Bexar County Women's Bar Association.
Name Entries
corporateBody
Bexar County Women's Bar Association.
Name Components
Name :
Bexar County Women's Bar Association.
Genders
Exist Dates
Biographical History
The Bexar County Women's Bar Association began meeting in late 1982 and incorporated in 1988. Its mission is to bring together women attorneys, legal assistants and law students in Bexar County and to provide a local, non-partisan forum for dialogue and the exchange of ideas relevant to women in the legal profession.
The Bexar County Women's Bar Association (BCWBA) was started in late 1982 and incorporated in 1988. The mission of the Association is to bring together women attorneys, legal assistants and law students in Bexar County and to provide a local forum for the exchange of dialogue and ideas relevant to women in the legal profession. The earliest motivations for organization were a desire to see a woman appointed to an open County Court judicial bench in Bexar County and to see more women gain leadership positions in the San Antonio Bar Association. Olga Brown organized the initial social in 1983 to gauge interest in forming an organization. Of the 77 original members of BCWBA, three were men. Membership is open to any women in the Bexar County area legal community, and by 1997 amounted to between 400 and 500 people. BCWBA published its first newsletter in 1984. In 1993, the name of the newsletter changed from Bexar County Women's Bar Association Newsletter to Equal Times ®.
The association is governed by a board of directors comprised of officers elected from the general membership, committee chairs, an association historian and a community liaison. Regular committees of BCWBA include Membership, Newsletter, Newsletter Advertisement, Luncheons, Public Relations, Bench Brunch, Social and Roundtable. Officers and directors assemble monthly for board meetings, while the membership in general meets many times throughout the year for social, educational, and professional programs relating to the roles of women's in the legal profession. The programming includes luncheons, lectures by outside speakers, and retreats. Since its inception, BCWBA has implemented many important projects. In 1984, a BCWBA committee designed a child support formula for Bexar County, which the District Judges accepted. It served as a model for the child support formula eventually set by the Texas Supreme Court. In 1990, BCWBA saw the opening of the Teddy Bear Room in the Bexar County Justice Center, a special waiting room initiated by the association for children (trial witnesses and others) in the District Attorney's Office.
BCWBA also lobbied in 1990 for amendments to the San Antonio Bar Association (SABA) bylaws to allow presidents of all local minority bar associations as non-voting members of the SABA board. At the same time, BCWBA also worked for minority representation on the Texas Young Lawyers Association Board. In 1994, a BCWBA group joined other Texas women bar leaders to form the Texas Women's Bar Association. Also in 1994, for the first time five women were nominated to four director positions in the San Antonio Bar Association, thereby advancing one of the original goals of BCWBA.
The longest running and most successful of the projects undertaken by BCWBA is the Annual Bench Brunch. Starting in 1983 in an effort to keep the Women's Law Center from closing, the first Bench Brunch raised $5,000 and successfully met its goal. The Bench Brunch has two foci: to raise money for various charities and to honor women judges in Texas. The program of Bench Brunches includes the presentation of awards, the introduction of honorees, an auction, a raffle and a guest speaker. Past guest speakers include former Texas Governor Ann Richards, former Texas State Attorney General Dan Morales, and former Dean of the Law School at St. Mary's University Barbara Bader Aldave among others.
The BCWBA attributes it success to remaining non-partisan, while supporting the efforts of all its members to achieve leadership roles. As of 1997, the Bexar County Women's Bar Association continues to be an active and on-going presence in San Antonio.
New accessions will continue to be added to these records.
eng
Latn
External Related CPF
Other Entity IDs (Same As)
Sources
Loading ...
Resource Relations
Loading ...
Internal CPF Relations
Loading ...
Languages Used
Subjects
Bar associations
Bar associations
Bar associations
Bar associations
Clubs and organizations
Lawyers/Judges
Minority lawyers
Older people
Women
Women
Women
Women
Women judges
Women judges
Women lawyers
Women lawyers
Women's Groups
Nationalities
Activities
Occupations
Legal Statuses
Places
San Antonio (Tex.)
AssociatedPlace
Texas--San Antonio
AssociatedPlace
Bexar County (Tex.)
AssociatedPlace
Texas
AssociatedPlace
Texas--Bexar County
AssociatedPlace