John F. Harkness Jr. to receive The Florida Bar Foundation’s 2017 Medal of Honor Award for a lawyer

John F. Harkness Jr. Medal of Honor Award Lawyer

John F. Harkness Jr.

MAITLAND, Fla. – John F. “Jack” Harkness Jr., a nationally recognized legal visionary and the nation’s longest-serving bar executive, has been selected to receive The Florida Bar Foundation’s 2017 Medal of Honor Award, the Foundation’s highest award, in the lawyer category.

After serving as the State Courts Administrator for six years, Harkness became executive director of The Florida Bar in 1980 when there were 27,713 members, a staff of 122 and an annual budget of $7.1 million. He now oversees a staff of 360 – with 284 working at the Tallahassee headquarters complex recently named in his honor – and a budget of $44.2 million for an organization with more than 105,000 members.

“He has been a transformative figure in inspiring the administration of justice, improving the science of jurisprudence, as well as being relied upon by virtually every single leader of The Florida Bar for wise counsel and advice,” wrote 2016 Medal of Honor Award recipient Kathleen S. McLeroy and Past Florida Bar President Gwynne A. Young in their nomination of Harkness.

“While it is not possible to list the accomplishments of a man who has nurtured and managed the legal profession in Florida for 37 years, suffice it to say that Jack has had an active role in every initiative and undertaking of The Florida Bar from the Constitution Revision Commissions to commissions and task forces designed to advance the Bar’s service to the public, to educate the public about judicial merit retention and improve access to justice through the Bar’s efforts to ensure adequate funding for the courts, and in support of the work of the Foundation and other legal aid organizations.”

Among advancements critical to the legal profession’s success, Harkness is recognized for establishing the Bar’s ethics hotline, Attorney Consumer Assistance Program and countless other professionalism committees and programs of The Florida Bar. Harkness has been a strong advocate of pro bono service, legal services funding and a fair and impartial judiciary.

In 2015, at the ceremony to name the Bar’s Tallahassee complex for Harkness, then-president Gregory W. Coleman said no single person has meant more to the legal profession and to Florida lawyers than Harkness.

“He has been the guiding force behind every Florida Bar president and has made our bar the most recognized and influential in the country,” Coleman said.

The Medal of Honor Award is presented each year to a member of The Florida Bar who has demonstrated his or her dedication to the objectives of The Florida Bar as set out in the Rules Regulating The Florida Bar “to inculcate in its members the principles of duty and service to the public, to improve the administration of justice, and to advance the science of jurisprudence.”

Sponsored by Florida Lawyers Mutual Insurance Company, the award will be presented at The Boca Raton Resort & Club June 22 at the Foundation’s 41st Annual Reception & Dinner during The Florida Bar Annual Convention. Other major and award sponsors include Holland & Knight LLP, Carlton Fields, Shutts & Bowen LLP, Searcy Denney Scarola Barnhart & Shipley, Susan & Stanley M. Rosenblatt and Greenspoon Marder, P.A..