| EDUCATOR
In 1969, the Chairman of the Young Lawyers' Section of the Maryland State
Bar Association, John F. McAuliffe, Esq., began to advocate the public need
for education about the law. He appointed young lawyer, Arthur M. Monty
Ahalt, Esq., as the Chair of a newly formed committee named The Youth and
Law Committee. That committee was charged with the responsibility of
establishing means and methods of public education about the law,
particularly in the public and private school systems, kindergarten through
twelfth grade.
For the next 25 years, lawyer Monty Ahalt, then Judge Monty Ahalt, led the
Bar's efforts to promote the public understanding of the law. For five
years he chaired the Young Lawyers' Committee on Youth & Law and in 1973
successfully advocated the creation of a Special Committee of the Maryland
State Bar Association on Law-Related Education. This committee became the
first committee of the State Bar Association to allow non-lawyer
participating and voting members.
For over twenty years, Judge Ahalt has been a nationally recognized
advocate, lecturer and author in the field of Law-Related Education. He has
served as Chairman of the Law-Related Education Committee of the Maryland
State Bar Association from 1973 to the present. Among his publications are
Understanding The Judicial Branch of the Government; Law-Related
Education -- A Ten Year Experience and Sexual Harassment and Judicial
Decision Making, Character Controls Conduct and A Juror's Guide to
Understanding the Judicial Branch of the Government. He has been the
principal lecturer at numerous teacher education and training seminars and
conferences. As a result of Judge Ahalt's efforts, over 20,000 teachers
have received training in the field of Law-Related Education. This teacher
training effort impacts over 700,000 Maryland primary and secondary students
each year.
Judge Ahalt also lectures before numerous groups of judges, lawyers,
insurance adjusters and court employees on evaluating risk. He has compiled
a group of 20 recurring accidents and injuries and a method of evaluating
the jury's potential entitled Evaluating Risk.
Judge Ahalt is a nationally recognized advocate, lecturer, and presenter of
technology programs, which aid the courts of the country in conducting the
business of dispute resolution. He has made presentations to the Conference
of Chief Justices, the Conference of State Court Administrators, the
American Bar Association's tech show, the Maryland Bar Association's
mid-winter and annual meetings and the Prince George's County Bar
Association membership meetings. He is on the faculty of the Institute for
Court Management-National Center for State Courts where he has conducted
seminars on electronic filing, electronic public access to the courts and
public policy considerations of electronic public access. He has published
articles on The Promise of Electronic Filing, A Public-Private Partnership
and Electronic Filing - The Need, The Change, The Promise and The Value. He
presents a three-day seminar on Electronic Public Access Issues &
Technologies along with other Institute faculty.
Judge Ahalt's leadership has also resulted in one of the largest number of
lawyer and non-lawyer participants in State Bar Associations. Every year
over 6,000 hours of pro bono service by lawyers having a value of over
$300,000 is contributed. Lawyers participate as Mock Trial coaches, judges,
writers, teacher seminar lecturers, classroom resources, mentors, mediator
trainers, workshop moderators, drama actors and summer institute
facilitators.
As a result of Judge Ahalt's leadership, the committee has raised in excess
of $5 million from public and private foundations. These funds have allowed
for the publication of over 20 teacher guides for use in State classrooms as
well as numerous classroom-teaching aides. They have also produced a
broadcast quality videotape entitled Good Times, Bad Times: Drugs, Youth &
the Judiciary. These funds additionally produced the first remedial
interactive computer software package covering the legislative, executive
and judicial branches of government, CITED.
|