Albuquerque Journal

Waiting on law commission

New safeguards are expected this summer from national group

- BY DIANE DIMOND ALBUQUERQU­E JOURNAL

The Uniform Law Commission has powerful influence over the laws of the land, yet few people know about it. Establishe­d in 1892, all of its approximat­ely 350 commission­ers are lawyers who come from every state plus the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

Every state and territory is a ULC signatory, but they are not obligated to accept the commission’s “best practices” work product.

ULC commission­ers regularly debate legal issues, formulate new legal language and urge all states to accept the uniform set of laws they devise. There are more than 100 different committees within the commission tackling issues as diverse as real estate law and presidenti­al electors to internet privacy and court-ordered guardiansh­ips.

It usually takes at least two years for a ULC committee to finish its work on an issue and present final language to the full commission for approval. Only then is the language transmitte­d to states for considerat­ion.

The ULC committee on Guardiansh­ip and Protective Proceeding­s has been working on drafting new safeguards since April 2015 and expects final language to be ready for a full commission vote by July. Its proposed bill considers all types of potential guardiansh­ips, including those appointed for children and disabled or elderly people.

New Mexico is a faithful adherent to ULC recommenda­tions, having signed on in 1908, even before statehood.

“New Mexico is one of our topranking states in terms of pure numbers of ULC acts adopted,” said the ULC’s Katie Robinson.

New Mexico’s delegation numbers 12. The New Mexico Legislativ­e Council appoints four legislator­s and four other members of the state bar. The governor has two appointees, and the dean of the University of New Mexico law school has a seat.

There are rules requiring appointmen­ts from both major political parties, and any lawyer who has represente­d the state at the ULC for 20 years or more has a spot.

New Mexico’s commission­ers include Reps. Zachary Cook, R-Ruidoso, and Antonio (Moe) Maestas, D-Albuquerqu­e, and Sens. Cisco McSorley, D-Albuquerqu­e, and William Payne, R-Albuquerqu­e.

Other New Mexico commission­ers include Raul E. Burciaga, John (Jack) Burton, Matthew Chandler, Robert Desiderio, Philip Larragoite, Patrick Rogers, Raymond G. Sanchez and Paula Tackett.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States