16, 2023 1 p.m.
5 p.m.
Board of Visitors Law Alumni Board Joint Board Retreat June
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Derek Aberle ′96 (JD) Chief Executive of San Diego Prospector Capital, a special purpose acquisition company, will merge with Canadian sensor fusion software outfit LeddarTech, focused on Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) and autonomous driving.
Matt Abbot ’15 (JD) welcomed baby boy Silas Charles Abbot to the family.
Dylan M. Aste ’11 (JD) completed the Rock 'n' Roll with the support of his cousins who pushed him every step of the way.
Thank you Adam Bass ′88 (BA), ′91 (JD), for hosting an alumni Summer Soiree in L.A. at his home on Friday, June 23.
Congratulations Honorable Michael S. Berg ′81 (JD) who will be recognized with USD School of Law’s Distinguished Alumni Award on Thursday, November 16.
Thank you Carolina Bravo-Karimi ’08 (JD) for four years of leadership as President and President-Elect of the Law Alumni Association Board of Directors.
Congratulations Alan Brubaker ‘76 (JD) for being recognized among the 2023 Top 50 San Diego Super Lawyers.
Congratulations David S. Casey, Jr. ’74 (JD) for being recognized among the 2023 Top 10 San Diego Super Lawyers.
Congratulations Steve Cologne ′84 (JD) for his service as Higg Fletcher & Mack LLP’s Managing Partner from 2017 to 2023. He has since returned to his litigation practice and serves as a panel arbitrator.
Congratulations Bibi Fell ’04 (JD) for being recognized among the 2023 Top 25 Women San Diego Super Lawyers.
Congratulations Nick Fox ’11 (JD) on being elected President-Elect of the Law Alumni Association Board of Directors.
Congratulations Erin Lupfer ’17 (JD), a Chambers Attorney with the California Court of Appeal, on being elected to the Law Alumni Association Board of Directors.
Congratulations Noel Meza III ’19 (JD), an attorney with Greene & Roberts LLP, on being elected to the Law Alumni Association Board of Directors.
Congratulations Carola Murguia ’20 (JD), an associate with Fisher Phillips LLP on being elected to the Law Alumni Association Board of Directors. Very special shoutout to alumnus, Tom Mulvaney ‘77 (JD) who will assume the role of Board Chair of University of San Diego’s Board of Trustees effective July 1. Supporting Tom in his new role will be Virginia “Ginny” Nelson ′79 (JD) who will serve as Vice Chair of University of San Diego’s Board of Trustees. As far as we know, this is the first time in USD history that two School of Law alumni are Chair and Vice Chair of the Board of Trustees. It is only the second time in recent memory that an alumnus has led the Board of Trustees.
Congratulations Katie Parker ’02 (JD) on starting her two-year term as President of the Law Alumni Association Board of Directors.
Congratulations Senior Director of Development Debbie Rider ‘84 (JD) on being slated to serve as a new member and the Recording Secretary of Patrons of the Prado.
Congratulations Mike Rider ′83 (JD) on being appointed Global General Counsel and Secretary of ResMed.
Congratulations Frederick Schenk ′78 (JD) on his appointed by Judge Carolyn Kuhl of the Los Angeles Superior Court to serve on the plaintiffs’ steering committee in the social media judicial council coordination proceedings (JCCP) lawsuit against some of the world’s biggest social media companies, including Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, Snapchat, TikTok and others.
Congratulations Jeff Thomas ′82 (JD) who will be recognized with USD School of Law’s Distinguished Alumni Award on Thursday, November 16.
You are here to do great things!
Dean’s Welcome
•
Retreat Priorities & Goals
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Synergy Between Board of Visitors & Law Alumni Board
Robert Schapiro
Dean
C.
