Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP. I currently work for the federal government. I was assuming an all telework job would be another government job or maybe working for one of the legal publishers? I don’t have the right personality to be a legal recruiter but maybe that’s a WFH job? In other words, I am willing to do something different from what I have been doing. Is there contract work that pays decently that you can do from home? If so, is it all document review?
What about a firm that does work with your agency? Any contacts with something like that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you're looking for a unicorn job that doesn't exist right now.
+1 and 100% WFH does not mean that you don't still need childcare. Every WFH agreement I've ever signed requires you to have childcare
Anonymous wrote:This is OP. I currently work for the federal government. I was assuming an all telework job would be another government job or maybe working for one of the legal publishers? I don’t have the right personality to be a legal recruiter but maybe that’s a WFH job? In other words, I am willing to do something different from what I have been doing. Is there contract work that pays decently that you can do from home? If so, is it all document review?
Anonymous wrote:I think you're looking for a unicorn job that doesn't exist right now.
Anonymous wrote:I need to move in with family if we’re going to be doing these covid closures on and off for a while. I can’t take care of my toddler and work. This isn’t sustainable. But my family lives in a tiny town with no jobs for me. I am a litigator but don’t care about being in a courtroom. Substantively I have experience in criminal and civil law and civil rights. Ivy League law school. Where would I even start to look for an all WFH job?
Anonymous wrote:The federal government probably won’t be hiring many people for some time due to the pandemic. However, I am working at home full time as an attorney advisor for the Social Security Administration. Normally, attorneys in my office can telework from home for three to four days a week. I used to be a state prosecutor, but this is a better job for raising a family due to less stress and a regular schedule. I went to a top ten law school and we have many great attorneys in the office that want work life balance and to live in a rural area.
The Social Security Administration has hearing offices all over the country and you just need to be within a two-hour drive to work at an office (which is not that bad with three or four days at home). My hearing office is in a city of 100,000 people, but I live an hour away in a town of 10,000 people. Salary is okay for a rural area. I’m a GS-12 now and there is sometimes overtime on the weekends to bump your salary up. I could possibly move up to a GS-13 senior attorney advisor someday. Anything higher and I’d have to find a different federal attorney job. There is the possibility of becoming an Administrative Law Judge for the Social Security Administration one day and you sound like you might have a chance with a good law school and litigation experience.
https://aljdiscussion.proboards.com/thread/4377/thoughts-on-decision-writer-positionexperience before coming to SSA.
https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/840767.page#16053461
Anonymous wrote:You'd be better off having your family move in with you.
Anonymous wrote:Why do you talk to your alumni office/network to see what's out there?