Leaving the law
Laura Clenshaw discusses lawyers' exodus from the profession
When the Solicitors Regulation Authority's (SRA) equivalent means qualification was introduced last summer, many, including myself, dubbed it the 'paralegal shortcut.'
The profession was horrified that paralegals, the background, foundation pillars of the legal workforce, who for so long held a subservient position to the more effervescent and glittering trainees and newly qualifieds of the legal world, could bypass years of distinguished training in the form of the LLB, legal practice course, and the prestigious two-year training contract.
Yet, as the story developed, as with most things, all was not as it seemed. The SRA unveiled one of the first applicants to qualify through said route, Robert Houchill, who explained the pathway was anything but a shortcut.
Involving five years spent working as a paralegal, an administratively heavy application form, and endeavours to source old contacts for references, the paralegal ‘shortcut’ appeared anything but a walk in the park. In addition, and in the words of Junior Lawyers Division (JLD) chair, Max Harris, the route should have had the potential to shake up the legal market. Harris believes many paralegals unfortunately do not know about the alternative route, and there is concern over how firms will perceive the new pathway. Note well: law firms are notoriously risk averse.
Meanwhile, amid the shrinking number of training contracts – the latest Law Society statistics found that, from August 2013 to July 2014, 5,001 training contracts were registered, a 6 per cent decrease from the previous year – and panic over whether to stick with laborious training contract applications or to be a modern-day maverick with an equivalent means qualification, Young Lawyer has investigated the new breed of entrepreneurial lawyers, who threw in the towel of 9 to 5 work (or 6am to 12am if you’re in the City), and decided to use their legal skills for different purposes.
When asked what acted as the biggest deterrent to aspiring lawyers, the lawyers-who-left-the-law commented on the shortage of training contracts (and course providers’ unwillingness to reflect this ever-decreasing number in the number of places offered to students), the ageing LLP model and route to partnership, which lengthens every time an extra stepping stone sprouts along the way (senior associate and legal director are fairly new vocabulary to describe City-slicker solicitors), and, of course, the disillusionment of a lawyer’s working life. As already mentioned, does anyone, apart from a brave few, want to work a 90-hour week any more?
So, what did those who left the profession do, and how have they used their skills? For starters, there are those who abandoned the law entirely, such as barrister turned barista Heidi Cotton, who opened her own café in Nottinghamshire. Then there are those such as Robert Birkett, whose website, www.leavinglaw.com, offers careers advice to those desperate to get out.
So, if you’re finding it impossible to come by a training contract, or are desperately trying to demonstrate your worth as a paralegal, all is not lost. As the lawyers-who-left prove, the law is as lucrative an area as ever.
The next issue of Young Lawyer will publish this month at www.younglawyer.com SJ
Laura Clenshaw is managing editor of Solicitors Journal and editor of Young Lawyer