Contact Information: Contact: Henry Stimpson Stimpson Communications 508-647-0705 Henry@StimpsonCommunications.com Adam Potter CLM (212) 724-2345 adam.potter@litmgmt.org
Council on Litigation Management Gets Insurers, Defense Lawyers and Insureds on Same Side of Table
CLM Becomes Force in Two Years
| Source: Council on Litigation Management
NEW YORK, NY--(Marketwire - January 6, 2009) - Insurance claims professionals, insureds and
outside defense lawyers have often worked at cross-purposes, making for
inefficiency and less-than-optimal results. But change has been afoot
since the Council on Litigation Management (CLM) began aligning
defense-team goals in early 2007.
"We're bringing law firms and the industry together to create efficiencies.
If we become more efficient working together as a team, both sides will be
more effective and profitable," says Advisory Board member Domenick C.
DiCicco Jr., Senior VP and Chief Legal Officer for claims at Zurich North
America.
The only organization dedicated to training both defense and claims
professionals in litigation management, the CLM has attracted thousands of
litigation management and claims executives, attorneys, adjusters, risk
managers and general counsel. Involving more than 125 insurance companies,
numerous corporations, every major brokerage firm, hundreds of third-party
administrators and adjusters, and defense lawyers and firms nationally, CLM
is the largest organization solely committed to furthering the highest
standards of litigation management.
CLM sponsors free courses for adjusters, supports 10 hardworking committees
and runs an information-packed annual conference. Its Advisory Board
boasts executives from companies like AIG, Aon, Costco, Fireman's Fund,
Liberty Mutual and Sony Pictures.
"The quality of people on the committees and Advisory Board is
extraordinary," DiCicco says. "We all share same goals in litigation -- to
get the best outcome for our mutual client, the insured."
CLM is made up of Fellows and Members. Fellows include adjusters, claim
executives, risk managers, inside counsel, litigation managers,
self-insured companies and service providers. Admission as a Fellow is
free.
Members, who must be nominated by a Fellow, are individual defense
attorneys and law firms.
Adam Potter, CLM's founder and executive director, says the organization is
forging a "bulletproof defense alliance," uniting insurers, lawyers and
insureds.
"Insurers spend tens of billions of dollars a year on outside counsel,"
Potter adds. "By working together, we can provide a better way to manage
resources and achieve better results."
About 300 insurance adjusters have attended litigation-management classes
held in Boston, Chicago, Dallas, New York and San Francisco. "Litigation
101 for Insurance Professionals," is for adjusters new to litigation.
Adjusters with at least three years of experience take "Economics of
Litigation Management," which covers planning, budgeting, valuation,
negotiation and resolution. Both offer adjuster continuing education
credits.
"The adjuster training program is designed to fill the gap for young
adjusters," says Mari Henry Leigh, a CLM Advisory Board Member and Chair of
its Education Committee. Leigh is a senior partner with Meckler Bulger
Tilson Marick & Pearson LLP. Taught by experienced defense lawyers, CLM's
classes "fast-track the learning curve on claims and offer a broader
perspective on litigation management," Leigh says. The courses are
provided without cost. CLM's Annual Conference in March will offer 16
sessions with 60 speakers, Arizona Governor Janet Napolitano, nominated as
the next Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, will receive
CLM's Professionalism Award.
Leigh's committee is working on creating a weeklong, intensive College of
Litigation Management to be offered in conjunction with a major law school
or university. Aimed at lawyers at all levels -- both at law firms and
companies -- it would be an accredited curriculum offering a certification
and diploma.
Attempts to set consistent industry guidelines for all defense firms have
failed to take so far. Today, each insurer has different standards, and
lawyers who represent many insurers find it difficult and inefficient to
comply with them all.
DiCicco co-chairs the committee working on industry-wide litigation
guidelines. His committee is also developing recommendations for
alternative fees.
CLM also sponsors an online lawyer directory. Insurers often struggle to
find a lawyer in a state where they don't normally do much business. With
CLM's online defense lawyer directory, anyone can easily find at least
several good choices in every state.
For more information about CLM, visit www.litmgmt.org.