Thứ Tư, 30 tháng 4, 2008

Quinn Emanuel's Flagship Year



The American Lawyer is reporting that Quinn Emanuel saw a 23% jump in profits per partner last year. I guess hiring Scott Krowitz's "Lex-Pollution" to run a dirty and overcrowded sweatshop, in which the NYC fire marshal had to be called in, was a good move on their part. Exploitation certainly pays.

http://temporaryattorney.blogspot.com/2007/08/roast-them.html

Thứ Ba, 29 tháng 4, 2008

The Big Squeeze

Steven Greenhouse, in a new book entitled "The Big Squeeze," reflects upon the tough issues facing American workers. In the past 20 years, corporate profits have soared and worker productivity grew apace, while wages have stagnated. In the economic expansion that began in November 2001, corporate profits have doubled, but average wages have increased by only 2 percent. As Greenhouse notes, "this may be the first time in American history that the typical working household goes through an economic expansion without any increase in income whatsoever."

As a result of the changes in both the public and private sectors, American workers today face a variety of threats. Aggressive managers desperate to trim costs use tactics reminiscent of the sweatshops of a century ago: locking workers inside shop floors or not allowing them to take bathroom breaks, harassing workers who attempt to unionize, refusing to pay overtime for additional hours or, even more egregiously, altering workers' time sheets. Then, of course, there is the threat that many jobs will be outsourced to countries like India or China, where companies can pay lower wages. There are companies that replace salaried workers with temps or contractors to avoid paying benefits.

The legal profession is no exception. Note the explosion of the temporary staffing industry and our stagnating wages, in red:

Thứ Sáu, 25 tháng 4, 2008

Small Firm Hell: Bivona & Cohen



Not to be outdone by their biglaw cockroach infested basement counterparts, NYC small law has been busy inflicting their own brand of torture on the working masses.

First, we learned about the partner who threw a heavy bound legal volume across an office, bloodying an associate's head.

Then, we read about how an Rappaport & Hertz partner allegedly placed semen on an associate's phone. http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1124269512308/

Now, to top it all off, we have a report that a Bivona & Cohen partner allegedly raped a secretary. http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1209047608835/ The partner claims, however, that the secretary had merely given him a consensual "lap dance" in his office.

Other opinions of working at Bivona from the blogosphere:

"If you like being verbally abused, working endless hours, dealing with psychodramas, never working on the same file twice, being told that you are worthless and replaceable, being criticized for winning a summary judgment motion because it ends the billing on a file, and generally wishing every day that a huge asteroid would hit New York and end your misery in a cataclysmic holocaust, then this is the job for you."

"I recall one former associate who was really a kind-hearted and hard-working guy but who was painfully unassertive. JVF would just berate the poor guy and make his life living hell. Then there was another associate who was so terrified that he reportedly began vomiting blood out of fear. Yet another associate had such a bad experience that she left law altogether and moved to Hawaii. I just walked out one day when I'd had enough and didn't even have the next job lined up. About four weeks later I was working in my next ID dump."


http://www.jdunderground.com/thread.php?threadId=11614

Welcome to NYC small law, or as some would call it, low-paying animal kingdom.

Thứ Tư, 23 tháng 4, 2008

White & Case



"Worked on a job at White & Case last week. Originally we were told in our interviews with the associate that it would be 2-3 weeks. Then on Monday, they came in and said that it needed to be done by Thursday. 4 days! We were given wrong directions, never shown how to properly code the system, and when someone accidentally went into the wrong documents, they didn't discover it until Friday. Total disaster!

The person who accidentally did the wrong docs, because of poor directions and incompetent feedback and planning on the part of the law firm, was told that she was not getting paid at all! On pay day, we were paid zilch, nothing! Payroll said none of our timesheets had been approved by W&C. Now supposedly they have, but we won't get paid until next week. I have been doing this for long enough and I have encountered a lot of underhanded things by agencies and firms, but never has a firm stooped this low."

Thứ Bảy, 19 tháng 4, 2008

David Gelfand: Worst Person of the Week



Last week, Milbank Tweed Hadley & McCloy laid off several attorneys in its staff attorney program. These jobs were good, stable, middle-class positions that provided benefits. When asked about the firings by Above the Law's David Lat, Gelfand stonewalled:

http://abovethelaw.com/2008/04/correction_milbank_hearts_staf.php

Let's not be too hard on David Gelfand, however. Maybe he was busy? Perhaps, he was attending outsourcing conferences, learning how to ship these very same jobs overseas:

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Faculty Includes:
Chairperson:
Patrick Hatfield, Esq.
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Locke Lord Bissell & Liddell LLP

