Aug 12, 2019, 3:14 AM

@Derp said in The Work Thread:

I have two college degrees, a professional certificate, my CP/CLA (Certified Paralegal/Certified Legal Assistant) and ACP (Advanced Certified Paralegal) credentials in Discovery and Trial Practice, and I make half of the average salary of someone in an entry level position in my field, probably without those last two (which are fairly important) and tend to command an even higher salary.

Where do you work? It sounds like a shitty place to work.

Don't mind me, I have more degrees than you, of course, but I always find it strangely amusing when people start talking to me about "the odds of you winning the case" while I'm staring at actuarial tables and the graduate degree I have in a statistics-based field.

But you? You are working in a shitty place, it sounds, but for the following:

And I do the lion's share of the actual casework, too. The research, the briefs, the filings. The attorneys largely just take what I wrote and go talk about it in court.

I never ask my paralegals to do any of the following:

  • Research my briefs;
  • Write my briefs; or
  • File my briefs.

Because, frankly, if I'm being paid to argue them, I might as well have the professional integrity to make them myself, rather than pass off someone else's work as my own. The assholes who do the above are the same that will flog their paralegals for "getting it wrong," whilst they are the ones carrying the malpractice insurance and license to practice.

Hint: It's always the lawyer's responsibility to make sure work is done right, and don't let them forget that.