Hugh Friedman, Professor of Law
Board of Visitors Welcome
Alan K. Brubaker ‘76 (JD)
Board of Visitors, Board Chair
Law Alumni Board Welcome
Katie Parker ‘02 (JD) President, Law Alumni Board
Robert Schapiro Dean
C. Hugh Friedman Professor of Law
Law School Highlights Student Success
Rankings Update
Diversity, Equity and Inclusion
Extending the Reach of USD School of Law
U.S. News Rankings Timeline 2022-2023
• November 16, 2022
Yale Law School withdraws from U.S. News rankings
Many other law schools also withdraw
• November 17, 2022
U.S. News announces it will continue to rank all law schools
• April 13, 2023
U.S. News releases “embargoed” rankings
Public release scheduled for April 18
Many schools question data
• April 15, 2023
U.S. News delays public release of rankings until April 25
• April 19, 2023
U.S. News delays release of rankings indefinitely
• May 11, 2023
U.S. News releases rankings
U.S. News Rankings Analysis
10-month employment
First-Time Bar Passage
Peer assessment
Bench/Bar
Ultimate Bar Passage
LSAT median
Student-Faculty Ratio
GPA median
Student -Librarian Ratio
Acceptance rate
2023
Metric Weight Score Rank Weight Score Rank
2024
OVERALL 64 78
2023 2024 Metric Weight Score Rank Weight Score Rank 10-month employment 14% 76.3% 122 84.6% 112 First-Time Bar Passage 3% 86.0% 91 81.8% 85 Peer assessment 25% 2.9 52 2.9 49 Bench/Bar 15% 2.9 77 3.0 62 Ultimate Bar Passage 0% 91.3% 113 LSAT median 11.25% 161 61 161 62 Student-Faculty Ratio 2% 7.9 98 9 128 GPA median 8.75% 3.70 45 3.74 45 Student -Librarian Ratio 1% 90.1 112 92.3 105 Acceptance rate 1% 31% 58 34% 66 OVERALL 53 64 70 78
U.S. News Rankings Analysis
U.S. News Rankings Analysis
2023 2024 Metric Weight Score Rank Weight Score Rank 10-month employment 14% 76.3% 122 33% 84.6% 112 First-Time Bar Passage 3% 86.0% 91 18% 81.8% 85 Peer assessment 25% 2.9 52 12.5% 2.9 49 Bench/Bar 15% 2.9 77 12.5% 3.0 62 Ultimate Bar Passage 0% 7% 91.3% 113 LSAT median 11.25% 161 61 5% 161 62 Student-Faculty Ratio 2% 7.9 98 5% 9 128 GPA median 8.75% 3.70 45 4% 3.74 45 Student -Librarian Ratio 1% 90.1 112 2% 92.3 105 Acceptance rate 1% 31% 58 1% 34% 66 Expenditures per student 9% $39,019 91 0% --- --OVERALL 53 64 70 78
2023 2024 Part Time 24 15 Tax 24 18 Constitutional Law 30 21 Intellectual Property 19 22 Criminal 60 30 Business/Corporate 44 36 Contracts/Commercial 45 47 Trial Advocacy 52 47
USD Top Specialties Rankings
Student Success: Welcoming Class of 2026
Applications to USD School of Law are up 10.8% compared to last year.
Nationwide, applicants are down by 2.2%; in the far west, applicants are down by 5.6%.