Bodhi Global Services Ltd.
Computer Associates
CPA
Deutsche Bank AG
Equifax, Inc.
Home Depot
Kaye Scholer LLP
LawDocsXpress
Legal Electronic Document Institute
Milbank Tweed Hadley & McCloy LLP
Outsourcing Today
Seyfarth, Shaw LLP
The Clutch Group
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• Establishing and Utilizing Proper Communication
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• Gaining Insights into the Future of Legal Outsourcing
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Thứ Năm, 17 tháng 4, 2008

Sometimes It's Necessary To Jump Ship



I wholeheartedly disagree with the following blog posting:

http://www.myattorneyblog.com/it-might-be-tempting-but-its-never-a-good-idea-to-jump-ship/

Sadly, for one's own economic survival, it's oftentimes necessary to jump off a sinking sweatshop. Two weeks ago, David King stood in front of the McCarter/Hudson project on a Friday afternoon claiming that there was more work to be done, and then turned around and axed everyone over the weekend via a cowardly email. To add insult to injury, in order to avoid having to hear from the angry masses, rumor has it that certain Hudson recruiters went off on vacation the following week. Are these the kind of people that you owe your loyalty to?

As someone so aptly put it,

"Unfortunately, loyalty in the contract attorney business means mostly loyalty to yourself. It’s your survival that you should care about because most of the agencies and firms could care less about you. I think most contract attorneys learn that very early on."

Many of the people that screwed Hudson over and left McCarter early are now comfortably working on other projects. Those who were loyal and stayed on are now scrambling for work in a recessionary job market. This is the nature of the beast.

Thứ Ba, 15 tháng 4, 2008

Angry Judges: New York Judges Deliberate Bid To Organize



"Judges of New York, unite!

Frustrated over salaries that have been frozen for almost 10 years, a group of state Supreme Court justices are talking about starting their own union.

In an email dated April 7th that was obtained by The New York Post, Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Wayne Saitta wrote to his colleagues that 'a few of us in Brooklyn have been trying to get together an organizing effort,' but to date it has not gone anywhere.

Judge William Erlbaum expressed his support. 'This is some shit we should not eat.'"


- Larry Celona, New York Post, 4/15/08

Chủ Nhật, 13 tháng 4, 2008

The Hudson Legal Propaganda Podcast



Upset about outsourcing, wage stagnation, shitty benefits, asshole bosses, crowded/cockroach infested basements, and 14 hour work days? Never mind that, according to a recent propaganda piece put out by the Hudson Legal Chicago office:

http://career-advice.monster.com/job-industry-profiles/legal/contract-temporary/Audio-The-Pluses-of-Legal-Contracti/home.aspx/

Thứ Ba, 8 tháng 4, 2008

Help Train Your Foreign Replacements

"Now Quislex, one of the first and largest Indian LPOs, has teamed up with Strategic Legal Solutions, a pioneer in the U.S. temporary lawyer marketplace, to form SQ Global Solutions. With offices in New York, New Jersey, Chicago, Los Angeles and Hyderabad, India, SQ Global has a unique international outsourcing network of attorneys. All of your high volume, labor intensive legal tasks can now be outsourced to our state of the art Hyderabad facility where we employ over 150 full time permanent attorneys. You can also combine our Indian resources with our nationwide candidate pool of highly credentialed and experienced U.S. temporary attorneys to create a unique onshore/offshore legal project team."

Thứ Bảy, 5 tháng 4, 2008

The Hudson Legal "Newark" Project: Bloody Friday



4/06/08-

"Dear Tom,

I was one of the recipients of the email axe from Hudson yesterday, and I guess I'm as pissed off as any of the rest of us who received the same message. They obviously didn't have the nerve to tell anyone in person. What wimps! The irony (for lack of a better word) is that, after a day without almost any assignments, David King stood in front of us on Friday and announced that the office was closing at 5 p.m. But he was quick to reassure us that that there's still lots of work ahead and that he'd see us all on Monday. The humane way of handling this situation would have been to end things then and there, and do the honorable thing by telling us the truth. At least that way we'd have had the opportunity to gather up our belongings and leave with some dignity. Now I'm put in the uncomfortable position of having to return to the office to retrieve my personal possessions when I no longer work there. I refuse to feel humiliated, but it sure will be uncomfortable.

Being treated this way is no way to thank those of us who worked extra hours and worked hard. Last time I checked, it doesn't cost extra money to treat people respectfully and professionally."


-----------------------------------------------------------------

The axe has fallen, and the anger is palpable.

"Fucking scumbag thieves (Hudson) said this project would last 4 to 6 months and send a fucking email when axing everyone. Pussies can't even call people.

David King and Vlad (The impaler) claimed that there was plenty of work....

I should have jumped ship a month ago.

Now the market is going to be flooded with us loser coders.

Read that a few people have mentioned the Newark project. Well, hate to break it to you, but make sure you have your welcoming mat down, because about 200 + contract lawyers just got fired this weekend, and they are saying the project is winding up...

Remember there are 800 of us."



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