Legal Information Service Policy
Summary:
The King County Law Library will provide information service in
support of the legal research need of the courts, the bar, and
the public.
Purpose:
This policy defines the information service the Law Library staff
will offer to the patrons at the King County Law Library. These
guidelines ensure that patrons from the legal community, the courts
and the general public receive optimum service without violating
ethical guidelines on the unauthorized practice of law outlined
by the American Bar Association, the Washington State Bar, and
the Revised Code of Washington.
Implementation Guidelines:
The King County Law Library staff will assist the judiciary in
securing all information they deem necessary to their research
of legal issues, and will provide legal information service to
all patrons by facilitating access to the materials in the Library's
collection.
The Library staff will assist its patrons in locating sources
for information not held by the Library.
The Library staff will provide finding aids to the collection.
The Library will publish a column in the Seattle - King County
Bar Bulletin to keep the legal community informed about collection
developments, services offered, and new programs and policies.
The Library will seek to enhance the collection with materials
designed for use by the layperson seeking legal information.
The Library staff will respond to telephone inquiries regarding
the Library's holdings on a particular subject and will suggest
alternative sources for materials not in the collection. Time
permitting, the staff will respond to specific short answer requests.
However, the staff will not read statutes, regulations, court
rules, or extended passages from other sources over the phone.
Patrons in the Library receive priority over the telephone patron.
Because of the ethical and legal implications
surrounding the unauthorized practice of the law, patrons must
be advised that the Library staff may not engage in the following
activities: perform legal research; answer a legal question; advise
any patron on the status of the law on a particular issue; recommend
that any patron contact a particular attorney; explain legal procedure,
court rules or jurisdiction; or interpret the text of a statute,
legal opinion, or administrative regulation.
(Rev. 1/8/93)
It is the policy of the King County Law Library, a public law
library, to conform with the copyright requirements for libraries
under title 17 section 108 of the United States Code and title
37 section 201.14 of the Code of Federal Regulations. All library
staff will receive training to ensure compliance with these requirements.
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