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Last updated on Wednesday, July 11, 2018
(STATEHOUSE) - State Sen. Eric Koch (R-Bedford) has been appointed to the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws by Senate President Pro Tempore David Long (R-Fort Wayne).
The National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws, also known as the Uniform Law Commission (ULC), now in its 127th year, provides states with non-partisan, well-conceived and well-drafted legislation that brings clarity and stability to critical areas of state statutory law. There is only one fundamental requirement for the commissioners: they must be members of the bar. While some commissioners serve as state legislators, most are practitioners, judges and law professors. They serve for specific terms and receive no salaries or fees for their work with the ULC. The organization, headquartered in Chicago, comprises more than 300 lawyers, judges and law professors.
Commissioners are appointed from all 50 states as well as the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, and they research, draft and promote enactment of uniform state laws in areas of state law where uniformity is desirable and practical. Since its inception in 1892, the group has promulgated more than 200 acts, among them such bulwarks of state statutory law as the Uniform Commercial Code, Uniform Probate Code and Uniform Partnership Act.
The ULC does the following:
The ULC is a working organization. The commissioners participate in drafting specific acts; discuss, consider and amend drafts of other commissioners; decide whether to recommend an act as a uniform or a model act; and work toward enactment of ULC acts in their home jurisdictions. ULC commissioners donate thousands of hours of their time and legal and drafting expertise every year as a public service.
Koch is an attorney with the law firm of Koch & McAuley, with offices in Bedford and Bloomington. He serves Senate District 44, which includes all or parts of Bartholomew, Brown, Jackson, Lawrence and Monroe counties.
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