CBA/CBF Task Force on the Sustainable Practice of Law & Innovation Releases Final Report and Recommendations

The Chicago Bar Association and Chicago Bar Foundation Task Force on the Sustainable Practice of Law & Innovation officially released its final report and recommendations today after formally submitting them to the Illinois Supreme Court.

The problem the Task Force seeks to address in a nutshell is an untenable failure in the legal market: at the same time we have more lawyers practicing than ever before, more people than ever before are going without legal help. Dozens of lawyers and legal professionals from diverse backgrounds across the legal community in Illinois and beyond have worked diligently over the past year to tackle these issues and develop a comprehensive series of recommendations for regulatory reform.

The report recommends a series of changes to modernize the Rules of Professional Conduct and related Supreme Court Rules, organized by three overarching Task Force goals:

  • Helping lawyers connect to more potential clients and offer more affordable and accessible solutions
  • Helping people to recognize they have a legal problem and where they can turn for affordable and reliable legal help
  • Spurring more innovation in the profession and delivery of services

“Our Task Force has been hard at work examining how to help Illinois lawyers develop more financially viable, sustainable legal practices, particularly for solo and small firm practitioners representing the middle class and small businesses,” said Task Force Co-Chair and CBA First Vice President E. Lynn Grayson, of Nijman Franzetti LLP. “The report we are releasing today expands opportunities to connect lawyers with clients and offers business savvy and technical innovations to improve the delivery of legal services.”

“Disruption and change are happening all around us and we have a choice as to how we can respond.” said Justice Mary Anne Mason (ret.), Task Force Co-Chair and CBF Board Secretary. “We can watch as outside forces shape the future of our profession or, instead, we can take a lead role in shaping that change for the good of our profession and the public we serve. The status quo is unacceptable, and our best course is to take charge of our profession’s future.”

The final report comes after a month-long public comment period in July and August.  

The Task Force received as many positive comments or comments that stated the recommendations did not go far enough as it did critiques of the recommendations for going too far. Where the Task Force received constructive suggestions for changes, those comments were incorporated into the final recommendations unless they already had been considered in the Task Force process.

“The balanced nature of the recommendations is illustrated by the absence of a single alternative proposal from any commentator who urges the Court not to adopt our recommendations,” said Mason. “In the face of a status quo that is universally recognized as unacceptable and inimical to the promise of equal justice, any suggestion that we should refrain from acting without offering a viable alternative course of action must be rejected.”

The CBA and CBF are the first voluntary bar groups in the country to take on this challenge and deliver a report and recommendations to our Supreme Court. “It is imperative that we identify and embrace legal innovations that have the potential to improve how Illinois lawyers practice law and their ability to better serve their clients and the public,” Grayson said. 

The Task Force built off the good work of other task forces in Arizona, California, and Utah, taking a multi-tiered approach to its report and recommendations. “The Task Force’s recommendations are comprehensive,” said Mason. “They run the gamut from high tech – allowing lawyers to harness the power of modern technology to deliver solutions to legal problems more efficiently and less expensively – to low tech  – establishing community-based, in-person sources of reliable information regarding legal problems.”

People can learn more about the report and recommendations on the Task Force page on the CBF website (chicagobarfoundation.org), where they can find a copy of the full report, a list of the Task Force members and other Task Force background, and links to “pocket chats”—brief video segments discussing each of the Task Force recommendations. 


The Chicago Bar Foundation (CBF) brings Chicago’s legal community together to improve access to justice for people in need and make the legal system more fair and efficient for everyone. As the charitable arm of the Chicago Bar Association, the CBF is the largest voluntarily supported bar foundation in the country. The generous contributions of thousands of dedicated individuals, more than 200 law firms and corporations, and many other committed partners make the CBF’s work possible. Thanks to that strong support, the CBF awards more than $2 million in grants each year and plays a lead role in a number of innovative access to justice initiatives. chicagobarfoundation.org


Media Contact: Bob Glaves / 312.554.1205 / bglaves@chicagobarfoundation.org