*Includes Non-Hispanic, Bi-Racial Black Applicants. Note, Black applicants are up nationwide 0.5%
Date Total Applications Median LSAT Median GPA Black Applicants Latinx Applicants Total Diversity % Total Diversity CA Residents June 13, 2023 3,723 157 3.54 216* 841 1782 48% 55% June 13, 2022 3,359 157 3.49 199* 820 1590 47% 58% •
•
Student Success Initiatives
• Expanding pilot program providing stipend to allow students to study full-time for bar, conditioned on
100% completion of commercial bar courses
100% participation in mandatory bi-weekly advising sessions
• Summer 2023: Public interest fellowships for107 rising 2Ls and 3Ls
• Open 1L fall study groups to 100% of students
• Through Mentor Collective platform match 108 incoming students with upper-level student mentors
Diversity, Equity, Inclusion Initiative
• Pre-Orientation Immersion Program for First Generation Law Students
• Study legal doctrine
• Introduction to Socratic method
• Mock final exam
• Social programs
Extending the Reach of USD School of Law
• Latin American initiative
Rule of law programs
o $3 Million Grant From U.S. State Department for Mexico Law Student Litigation and Mediation Initiative
Degrees/certificate programs
o LLM in Spanish beginning summer 2023
Mexico Law Student Litigation and Mediation Initiative
March 31, 2023 - June 14, 2023
Mediation
• 6 in-school competitions in 5 states
• 60+ participants
• Number of professors trained: 8
• Number of students trained: 50
Litigation
• 6 in-school competitions in 6 states
• 100+ participants
• Number of professors trained: 13
• Number of students trained: 116
LLM in Spanish
USD Law welcomed
Class of 2023/2024
• 34 students from 9 different countries: Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, El Salvador, Mexico, Peru, United States, and Venezuela
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Questions?
Shari Baurle Green Director of Alumni Relations
Self-Reflection
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Setting Goals & Action Items
Self-Reflection Setting Goals & Action Items
What Do You Rank In Order of Importance In Terms of Engagement?
How Do You Rank the Following in Order Of Importance?
1. Philanthropy
2. Volunteering
3. Experiential (Attending/Participating in Events)
4. Communication (Ambassadors)
5. Employing Students & Graduates
6. Recruiting Students to Attend USD
What Goals Are You Setting for Your Next Year of Board Service?
What Action Items Will You Employ to Pursue Your Engagement Paths?
Meet with One Other Board Member to Share Your Responses & Strategies
2:25 - 2:35 p.m.
10 minutes BREAK
Artificial Intelligence (AI)
MODERATOR
Erin Gibson ‘03 (JD)
Partner, Global Co-Chair of Technology Sector, Chair of International Trade Commission Practice, DLA Piper LLP
PANELISTS
Dr. Danny Tobey Partner
DLA Piper LLP
Bennett Borden Partner & Chief Data Scientist
DLA Piper LLP
Tiffany Johnson Legal Marketing Manager
LexisNexis
Questions?
Breakout Session & Reports
How Should Law Schools Move Forward Knowing
What We Know About AI?
3:55 – 4:05 p.m.
10 minutes BREAK
Questions?
Creating Supportive Communities for Students
First-Generation Legal Professionals, President 22-23
Raynier Ramos, J.D. & MAPJ Candidate, 2024 Student Bar Association,Vice President
Creating Supportive Communities for Students
Itzelth Gamboa , J.D. Candidate, 2025
First-Generation Legal Professionals, Co-Chair, 23-24
What Does a Supportive Community Look Like?
● Student Leadership and Involvement
● Faculty representation and flexibility
● Being open to student experiences that may not align with your own
● Administration that is open to student input and actively changing for student success
● Funding for students who come from low-income backgrounds
● Communities of people with similar experiences
What is “First-Generation”? What is FGLP?
● First-Generation is defined by FGLP as any student who is the first in their family to attend law school or any institution of higher education
● FGLP is a student organization devoted to advancing the cause of first-generation students and ensuring they can compete with their non-first-gen counterparts.
● Attorney and Student Mentors
● Mundane questions
● Resources and Leadership
● Professional Development
“The First-Generation Experience”
● Diverse set of intersecting cultures
● Imposter Syndrome
● Stigma attached to being first- gen
● The “Unfortunate Reality” of the Legal Profession
● Complexities of the profession
● Income inequalities
● Uphill Battle
● Supportive administration, but financial disparities
● Lack of a supportive lens by both faculty and peers
● Having to support family while going to school
Pre-Orientation Program
● Bridging the gap between first-generation and non- firstgeneration students
● Providing Academic, Community Building, and Professional support resources to students to ensure they get a running start on Day One
● Very new program, but some issues remain:
● Getting housing before financial aid has a chance to kick in
● Rising costs of living in San Diego
Questions?
