stateofbeasley
Senior member
LA Times: Black Thursday
For years, the large law firms have been bilking, I mean billing, their corporate clients $800-$1000/hr for a partner's advice, and $400/hr for associates who know nothing to review documents.
Now with the economy going down the drain, the big firms are faltering and the ax is falling.
The corporations are wising up now that their coffers are shrinking.
One attorney profiled in the article did corporate law and now can't even land a job as a paralegal:
The days of reckoning are here for the big law firms, their useless bar associations, and the ripoff law schools that scam students with claims of a big payoff after graduation. The era of cheap student loans is over.
And these jobs that are going away aren't coming back.
When some Indian in Mumbai can do the same legal research and document drafting for $10/hr, fewer clients will be willing to pay for people in the US to do the same work.
Don't go to law school if you can help it. It's a waste of time and the jobs are going overseas.
For years, the large law firms have been bilking, I mean billing, their corporate clients $800-$1000/hr for a partner's advice, and $400/hr for associates who know nothing to review documents.
Now with the economy going down the drain, the big firms are faltering and the ax is falling.
The corporations are wising up now that their coffers are shrinking.
When people in banking and the mortgage industry were getting the heave-ho, it came as no surprise. In fact, on Friday I spoke to a banking executive with 20,000 employees under him who got fired in December after 21 years on the job. But I would have thought anyone with a law degree would be able to talk their way out of a layoff, file for an injunction, whatever.
Not so. Trope told me it's gotten much worse of late, and when I made some phone calls and checked on the Internet, I found that law firms in California and throughout the nation have been handing out pink slips by the dozens and the hundreds.
"Job cuts in U.S. legal sector hit 1,300 for January," said a headline at Legalweek.com.
"Today isn't over, but it already has a name: Black Thursday," said a Los Angeles County Bar Assn. blog this week, making reference to hundreds of layoffs in the legal biz that were announced around the world the other day.
One attorney profiled in the article did corporate law and now can't even land a job as a paralegal:
With help from a family member, she moved to her own place to try to figure out her marriage and her career. As for the latter, she reluctantly decided to lower her expectations and began applying for jobs as a contract administrator, an office administrator and a paralegal. But she struck out there too, in part because other lawyers were trying the same thing.
"After a while with the paralegal jobs, the listings said, 'No attorneys.' I think it's because they figured attorneys would leave as soon as they found work as lawyers."
The days of reckoning are here for the big law firms, their useless bar associations, and the ripoff law schools that scam students with claims of a big payoff after graduation. The era of cheap student loans is over.
And these jobs that are going away aren't coming back.
When some Indian in Mumbai can do the same legal research and document drafting for $10/hr, fewer clients will be willing to pay for people in the US to do the same work.
Don't go to law school if you can help it. It's a waste of time and the jobs are going overseas.