Meet incoming ADLS President Tony Herring
Reweti Kohere
āIām good, Iām good. Iām sweaty,ā confesses incoming ADLS president Tony Herring. āI know you donāt need to know that but Iāve been racing around.ā
Thatās not surprising. Since learning at the ADLS annual general meeting last Thursday that heād won the vote and would succeed outgoing president Marie Dyhrberg KC, Herring hasnāt yet had time to let the election result sink in.
A commercial and property partner at Gibson Sheat, he flew back to Wellington the morning after the AGM, shot up to Thorndon for a client meeting and, having returned to his office, is now telling a journalist heās sweaty.
And he wonāt get time to catch his breath over the weekend, either. On Sunday, he sets off for Antarctica, the driest, coldest and windiest continent on Earth, to run his 20th (and last) marathon ā a swansong thatās three years overdue.
The many parts of his life have all come to a head, Herring says.
āItās been a funny old time because Iāve been focused on this marathon for so long. Iāve been trying to organise my life around my training and then Iāve been trying to campaign to be president of ADLS for a while and trying to keep my day job as well.ā he says.
Marathon man
Herring shouldāve ticked off the Antarctic marathon already, had the global pandemic not scuppered his plans in early 2020 when the marathon was cancelled just days before he was set to depart.
As he told LawNews at the time: āEighteen weeks of training during the New Zealand summer for a bitterly cold adventure marathon in one of the most forbidding environments on the planet had come to nought.ā Luckily, heās been given a second chance.
Herring took up long-distance running 10 year ago after falling from a first-floor balcony and breaking his neck. Since then, heās completed the worldās six major marathons on six continents and is chasing his seventh ā and last ā long-distance run.
āYou can commit this in writing if you want. This is my last. Itās just too hard and Iām getting too old,ā he says. āIām going to
retire victoriously.ā
Heāll have his work cut out. Any marathon is a slog, let alone completing a big run in one of the most inhospitable environments on the planet. Herringās best-case scenario on race day? A fine, sunny day with no wind. If the wind exceeds 24 knots, the entire 42km race might be shifted from the ice to the deck of the competitorsā holding ship, a scenario that happened nearly 20 years ago, he says.
āThe wind is key for me. I donāt mind running in the cold ā Iāll have plenty of layers on. Itās the wind, because the wind will not only make it potentially precarious in getting back to the ship, but it will just make [the race] harder.ā
The frozen continent still beckons. The three-day voyage begins in Buenos Aires, followed by chartered flight to the resort town of Ushuaia, nicknamed the āEnd of the Worldā for its location on the southernmost tip of South America. Herring will then board the Ocean Victory, a vessel purpose-built to tackle polar waters, and traverse the Drake Passage, considered one of the worldās most treacherous voyages with travellers contending with 12-metre swells. By Sunday week, the marathon will have taken place. And afterwards, a week of sight-seeing.
āItāll be an amazing trip, but I just need to get the marathon out of the way,ā Herring says. After completing the race, he suspects heāll be emotional, much as he was on finishing his first marathon, in Christchurch.
āThis will be the culmination of an awful lot of effort and an awful long time of running. And to do the seven continents and the six world marathon majors is just, for me, such a special achievement.
āIt wouldnāt surprise me if thereās a few tears crossing the finish line. Theyāll freeze, of course.ā
Fresh eyes, new name
Once he returns home, a new set of ADLS councillors will await him around the table. Four councillors ā Chris Eggleston, Craig Fisher, Andrew Skinner and Ellen Snedden ā are departing. They will be replaced by Martelli McKegg litigator Telise Kelly, criminal
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If we have the ear of the people who make the rules ā the politicians or cabinet or select committees or whatever it is ā then weāre much more influentialTony Herring
My vision is not only that we are a genuine national organisation that helps all our members on a day-today basis, but we are an absolute leader in representing our lawyers
Continued from page 05
defence barrister Samira Taghavi and Shine Lawyers managing director Angela Parlane, who also ran for president. Criminal barrister Julie-Anne Kincade KC and cybersecurity consultant Michael Wallmannsberger will remain on the council.
Herring acknowledges the influx of new blood has its challenges.
āIt wonāt be seamless. It wonāt be āletās just carry on doing what weāre doingā because itāll take a meeting or two or three to learn where their skills are, what theyāre interested in doing and what they might be able to get involved in. Theyāre not known quantities,ā he says. āBut fresh eyes always bring a new perspective and thatās exciting. Theyāll be motivated to make the profession better, I would hope.ā
The fact that ADLS has a president based outside of Auckland ā for the first time in 144 years, Herring understands - is proof that the membership body is increasingly being perceived as truly nationwide. Itās ground Herring has broken before: when first elected to the council six years ago, he was ADLSā first-ever nonAuckland councillor.
Turning that perception of serving all New Zealand lawyers into reality is the next challenge.
āMy vision is not only that we are a genuine national organisation that helps all our members on a day-to-day basis, but we are an absolute leader in representing our lawyers through law reform, through select committees, through [our] committees, through the CPD that we offer,ā he says.

That vision aligns with ADLSā rebranding plans. Members attending the AGM were told the organisation wants to drop the āAuckland Districtā from its name because it doesnāt reflect the bodyās national reach, excludes the 46% of members who live elsewhere in New Zealand and something more modern is needed. Members will be given the chance to vote on an
alternative.
Herring says heās familiar with concerns from some members that much of the ADLS legacy might disappear with a name change and itās a worry he shares. People heās interacted with, including those who donāt work in the legal service industry, know about the organisation through its valuable webforms, such as the ADLS sale and purchase agreement for real estate.
But he acknowledges that ADLS must move on. āItās 2023, we have to move on. A name is only a name. Weāre not going to destroy everything weāve built up.ā


Wider issues
Being a sought-after organisation with a seat at the table is Herringās aspiration for ADLS.
āNot only are we sought after by members who want to be members because of the great stuff we offer them, but weāre sought after by media if thereās a story because weāve got such a good reputation. Politicians seek us out for our views on an issue before they embark on or are drafting policy.ā
On some of the problems confronting the profession ā access to justice, work culture and inclusion and diversity, to name a few ā having influence will prove critical to finding a solution, Herring says. āIf we have the ear of the people who make the rules ā the politicians or cabinet or select committees or whatever it is ā then weāre much more influential.ā
Even before I push back on that, Herring has beaten me to the punch. āPower and influence ā it sounds dangerous in a way,ā he says, before explaining his aspiration for decision-makers to think of the organisation first when contemplating solutions.
Herring wants an ambitious future for ADLS. He just has to knock off that last marathon first. ā
If the wind exceeds 24 knots, the entire 42km race might be shifted from the ice to the deck of the competitorsā holding ship
It wouldnāt surprise me if thereās a few tears crossing the finish line. Theyāll freeze, of course