About William Paul
William Paul Slough has built a quiet but steady presence in Michigan’s legal community. He has been active in local and national professional groups for nearly two decades. His name appears regularly on membership rosters and in bar association meeting minutes.
Slough began serving as a mediator in 2006 through a local community mediation program. That role put him in the middle of neighborhood disputes, landlord-tenant matters, and small civil cases. He handles sessions that aim for practical resolutions. Mediating requires patience and a practical sense of procedure. Those traits have shaped his approach to other work.
In 2008 Slough expanded his professional affiliations to include two national organizations: the American Bankruptcy Institute and the National Association of Consumer Bankruptcy Lawyers. He joined both that year and has maintained membership since. Membership in those groups signals an interest in bankruptcy law and consumer credit issues. He participates in continuing education and the exchange of practice-related ideas at conferences and workshops.
Also in 2008 he took on an elected role in the 46th Circuit Bar Association. He serves as Treasurer, a post he has held continuously since then. The treasurer role involves oversight of finances, budgeting for association events, and reporting to fellow officers. Colleagues turn to him for practical bookkeeping and organizational support. That administrative work complements his case-related practice and his mediation duties.
Slough’s professional life combines courtroom-adjacent roles and community-focused dispute resolution. He works under the laws of Michigan and keeps active ties to national bankruptcy organizations. He is known to colleagues for steady participation in bar governance and for handling mediations that allow parties to move on. He currently practices bankruptcy and consumer debt law in Michigan.