williams Jr. is a shareholder and director at Hall Estill in Tulsa. 918-594-0519 kwilliams@hallestill.com (continued on page 63)

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