Wednesday, August 7, 2013

President's Article for the Winter issue of the IACP's “Declarations”


To all of our ADTA Friends and Family – Below is the piece I wrote for the Winter issue of “Declarations,” the semi-annual magazine of the International Association of Claims Professionals. The Presidents of the ADTA, IADC, FDCC and DRI are invited to write a piece for each issue. It is one of the ways that we make our association visible to members of the insurance industry that many ADTA members and law firms serve.

I hope all of you and yours are well as summer proceeds.  Pretty soon, many of us will be seeing cooler temperatures and different colored leaves on the trees. 

Best,
~David

___________________________

As I waited in the third floor lobby of the John Joseph Moakley United States Courthouse in Boston recently for a Mediation to begin, I wondered what must be going through the minds of the lawyers representing James "Whitey" Bulger in a nearby courtroom.  In that case, as many of you may know, federal prosecutors allege that Bulger murdered 19 people as the leader of a protection racket that targeted drug kingpins and the heads of illegal gambling operations.  By the time you are reading this, perhaps you will have read about a verdict.  If convicted, Bulger could face the death penalty. For Bulger, it is a very risky situation indeed.

As I thought about the issues, legal arguments and strategies in my case - in which money damages are at stake - I could not help but wonder how the lawyers who represent Bulger and other criminal defendants must feel, knowing that their clients' money and personal liberty are at risk. 
 
"Risk."  It is at the heart of what every IACP member professional deals with every day.  And, ultimately, "risk" is what insurance defense trial lawyers deal with every day, as well.  It is never entirely clear what a judge or jury will do, how they will perceive the facts or witnesses' credibility, and ultimately what value they might (or might not) place upon a particular outcome. 

And so, insurance professionals and defense lawyers seek the same goal:  To minimize risks by understanding the underlying facts and the law that applies to them in a myriad of different situations with a seemingly infinite number of variables.  IACP professionals and insurance defense lawyers share the need for good information and timely, competent advice. 

Where does that come from? 

We can benefit from the "book knowledge" gained by attending school, and by studying at the "College of Hard Knocks" - the experience of handling our work on a day-to-day basis.  But the question remains:  What else can we do to prepare ourselves to make good decisions on the risks our insureds and clients face every day? 

I would submit that groups like the International Association of Claims Professionals, as well as the group I currently lead - the Association of Defense Trial Attorneys (ADTA) - are critical components in the ongoing process of education and experience for insurance claims professionals and the attorneys who represent them and their insureds.  The superb quality of educational programming that IACP provides its members is evident - we at the ADTA have a similar focus on high quality "continuing legal education" at our annual meetings.  At the Greenbrier this past April 2013, for example, ADTA's "CLE" programming focused on law firm management, on how lawyers can better manage and utilize human and technology resources to provide quality legal services efficiently at a reasonable cost.  It was a terrific program and was very well received by our members.

But the IACP and ADTA are more than educational programming.  Much more. 

When I became ADTA president at our Greenbrier meeting, I spoke about three things that ADTA has offered since its inception 72 years ago that I believe reflect the core values of our organization: (1) A warm welcome; (2) a promise of fellowship; and (3) a tradition of excellence.  What those things add up to is a unique opportunity to gain education and experience by building strong, personal relationships with other similarly situated professionals in jurisdictions throughout the United States, Puerto Rico, Canada and the United Kingdom.

ADTA is delighted to participate in IACP's Annual Meetings.  My wife Karen and  I greatly enjoyed our experience last year at the Walt Disney World Resort in Orlando, and we look forward to being with you again at future meetings.  It was evident last year in Orlando that IACP's members share the same passion for "getting it right" that ADTA members strive for in the work our member defense trial attorneys do every day, in and out of the courtroom. 

What was also evident is that the IACP is much more than educational programming.  IACP's members share the ADTA's core values of fellowship and excellence through strong personal relationships developed over the years with other members.  And those relationships reinforce our education and experience, and make us better at what we do every day.  And that helps us to make better decisions about how to manage the "risks" that we all face every day.
 
ADTA thanks the IACP for the opportunity to be involved!  We hope to foster a strong relationship between our organizations in the future. 

If you have any questions about how ADTA member attorneys can assist you or your firm on a wide variety of insurance issues, I would love to hear from you.  Or visit www.adtalaw.com. 

The Tradition of Excellence Continues!

Sunday, May 12, 2013

HAPPY MOTHERS DAY, ADTA NATION!