Making an Impact in our Local Community Alysson
Snow Professor of Practice
Housing Rights Clinic The Creation The Team The Work
The Challenges The Results The Future
Advocacy and Training
The Creation: Housing Rights Clinic
Purpose:
To serve low-income clients in San Diego County with housing instability and homelessness, prioritizing immigrants (both documented and undocumented), limited English proficient individuals, senior citizens, veterans, domestic violence and human trafficking survivors and disabled people.
The Creation
April 15, 2022: Professor in Practice Alysson Snow joins USD Legal Clinics.
April 15 to May 31, 2022: Build Collaborative Network with:
San Diego Eviction Prevention Collaborative; ACCE Action; City Heights Community Development Corporation; Community Law Project; Disability Rights California; Legal Aid Society of San Diego; San Diego Volunteer Lawyer Program; National Conflict Resolution Center; North San Diego County NAACP; and California Rural Legal Assistance
June 1, 2022: Official launch date of Housing Rights Project
January 1, 2023: Housing Rights Project formally becomes Housing Rights Clinic.
The Team
Professor in Practice: Alysson Snow
Staff Attorney: Seth Barron
Legal Assistant: Victoria Romero
Paralegal: Elizabeth Magana Weaver
Law Student Interns
The Team: Law Students Housing Rights Legal Clinic
Video #1
The Work
Video #2
The Work: Homelessness
East County Homeless
Resource Fair:
Every Tuesday
El Cajon Salvation Army
Eurie
Client Stories Told By Students Joshua
I represented undocumented parents with four children, one with autism. Property management said she missed payments, but we proved with the rent ledger she was current. This was a complete defense to the UD action, leading to a dismissal of the lawsuit.
I represented a Hispanic family who had lived in the same apartment complex for 30 years, having paid rent every single month. The landlord used a pretextual, invalid excuse to sue for eviction claiming that the client’s son, who was 2 years old when they moved in, was not on the lease.
The USD Legal Clinic is absolutely an essential source for the San Diego community. It is the work that the staff of the USD Legal Clinic do every day, case by case, that serves as a crucial means of preventing homelessness.
Before we got involved, there was a default judgment entered and a sheriff’s lockout was imminent. We prevailed in staying the lockout and setting aside the default judgment. I was able to negotiate the dismissal of the entire eviction case.
The Challenges
Need Exceeds Capacity Need is great.
Current docket for the eviction court is in excess of 4,000 cases.
Demand is High
ACCE and Legal Aid Society of San Diego provide us with large number of clients.
The Results
Outreach and Education: 448
Direct Legal Services: 136 (plus an additional 70 mobile home and RV park residents benefitting from impact litigation)
Prevent Homelessness: 100 percent (22% Stay in Home; 78% Soft Landing)
Avoid Default: 100%
Avoid Sheriff’s Lockout: 100%
Set Aside Prior Default Judgments: 100%
The Future: Courthouse Negotiation Program
In partnership with the Superior Court, provide on- site legal representation to tenants in day-of-trial negotiations.
We will need a full-time staff attorney and a case manager/ translator to help supervise and manage the law students’ representation of tenants in eviction proceedings.
Questions? Professor Alysson Snow University of San Diego Law School Housing Rights Clinic asnow@sandiego.edu 619-548-0888
Law School Building Project
Progress, Potential, & Vision
Debbie Rider ‘84 (JD) Senior Director of Development
•
USD School of Law
Building Campaign
Concept Design
June 16, 2023
58
USD SCHOOL OF LAW ALUMNI, FRIENDS, STUDENTS, FACULTY & COMMUNITY
OFFER THEIR INPUT
Collaboration & Community, Student Experience
Students, Faculty, Staff, Alumni
Functional and Flexible Learning Spaces
Accessibility, Technology, Hybrid
Goals Developed during 21 USD Focus
Group Discussions
Professional Character and Connections
Skills Development, Outreach, Dedicated Alumni
Well-being
Building Systems, Natural Light, Outdoor Space,
Accessibility and Inclusivity
Guiding Principles
Unified Law School
Identity and Connectivity
59
Benchmarking Context – Space Needs
Notes:
--Student and Instructional space are priorities.
