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Marlene Garvis took
office on July 1, 2005 as the 87th president of the
Hennepin County Bar Association, leading a professional
organization with a membership of 8,000 lawyers.
The HCBA is Minnesota’s largest local bar association
and also the nation’s ninth largest.
Garvis accepted the gavel from outgoing
President Brent Routman at the HCBA annual meeting.
Garvis is the first nurse-attorney, and the first
graduate of the Hamline School of Law to fill this role.
This also is the first year that the Hennepin County,
Ramsey County and Minnesota State Bar Associations have
women presidents simultaneously.
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Garvis is a partner with the law firm of Jardine Logan &
O’Brien, focusing her practice on representing clients
in litigation-related and administrative proceedings for
employment, professional liability, product liability,
and licensing and disciplinary matters. She spent
fifteen years in a nursing career after completing
undergraduate degrees at the University of Minnesota and
the College of St. Catherine, along with a master’s
degree in nursing from Boston University. She completed
her law degree at the Hamline University School of Law
in 1984.
Garvis
is not new to association work as she takes the helm of
the 8,000-member HCBA —the largest local bar association
in Minnesota and the ninth largest in the nation. She
has invested herself in a variety of organizations and
served on many boards and committees. In addition to
involvement in nursing associations and health-oriented
organizations throughout her career, she has also been
in leadership in serveral law-related groups. She is a
past president of Minnesota Women Lawyers and also a
past president of the Hennepin County Bar Foundation.
In her acceptance speech at the HCBA annual meeting, Garvis
outlined some key issues that face the profession, and
lawyers in Hennepin County in particular. She hopes to
refine association processes and strengthen
partnerships. She sums up her philosophy in one word:
Connectedness.
She believes that much can be accomplished through
collaboration with different groups working together.
Garvis hopes to apply that principle to relationships
within the association and to partnerships with outside
organizations. She plans to build on partnerships
developed in the past year such as the Minnesota Council
of Bar Presidents, where district bar, specialty bar,
and minority bar presidents work together with the state
bar to achieve joint goals. She also looks to enhanced
relationships with the courts in pursuit of the
administration of justice, with Volunteer Lawyers
Network to accomplish more in pro bono service, and in
partnerships with the media and the public in
understanding the essential role of lawyers and the
judiciary—both of which find themselves often under
fire.
Bar relationships have always been important to Garvis, and
she begins her leadership year enthusiastically building
on her experiences. “The HCBA has traditionally been a
pro-active organization, successfully drawing on its
large and diverse membership. There’s always been a
place for me here to find ways to give back to the
community, and that’s all anyone could ask.”
With husband, Arlan, Garvis resides in Minnetonka. They
are proud parents of three adult sons. |