[msb-alumni] Re: Bernstein Pledges Fairness on Supreme Court

  • From: "Mark Martin" <mbmartin1984@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <msb-alumni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Mon, 12 Jan 2015 21:50:22 -0500

BlankI can't think of any instance indoors where I have counted steps.

Mark Martin, 73.
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: willie jones 
  To: msb-alumni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Sent: Monday, January 12, 2015 9:34 PM
  Subject: [msb-alumni] Re: Bernstein Pledges Fairness on Supreme Court


  that wouldn’t fly at gm

  From: Mark Martin 
  Sent: Monday, January 12, 2015 9:05 PM
  To: msb-alumni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Subject: [msb-alumni] Re: Bernstein Pledges Fairness on Supreme Court

  There is just one instance for me counting steps because where my dentists 
office is, the cars pull up pretty close to the building so it is easier to 
stay on the left side of the driveway and trail on the grass line.  The 
building itself is rather narrow so I need to be as precise as I can when 
crossing to go into the building.  As a rule I don't count steps because i use 
so many other techniques to help me determine where I am.

  Mark Martin, 73.


    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: Larry D Keeler 
    To: msb-alumni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
    Sent: Monday, January 12, 2015 4:26 PM
    Subject: [msb-alumni] Re: Bernstein Pledges Fairness on Supreme Court

    What a goof! With all the tech available and the ability to take your own 
notes, I think the job could be done without an extra aide! And, counting 
steps! When was the last time any of us did that! Maybe when we were 2 and were 
learning to count! And, modifying the conference room, what a joke! Sometimes, 
I need a little more room but sounds like they all take a lot of stuff with 
them so, shouldn't be an issue! 
      ----- Original Message ----- 
      From: Steve 
      To: msb-alumni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
      Sent: Monday, January 12, 2015 4:04 PM
      Subject: [msb-alumni] Bernstein Pledges Fairness on Supreme Court

      God, this makes me ill!  So, he claims to be independent, but he needs an 
extra full-time staff-member.  He reads Brille but doesn't use it--Yeah man!  I 
understand it is bulky, has he ever heard of refreshable Braille?  
      And, counting steps; I think in forty-five years of independent travel, 
there is only one area shere I counted steps.

      Now, how many of you, even working for supposedly enlightened emplooyers 
would have been offered a job if you needed a full-time assistant?