--The proposed allocations result in an increase of @10,000 ASF above the existing ASF within Warren, LRC, Guadalupe, and Barcelona.
--The proposed allocations result in an increase of @20,070 ASF above the existing ASF within Warren and LRC only.
SUMMARY Existing USD ASF / FTE Proposed USD ASF / FTE Recent Law Schools ASF / FTE Cincinnati College of Law ASF / FTE Instruction 15,352 20 26,602 35 25,520 33 15,530 37 Library 36,575 49 29,075 39 41,662 54 18,197 43 Faculty 19,661 26 17,361 23 16,508 21 8,124 19 Administration 18,393 25 15,040 20 12,148 16 7,524 18 Students 3,442 5 15,342 20 17,549 23 11,650 27 Clinics 7,475 10 7,475 10 6,617 9 5,665 13
60 Existing USD Proposed USD Recent Law Schools Cincinnati College of Law
Detailed Benchmarking to Establish Context
Notes:
--“USD EXISTING” includes Warren, LRC, Guadalupe, and Barcelona.
--The “Other” category (GSF, gross square feet) is not included in the NSF (net square feet) subtotal.
61
Enhancing Instructional Spaces
62 Right Sizing Classrooms +7,000 SF Existing Classrooms 15-20 SF / Student To meet current professional standards 25-30 SF / Student Adjusting Classroom Capacities, Formats for Current and Future Requirements +4,000 SF 1 125-person classroom 1 Multi-purpose events / classroom (capacity varies, 175-person max) 1 150-person appellate courtroom / auditorium / classroom 1 40-person flex jury courtroom Group learning formats, 30-person, 70-person
Large classrooms
POSSIBLE OPTIONS
POSSIBLE OPTIONS
63
Room SF P SF/P B 2790 124 23 A 2250 90 25 C 4000 120 33 A B C A A
Medium classrooms
Room SF P SF/P C2 3375 176 19 B 1760 72 24 A 1620 50 32 C 3375 100 34 A C1 C2 B B
Small classrooms
POSSIBLE OPTIONS
15 seats 400 SF
Room SF P SF/P A 400 15 27 B 30-32 28-30 C 1280 28-44 29-46 C C C C B B A 15 seats 400 SF A
SCENARIO 1 – Renovation Only
Site Context
This option is a renovation of Warren Hall and the Pardee Legal Research Center. Sites 25 and 26 from the Master Plan remain available for non-Law School use. The Clinics remain in Barcelona.
Opportunities:
• Unified internal character
• More appropriate learning environments
Challenges:
• Proposed program not fully met
• Existing building conditions create challenges for classrooms
• Limited ability to host events and outreach activities
• Law school remains disconnected
65
SCENARIO 1 – Site Plan
FUTURE BUILDING SITES (NON LAW SCHOOL)
66 TORERO WAY Level 01
RENOVATE WARREN HALL RENOVATE LRC WARREN HALL LRC LIBRARY OFFICE OFFICE LIBRARY CLASSROOM OFFICE OFFICE OFFICE
SCENARIO 2 - Renovation and Addition to Warren Hall
Site Context
This option is a renovation of Warren Hall and the Pardee Legal Research Center, with a new building on Site 25. Site 26 remains available for non-Law School use. The Clinics relocate to the Law School.
