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Lawyers dwindle in senate.


THE NUMBER OF LAWYERS IN the 35-member Arkansas Senate The Arkansas State Senate is the upper branch of the Arkansas General Assembly. The Senate consists of 35 members, each representing a district with about 76,000 people. Service in the state legislature is part-time, and most state senators have full-time jobs during the rest of  has decreased from 13 (37 percent of the total) to two (5.7 percent) over the past decade.

But the number of lawyers in the 100-member state House of Representatives has increased from 11 to 15 during that time.

It's it's  

1. Contraction of it is.

2. Contraction of it has. See Usage Note at its.


it's it is or it has
it's be ~have
 not necessarily that fewer lawyers are being elected to the Senate, said Charles Charles, archduke of Austria
Charles, 1771–1847, archduke of Austria; brother of Holy Roman Emperor Francis II. Despite his epilepsy, he was the ablest Austrian commander in the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic wars; however, he was handicapped by
 Schlumberger, chair of the Legislation Committee for the Arkansas Arkansas, river, United States
Arkansas (ärkăn`zəs, är`kənsô'), river, c.1,450 mi (2,330 km) long, rising in the Rocky Mts., central Colo.
 Bar Association. He believes fewer lawyers are running for the Legislature in general.

"These days, more and more, it seems being a legislator LEGISLATOR. One who makes laws.
     2. In order to make good laws, it is necessary to understand those which are in force; the legislator ought therefore, to be thoroughly imbued with a knowledge of the laws of his country, their advantages and defects; to
 is becoming almost a full-time job," Schlumberger said. "It is extremely hard to run a successful law practice and devote as much time as the legislators are having to devote."

"I think it had a lot to do with term limits," said state Sen. Dave Bisbee, R-Rogers, who is a building contractor building contractor ncontratista m/f de obras

building contractor nentrepreneur m (en bâtiment)

building contractor 
. "Attorneys seemed to stay longer than other legislators."

Because of term limits, almost 40 percent of the Arkansas General Assembly--36 representatives and 16 senators--were freshmen last year. Term limits became law in 1992, restricting state senators Noun 1. state senator - a member of a state senate
senator - a member of a senate
 to two four-year terms and representatives to three two-year terms. Because of some constitutional glitches, term limits didn't affect all senators in the Legislature until 2003.

Bisbee said people generally believe the majority of senators were lawyers in years past, but that's apparently a misconception mis·con·cep·tion  
n.
A mistaken thought, idea, or notion; a misunderstanding: had many misconceptions about the new tax program.
. In 1965, there were 11 lawyers in the state Senate. In 1973, there were only seven. Those are years selected at random for review. Only people who listed "lawyer" or "attorney" as their profession were counted.

In any event, it seems that some politicians prefer to run as non-lawyers.

"I think the first time I campaigned, I campaigned on the grounds that I am not a lawyer," Bisbee said of 1993, when he was first elected as a state representative. "It seemed to work."

Is the Legislature better now that term limits have thrown some career politicians out of office?

"It's a mixed bag," Bisbee said. "You threw out some dead wood. You threw out some corruption. But you also threw out some experienced and tremendously talented, good people."

In 2002, David Matthews David Matthews has been the name of several notable people: In media:
  • David Matthews (1967- ), controversial Afro-British writer/journalist
In music:
, a Rogers lawyer and former state representative, wrote in the Arkansas Lawyer that "good lawyers" are particularly suited for the Legislature because they are the "most well educated citizens in the state in the area of critical thinking skills."

"I don't think lawyers have a monopoly on good sense," Bisbee said. "I think the voters want people in the Legislature who have good sense. But I can tell you, we're hurtin' for some good lawyers ... I worked on an impact-fee bill last session, and frankly I was in over my head."

"I think the public is happier to have some people with some good old common sense for a change," said Sen. Sue Madison, D-Fayetteville. "We have staff attorneys."

"Do you want the staff running the state?" Bisbee asked, saying lawyers are a necessity in the Legislature. "But no profession needs a monopoly in the Legislature."
Legislative Lawyers

Year    Senate    House

2003       2        15
1993      13        11
1979       7        14
1965      11        19

Source. Arkansas Legislative Directories
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Title Annotation:Law Firms
Author:Bowden, Bill
Publication:Arkansas Business
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1U7AR
Date:Jun 7, 2004
Words:527
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