If evolution really works, how come mothers only have two hands? 
-Milton Berle

HAPPY MOTHERS DAY!


 

Sunday, May 5, 2013

One Million is an impressive number.


On March 2, 1966, the Ford Motor Company produced its one millionth Mustang. It was a white convertible. Here’s a story about it; and here’s a picture:

ONE MILLIONTH FORD MUSTANG
MARH 2, 1966

1966 was an important year for Ford.

1966 was an important year for our “One in a Million” Association, as well.  Back in those days – as you know from reading The History of the ADTA (1941-2008), we were known as the Association of Insurance Attorneys (AIA). 1966 marked the Association's 25th Birthday, which members, spouses and guests celebrated at the AIA Annual Meeting in Chicago, Illinois.  The following year's Annual Meeting was in my neck of the woods, Boston, Massachusetts.  It took 43 years for us to get back to Boston, which we did - as many of you know by first-hand experience - with great gusto in 2010.

Please do not wait 43 years to attend your next ADTA Annual Meeting!  Mark your calendars now, and plan to attend the Association's 73rd Birthday celebration at the 2014 ADTA Annual Meeting in Vancouver, British Columbia.  The dates are Tuesday, April 22 to Saturday, April 26, 2014.  The location is the spectacular Fairmont Pan Pacific Hotel.  Here’s information about the hotel venue, and here’s a picture of the hotel:

FAIRMONT PAN PACIFIC HOTEL
VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA

The ADTA 2014 Annual Meeting in Vancouver will start on Tuesday instead of Wednesday, with a final night Gala on Friday not Saturday, to allow for more flexibility in your travel plans (and so you might consider extending your stay to include a "post-trip" that is being planned to nearby, beautiful Victoria Island).  Meeting Hosts Leon Beukman and Anita Parke have a party for the ages in store for you!  You won't want to miss it!  And Mike and Debbie Aylward are hard at work planning the post-trip to Victoria Island.
For those of you who have attended an ADTA Annual Meeting (or two, or three, or ??), I am preaching to the choir.  For those of you who have not, I cannot overemphasize that annual meetings offer ADTA members, spouses, friends and families the most valuable benefit of ADTA membership - opportunities to develop close collegial relationships with colleagues from the United States, Canada, Puerto Rico, and the United Kingdom. 
A warm welcome and the promise of fellowship await you! 
Have a great week, my friends.
David W. Zizik
May 5, 2013

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

A Reflection on ADTA Greenbrier 2013

Didn’t you just love it when ADTA’s esteemed Secretary, Tom “Hurndog” Hurney, referred to us as “ADTA Nation” in his Greenbrier blog?  It reminded me of 2004 and 2007, when “Red Sox Nation” captured two World Series titles to break the decades-old Curse of the Bambino.  As Hurndog would say, for more on that, click here.

And so, greetings and salutations to ADTA Nation!  I am writing from the slowly-but-surely thawing tundra of New England, more precisely from 94 Meeting Street on College Hill in Providence, Rhode Island.

Last Sunday morning Karen and I reluctantly departed from the Greenbrier and headed for Charleston, WV’s convenient Yeager Airport (why can’t all airports be like Yeager?), about a 2 hour drive through the Allegheny Mountains and some of the most beautiful country I’ve ever laid eyes on.  Made me wonder why we don’t have a meeting sometime in tents at a camp ground up in the mountains.  But then I remembered that I don’t do tents.  Indeed, my idea of “camping out” is a great hiking trail at the end of which is a 4-star hotel with a concierge floor and a spa...that’s my idea of the great outdoors! 

But I digress…at Yeager Airport we said our third, fourth and fifth good byes to Kevin and Alice Amatuzio (Denver bound), New Member Elizabeth Reid Dotson and husband Ken (Kansas City), Bill and Maureen Staples (San Francisco), Brad Narhstadt (Chicago) and Ray Lyons (ditto).  We reckoned the better plan would have been to hire a small motorized hospitality suite to transport us there, but hindsight is always 20/20. I wonder if anybody would be interested in a Magical Mystery Tour-style bus next year that might start in, say, Providence, and pick up citizens of ADTA Nation on the way to Vancouver?  ADTA Nation in motion!  Might be a lot of fun, come to I think of it.
 
So, back to the trek home from the Greenbrier...the flight from Charleston to Dulles was fine except that it felt more like a roller coaster than an airplane. Besides tents, I don’t do roller coasters.