Opportunities:
• Proposed program fully met
• Unified law school
Challenges:
• Linear massing of the addition creates planning inefficiencies
• Does not fully utilize Site 25
67
SCENARIO 2 – Site Plan
68 TORERO WAY Level 01
RENOVATE WARREN HALL RENOVATE LRC ADDITION TO WARREN HALL
FUTURE BUILDING SITE (NON LAW SCHOOL)
WARREN HALL STUDENT ADDITION CLASSROOM CLASSROOM CLASSROOM CLASSROOM OFFICE OFFICE OFFICE
SCENARIO 3 - Renovate LRC and New Law Building Adjacent to LRC
Site Context
This option is a renovation of Pardee Legal Research Center, with a new building on Site 25. Warren Hall and Site 26 remain available for nonLaw School use. The Clinics remain in Barcelona.
Opportunities:
• Improved architectural character
• Unified law school
Challenges:
• Proposed program not fully met
• One level of space largely
underground
69
SCENARIO 3 – Site Plan
NEW BUILDING ADJACENT TO LRC
RENOVATE LRC
WARREN HALL (CONVERT TO NON LAW SCHOOL USE)
FUTURE BUILDING SITE (NON LAW SCHOOL)
70 TORERO WAY Level 01
NEW BUILDING STUDENT LRC LIBRARY CLASSROOM OFFICE CLASS ROOM OFFICE OFFICE STUDENT LIBRARY OFFICE OFFICE
SCENARIO 4 - Unified Law Complex with LRC Revitalized Site Context
This option is a renovation of Pardee Legal Research Center, with a larger new building on Site 25. Warren Hall and a reduced Site 26 remain available for non-law school use. The Clinics remain in Barcelona.
Opportunities:
• Proposed program fully met
• Improved architectural character
• Unified law school
Challenges:
• One level of space largely
underground
71
SCENARIO 4 – Site Plan
WARREN HALL (CONVERT TO NON LAW SCHOOL USE)
FUTURE BUILDING SITE (NON LAW SCHOOL)
TORERO WAY
RENOVATE LRC
NEW BUILDING ADJACENT TO LRC
72
NEW BUILDING STUDENT LRC LIBRARY CLASSROOM OFFICE CLASSROOM OFFICE OFFICE STUDENT LIBRARY OFFICE OFFICE Level 01
Scenarios
All scenarios assume aesthetic and functional improvements to LRC
Does not achieve recommended program.
Renovate Warren + LRC, addition to Warren (with Clinics)
New building replaces Warren (without Clinics) + Renovate LRC (Master Plan Site 25 + 10%) Does not achieve recommended program.
Larger new building replaces Warren (without Clinics) + Renovate LRC (Master
Site 25 + 30%)
Site # Site SF GSF Site 25 23,700 71,100 Site 26 26,000 69,500 Site # Site SF GSF Site 25 11,600 40,000* Site 26 26,000 69,500 Site # Site SF GSF Site 25 25,000 78,210 * Site 26 24,700 62,500 *Exceeds allocation in MP by 10% *Less than allocation in MP by 44% SCENARIO 1 Warren + LRC Renovation Only SCENARIO 2 Addition + Warren + LRC SCENARIO 3 New Building + LRC (No Warren) SCENARIO 4 Larger New Building + LRC (No Warren) Site # Site SF GSF Site 25 29,600 92,600 * Site 26 20,100 48,000 *Exceeds allocation in MP by 30% 73 Site 25 Site 26 Site 26 Site 25 Site 26 Site 25 Site 26 Site 25
Plan
University of San Diego School of Law
Questions?
Alan K. Brubaker ‘76 (JD)
Board of Visitors, Board Chair
Katie Parker ‘02 (JD)
Board President, Law Alumni Board
Summary & Action Items
•
Fri, June 23
Hosted by Adam Bass '88 (BA), '91 (JD) and Amy Bass
Sat, July 15
Sat, Aug 5
Wed, July 19 & Thurs, July 20
Fri, July 28
Tues, Oct 10
Mon, Oct 2
Oct Milestone Reunions
Thursday, November 16, 2023