Jonathan Wang has not practiced law since he graduated from Columbia Law School in 2010, but he did not plan it that way.
When
he entered law school, the economy was flourishing, and he had every
reason to think that with a prestigious degree he was headed for a
secure well-paying career. He convinced his parents, who work in Silicon
Valley, that he had a plan. “I would spend three years at school in New
York, then work for a big law firm and make $160,000 a year,” said Mr.
Wang, 29. “And someday, I would become a partner and live the good
life.”
Mr.
Wang, who works in Manhattan as a tutor for the law school admissions
exam, is living a life far different from the one he envisioned. And he
is not alone. About 20 percent of law graduates from 2010 are working at
jobs that do not require a law license, according to a new study, and
only 40 percent are working in law firms, compared with 60 percent from
the class a decade earlier. To pay the bills, the 2010 graduates have
taken on a variety of jobs, some that do not require admission to the
bar; others have struck out on their own with solo practices. Most of
the graduates have substantial student debt.
Even
as law school enrollment was peaking in 2010 — reaching 52,488,
according to American Bar Association figures — those graduating were
not receiving job offers from firms where they were interning. And
offers to some students were rescinded.
“None
of this was on my radar,” Mr. Wang said, “but it began to be obvious by
the time second-year summer internships were over. We knew things were
depressed, but then the legs were cut out from under us.”
After
the economic collapse in the fall of 2008, corporations began to cut
spending on legal matters, and law firms, in turn, began to reduce their
hiring and even laid off employees. The legal profession was undergoing
the early wave of turbulence that left graduates in subsequent classes
facing a harsher job market that has shown few signs of a robust
recovery. But the class of 2010 was the first to experience it full
force.
At
the time, legal scholars predicted that when the economy turned the
corner, the new graduates would find jobs. But the checkered job
outcomes for the 2010 law graduates could be predicted by their early
employment numbers, said Deborah J. Merritt, a law professor at Ohio
State University’s Moritz College of Law.
She wrote “What Happened to the Class of 2010? Empirical Evidence of Structural Change in the Legal Profession,” a study published in March that examined the careers of those graduates and the legal marketplace.
Professor
Merritt combined public data, including court records and the
employment outcomes of more than 1,200 lawyers who received their law
degrees in 2010 and then passed the Ohio bar, with information from the
National Association of Law Placement recorded for the same class
nationally. She concluded that the 2010 class had not recovered in the
ensuing years.
“Employment
has improved only marginally for the class,” she said, “with
unemployment at 6 percent, many fewer lawyers working at law firms and a
leap in the percentage of solo practitioners.
“These
outcomes contrast markedly with those from the 2000 graduating class,
which was also shadowed by an economic recession but were later able to
better their positions,” she said. “But that type of progress has not
occurred for the Class of 2010.”
With
law firms cutting back, she said, most available positions “fall within
modest-paying categories: solo practice, small firms, government work
and business jobs that do not require bar admission.”
And
they might be the lucky ones, according to some 2010 graduates who said
they were “too ashamed that I have not found a legal job” to allow
their names to be mentioned. One law school graduate who said he did not
want to draw attention to his lack of permanent employment said he was
“doing rote legal temp work on the side to pay rent.”
“I dare not put it on my résumé because it makes you instantly nonprestigious and unemployable,” he added.
Others,
like G. Troy Pickett, 44, of Houston, who worked as a bartender in
Austin before going back to school with the intent of becoming a
big-firm mergers and acquisitions lawyer, opted to set up their own
practices.
“I
began to realize that I had set the bar too high, but I kept thinking
that if I could get my foot in the door, I could do it,” he said of his
decision to attend South Texas College of Law in Houston.
Then he saw that fewer firms were recruiting on campus and job offers were evaporating.
“It
was a double whammy. Our class was also competing with third- and
fourth-year associates who had been laid off,” he said. He took the
Texas bar exam six months early while still in law school to save time
and money. The same day he passed, in June 2010, he and a fellow student
formed a law practice, which handles family law issues like divorces
and child custody.
Another
2010 graduate, Hyatt Shirkey, 30, who received his diploma in May 2010
from Ohio State’s law school, moved to Virginia, where he passed the bar
the following July, and decided to open his own practice after juggling
several jobs.
“When
I started law school, it was still a great era,” he said. “I had some
good experiences, including working for a federal judge in Columbus,
Ohio. Then, the end of my second year in school, I saw that law firm
offers were being pushed back.”
“There
was a glut of people in the job market, and the only job I could find
did not require a law license,” added Mr. Shirkey, who first ran the
paralegal studies program for a private college in Roanoke, Va. He
eventually found work at the Roanoke public defender’s office but kept
his part-time job at the paralegal program and another as a server at a
Cracker Barrel restaurant.
Since
then, he found a job teaching contract law at a local community college
and opened a solo practice in criminal defense to “build up my
experience and reputation” so he could qualify for an opening in the
United States attorney’s office. For now, he receives referrals for
cases that the public defender cannot take on, but he said practicing on
his own was uncertain financially. And, like more than 80 percent of
law school graduates, he has substantial student debt.
Over all, nearly 85 percent of law graduates have taken out student loans, according to the website Law School Transparency, and 2010 law graduates accumulated debt averaging $77,364 at public law schools and $112,007 at private ones.
Many
have received financial hardship deferments or, like Mr. Shirkey, who
accumulated $328,000 in student debt, including some undergraduate
loans, received credits for public interest work. Federal government
rules, revised last year, allow student borrowers who work in nonprofit
and public sector jobs to have their loans forgiven after 10 years and
to pay back their college loans based on their income and expenses.
“Otherwise,
I would be very, very much in a pickle,” Mr. Shirkey said. “I
anticipate that I will wind up working for the government or a nonprofit
because I will need the credits to take care of my loan burden.
“Every time I look at the debt amount,” he said, “my heart beats a little harder.”
After
he graduated, Mr. Wang had a yearlong fellowship with a state court
judge, but when that ended in 2011, the “market was still awful,” he
said. After he was admitted to the New York State bar, he turned to
tutoring and law school advising to pay his rent and loans.
“I
thought the LSAT tutoring gig was going to be a temporary thing, but
five years and one bar admission renewal later, here I am,” he said. His
business has greatly expanded and he makes over $100 an hour, but that
is far below what he would make at a law firm. “I waffle constantly, but
I’m still in the mind-set that I need to find a real job,” he said.
No comments:
Post a Comment