The real fun began at Dulles, where shortly after our arrival we learned that our 5 PM flight to Providence was “cancelled.”  Lord knows why - United never told us.  A phone call to United resulted in a rebook to Boston via Reagan National – yup, no flights from Dulles to Providence…until Tuesday.  They were joking, right?  Afraid not.  And nope, United couldn’t give us back our luggage at Dulles to take with us to Reagan National – apparently it is not possible for an airline to identify bags from a cancelled flight and make them immediately available to the cancellees.  No sir, they would continue on...there were no seats on the 9:30 PM home for Karen and me, but by George there was enough room for our 4 bags, which for a moment made me wish my name was American Tourister.

So, having become bag-less, we taxied from Dulles to Reagan National.  Acquired boarding passes. Got through security – twice in one day, what a joy!   Had a quick airport supper.  Boarded the flight to Boston Logan Airport.  Arrived at Logan about two hours later than we had been scheduled to arrive at Green Airport in Providence.  (Not bad!)  Spent another half hour at Logan arranging for our bags to be sent home.  Then we took a taxi from Logan to Green Airport in Providence (about 50 minutes).  Picked up our car which we’d parked there last Sunday.  Drove home … sweet … home (15 minutes).  All told, it could have been a lot worse. The lingering afterglow of ADTA Nation and the Greenbrier made it tolerable.  
 
And what a terrific meeting the Greenbrier was! 
 
Inspired by Steve and Melinda Crislip, and artfully planned and executed by Tom and Julia Hurney and our superb Executive Director Peggy Schultz, and a host of others, including a terrific spouse program led by Melissa Bailey, and of course Project Orange, led by Tom and Julia, Leon Beukman and Anita Parke. (I saw you David Schultz helping to do the final clean-up on Sunday morning with Peggy and Hurndog at Project Orange…thank you!!) Skeet shooting, a Bunker Tour, excellent CLE, Mike Roberto and Stephen Coonts. And so many First Time Attendees and New Members whose enthusiasm is infectious. Not to mention the Greenbrier itself: A sublime place that kind of grows on you and whispers "you'll be back!"
 
Yes, indeed, ADTA Greenbrier 2013 will be long remembered.
 
For me the days immediately following an ADTA annual meeting are always bittersweet.  On the one hand, I relish getting back to the office, catching up, and then at the end of a day’s work, going home. Getting comfortable in front of the family room TV.  Taking in a little Duck Dynasty.  Or, maybe Pawn Stars.  A Red Sox game!  Along with other similarly highbrow programs.  Home … sweet … home.  And yet, I can’t help but think about the painfully short but oh-so-sweet time at the Greenbrier with our ADTA friends, almost all of whom we see but once a year…never long enough.  Thankful for the time together, but never long enough.
 
This year, leaving the Greenbrier was bittersweet for another reason:  It was exciting to assume the presidency and the challenges that accompany the office.  But the meeting marked the conclusion of Steve Heine's presidency; and I shall miss working with him.  Karen and I got to know Steve and his lovely and talented wife Karen Kendall (an ADTA member in her own right) pretty well during our travels "on the circuit" over the past year - a blessing that we thoroughly enjoyed.  Steve is a tireless worker.  He is a great trial lawyer who fights hard for his clients.  Steve is in many respects the quintessential ADTA "defense trial attorney."  And on top of everything he had to do over the past year in his busy trial practice (no, VERY busy trial practice!), he worked very hard to keep the ADTA ship of state steady and on course.  Steve was an excellent president - I am proud of him and all of the citizens of ADTA Nation should be, as well.  Karen was a gracious, wonderful ambassador as ADTA First Lady.  Karen and I wish Steve and Karen all the best.  They deserve it!  We look forward to spending time with them at many more ADTA hospitality suites in the years to come!

And so ADTA Nation marches on, in the spirit of the Greenbrier!  That spirit will take us north and west into Canada next April for ADTA Vancouver 2014.  Between now and then your Executive Council and Officers have work to do.  Please help us to make ADTA the best it can be: Look at the website (www.adtalaw.com) and let me, President-elect Dan Balmert, VP Matt Bailey, or any of the other council members (we are all listed on the website) know what you are interested in helping with.  Let us know your ideas, comments, criticisms, concerns...whatever is on your mind. It is your ADTA and we need everyone's help to keep ADTA Nation strong!
 
I’ll be back with you soon. Be well, ADTA Nation!