Landlords, though I'd be curious for both sides. |
Why did you opt to do so and how long did you remain? How did you survive? |
Depends on what other debt/expenses she has. $120k could easily get eaten up by the slog to pay off law school, medical costs, any dependents (those of us in our 40s not infrequently end up supporting our parents even if we don’t have kids of our own). |
Bullshit. Show me an attorney job paying $30K a year. That’s $15 an hour – Target will pay you more than that as long as you can stock shelves and prove you’re not addicted to heroin. Not an attorney so have no vested interest either way. But $30K for a lawyer is absurd. |
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Did this person give details? Does she have huge debt? So many of these people who tell their stories on social media don't give the details. I am guessing this person is saddled with debt and got a cr*ppy job, or just low paying.
So many people are clueless about how to live financially responsible lives. I was one of them, but learned real quick. |
| I signed up for a civil service list and got a canvass letter for a Couny attorney job paying 33k. This was a year or two ago! I also know a woman with decades of experience making 50k (ten years ago when she had been barred for 30 years, and she still works there and I doubt makes more than 60) doing tenant advocacy. And this is all in a NYC suburb in Long Island with the second highest property taxes in the country. |
NP and there is generally no money in representing tenants. If they can't pay their rent they can't afford a lawyer so if they qualify they use legal services. When I worked there starting salary was about $50K with small annual increases. There might be some money representing commercial tenants but that isn't what people consider landlord/tenant law. LL side your best bet is getting an apartment complex to use you so you're doing batches of cases for them when you appear in court. Downside is you're not going to be paid a lot for each case. Many LL lawyers use paralegals to prepare all the paperwork (some better than others but most tenants are not represented so maybe it doesn't matter). |
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Look at this data. Law starting salary distribution is bimodal - two huge humps in the chart, for biglaw around 220K and about 60K for everyone else.
https://www.nalp.org/salarydistrib |
Thanks. I'm a small landlord and was quoted $250/hour for an attorney but had no clue how many hours iare typically billed (10 hours? 100?) per hearing. |
It shouldn't be much as most of the work is just filling in forms with some third party costs for the process server. However, if you are their only case in that court that day travel time and time waiting for the case to be called can add up. Larger LL get a better deal per case because the travel and waiting time is split among them. |