      Bernstein pledges fairness on Supreme Court 

      Michigan's Supreme Court will convene this week to hear oral arguments 
with a new jurist on the bench who made history the minute he was elected. 
Justice Richard Bernstein says he already feels the weight of legacy as the 
state's first blind justice. But it's a legacy he embraces, because his 
greatest hope other than being a fair jurist for the people of Michigan is that 
his position opens doors for other people with disabilities in Michigan. "I 
genuinely believe as a blind person I was created this way for a reason," he 
says. "It's not easy. It's incredibly challenging, incredibly difficult. But at 
the same time, it makes your life incredibly fulfilling. If I hadn't been born 
blind, I would not have lived my life with the same sense of mission and focus 
and purpose. Lansing State Journal Columnist Louise Knott Ahern spent several 
hours with new Supreme Court Justice Richard Bernstein on his first official 
day on the job. It's a few days after the New Year, and Richard Bernstein is 
sitting at the conference table inside his chambers at the Michigan Hall of 
Justice , his new office for the next eight years. Most of the building is 
empty, a post-holiday lull still hanging over the marble columns and mahogany 
desks. Not inside his office, though. His staff has been working nearly every 
day since he raised his right hand on Jan. 1 and took the oath of office on the 
steps of the Capitol. His only complaint so far is the quiet. In his old office 
-- where he worked cases on behalf of people with disabilities alongside his 
famous family of attorneys at The Law Offices of Sam Bernstein -- he would have 
had 40 phone calls by 11 a.m., he says. The phone hasn't rung once in his 
chambers. Maybe it's just too soon after the holidays. But it's not too soon 
for him to be working, he says, because starting over in a new job is a 
different proposition for him than for most everybody else. It takes longer to 
get acclimated when your orientation means counting the steps from room to 
room.. It's OK to ask how he does it. He knows people wonder, even if they're 
afraid to come right out and say it. People have wondered his entire life. They 
wondered when he attended Northwestern University School of Law, every time he 
took his spot at the starting line for one of his 18 marathons, when he sat 
down often by himself at a table in a courtroom without a single notebook. 
Every time, in every instance, people would look at him and think, how is this 
going to work? He'd rather people ask than just assume it can't be done. If the 
world can see a blind man sitting on the Supreme Court, he says, then maybe it 
won't seem so farfetched for a restaurant owner or an office manager to think 
about filling their next vacancies with a blind candidate or a deaf candidate 
or a candidate with some other disability. "Disabled people know what we can 
do," he says. "We just have to be given a chance. I'm a blind person who is a 
Michigan Supreme Court justice. Is it challenging and hard? Absolutely. But am 
I going to get this job done and do it well? Absolutely. The Supreme Court has 
made a few accommodations for Bernstein and will continue to do so as needed, 
said Justice Bridget Mary McCormack, who was assigned as Bernstein's unofficial 
mentor in the court. His attitude is there are some things they will simply 
have to figure out as they go along, she said. Like, for example, the 
conference room. That's where most of the work of the Supreme Court is done, 
where justices gather for hours to discuss cases. They're used to a certain 
routine, McCormack said. She and most of the other justices come in with 
multiple devices laptops and tablets alongside reams of notes to refer back to 
during discussion. Bernstein will have none of that. They're exploring possible 
adaptive technologies, but they have to see how things go first. "There are 
things we'll have to do differently," said McCormack. "If we're all looking at 
an agenda, we can't just say, 'OK, let's go to item number two. He's not going 
to know what that is. So, instead, we're going to have to review for him, 'This 
is the case of the People vs. Smith.' He requested and was granted one special 
accommodation an additional staff member. Justices are usually allotted five 
staff members. Bernstein will have a sixth -- his long-time personal aide, Tim 
MacLean. MacLean has been with Bernstein for five years and does a little bit 
of everything. He drives Bernstein, travels with him, helps him with countless 
other tasks. Perhaps most importantly, MacLean reads to him. Michigan Supreme 
Court Justice Richard Bernstein smiles while talking to others as he sits at 
the bench inside the courtroom at the Hall of Justice on Monday, Jan. 5, 2015. 
(Photo: Dave Wasinger/Lansing State Journal) Bernstein doesn't use braille. He 
can read it. He knows it. But he doesn't use it in his work. It's too 
cumbersome. A five-page legal document becomes 20 when translated into braille. 
Computers and technology are great to a point, and there are many things 
available for his use. But what works for him is this: MacLean reads to him, 
and Bernstein memorizes. Everything. Actually, Bernstein says, it's more than 
that. He calls it internalizing. It's not a matter of just knowing the words 
but understanding them, how they all fit together, how they complement and 
contradict, how they apply to other cases, other laws. "It blows my mind day in 
and day out to work with him," MacLean said. "He is remarkable in his ability 
to ingest material and remember it. Just as soon as I think I've found a 
pattern about how long he needs to hear something to learn it, he surprises me. 
Let's say we're on the fifth reading of a 40-page brief, I'll think he's going 
to need to hear it again. He'll regurgitate it to me almost verbatim. They 
average 15 hours a day of work. They started reviewing the current cases before 
the court the day after the November election so he would be prepared for oral 
arguments, which start Jan. 13. He commutes from his home in Birmingham to 
Lansing every day, and a lot of reading and internalizing happens then, he 
says. "I think he lives his life by one quote," MacLean said. "'To whom much 
has been given, much is expected. He lives by that every day of his life. Which 
is remarkable, because a lot of people would think that if I have a disability, 
I haven't been given much. He sees it as, 'What can I do to make this world 
better, to make my circumstance a beacon of light for other people? Lynn Seaks, 
administrative specialist with the Michigan Supreme Court, helps Justice 
Richard Bernstein put on his robe before entering the courtroom last week. 
Bernstein, who is blind, was elected in November to serve an eight-year term. 
(Photo: Dave Wasinger/Lansing State Journal) In 1998, as the end of law school 
neared, Bernstein signed up for 65 interviews with visiting law firms. He 
didn't really want to work for any of them. He had a job waiting for him at the 
family firm, where he planned to open a public services division -- a luxury he 
says he is thankful for every day of his life. But he requested the interviews 
because he wanted the experience of being a blind man in the job market. To 
feel what it was like to be passed over, even though he was qualified, because 
it was probably just easier to not consider him for a job, he says. "How many 
call backs do you think I got? He pauses to wait for an answer. Two? Five? 
Twenty? "Zero. Not a single call back," he says. He wants to make one thing 
clear. "My advocacy days are over," Bernstein says. "I am not here to advocate 
or to legislate. I am here to interpret. I am here to be a rule of law judge. 
To apply the facts to the law. But if his presence on the court can strip away 
some of the mystery that surrounds what it means to be blind, to live blind, to 
work blind, he'd be perfectly fine with that. "I'm desperately hoping someone 
will look at my story and say, you know what? I'm going to hire a disabled 
candidate," he says. "I hope they will realize, yes, they might have to make 
some accommodations, but they are small. Modest. And if you are willing to do 
that, you will get some of the best employees you could ever hope to have. 
That's one of the most exciting things about this position, he says. "The 
people of the State of Michigan gave me a job. Louise Knott Ahern is a 
columnist at the Lansing State Journal. Follow her on Twitter: @weezwrites 
Michigan Supreme Court Justice Richard Bernstein sits at the bench inside the 
courtroom at the Hall of Justice last week. Bernstein was elected in November 
to serve an eight-year term on the court. He is the Michigan's first blind 
Supreme Court justice. (Photo: Dave Wasinger/Lansing State Journal) About 
Justice Richard Bernstein Attorney Richard Bernstein, 41, was elected to an 
eight-year term on the Michigan Supreme Court in November, making him the 
state's first blind justice and one of just three blind high court judges in 
the nation. He was nominated by the Democratic party. He hails from a famous 
legal family. His father is personal injury attorney Sam Bernstein, and 
Bernstein has spent his legal career working in the family law firm in a public 
services division he created. He graduated from Northwestern University School 
of Law in 1999 and received his bachelor's degree from the University of 
Michigan in 1996. Bernstein previously held elected office on the Wayne State 
University Board of Governors. 


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