Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Or you could you know, hire a nanny to care for your toddler during the day so you can work.
This. Hire a nanny or have your child in daycare.
Anonymous wrote:Or you could you know, hire a nanny to care for your toddler during the day so you can work.
Anonymous wrote: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?
Legal recruiters travel...to recruit people. Can you bring family to you?
Yep, recruiters travel plus it helps them to live in or travel frequently to a major market where the talent and clients are (such as NYC).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Littler has 100% work from home attorney jobs. See, e.g., https://recruiting2.ultipro.com/LIT1003LITME/JobBoard/0ece97ba-dd32-4d62-8c5e-1663f6040db1/OpportunityDetail?opportunityId=95fcbd90-b4b6-442c-aeb4-04dda0b43a69
If you don't want to click on the link, go to their website and look for the Case Smart attorney jobs. Those are 100% remote.
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?
Legal recruiters travel...to recruit people. Can you bring family to you?
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:Littler has 100% work from home attorney jobs. See, e.g., https://recruiting2.ultipro.com/LIT1003LITME/JobBoard/0ece97ba-dd32-4d62-8c5e-1663f6040db1/OpportunityDetail?opportunityId=95fcbd90-b4b6-442c-aeb4-04dda0b43a69
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:OP, you said you work for the federal government as an attorney. I’d keep a federal job in this economy if possible. I thought I heard something about paid leave to care for children in legislation recently. I know I’ve seen several threads on the forum about childcare issues and maybe someone has an idea that would work without you giving up a stable federal attorney job during a pandemic? Childcare is a mess right now, but I wouldn’t give up my federal job without a fight during this pandemic.
It seems like nearly everyone is teleworking right now in the federal government. Are you able to telework? Does your agency have field offices? Or could you transfer to an agency with field offices near your rural area? You’d be at home, but you’d still have a federal job with stability and benefits. And, you’d likely have a telework job for the foreseeable future/during the pandemic.