Anonymous wrote:Mine, in house lawyer work from home 3 or more days a week and 10 to 6 hours, 270k, routine work sometimes but occasionally work on cool cutting edge matters, opportunities to rotate in the large legal dept if interested
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like most of you lawyers don't work very hard.
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like most of you lawyers don't work very hard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In-house jobs. You will be dealing employment law, etc., but it is closer to a job/job than being a lawyer at a firm as you would work normal business hours and such.
Posted by someone who doesn't work in house. My in house job certainly isn't like that. No way could I stick to working 40 hours only and get the work done.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I am almost exactly like you. Been at a big firm for almost six years, was recently told that I am on partnership track, and am so miserable and get so little time with my kids that I am ready to jump ship. I've applied to nearly ten government jobs, though, and haven't even gotten an interview. Totally bummed.
Keep applying. I think I probably applied to 30, and that was before the crash. Most advertised government jobs are already earmarked for someone, so you have to just keep applying and hope to strike an actual opening. At the same time, you should be networking; although I was able to get my job by sending in applications, most of my friends in similar positions ended up making it work through back channels, which of course results in a partially earmarked opening (as opposed to many which are actually earmarked for internal candidates).
I would recommend staying away from HUD. OGC management there is awful and morale is really low, which makes the environment soul-crashing.
Anonymous wrote:DOT, FRA, FERC, HHS, HUD, VA, etc. Just jobs, not soul-crushing BIG LAW or high-stress DOJ.
Anonymous wrote:Social Security also has many positions in Bailey's Crossroada/Falls Church with good mobility to GS-14 level and possibly beyond. Don't know what's open right now. There is a Bright Horizons on site.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In-house jobs. You will be dealing employment law, etc., but it is closer to a job/job than being a lawyer at a firm as you would work normal business hours and such.
Posted by someone who doesn't work in house. My in house job certainly isn't like that. No way could I stick to working 40 hours only and get the work done.
I am an in house transactional lawyer and rarely ever work more than 40hrs...maybe one week a year when it is necessary. I am one of hundreds of mid level attys in my company so work is spread around so you can have good work life balance and we have legal assistants to lean on. I am the the one making 270k and working from home most of the week.
DOT, FRA, FERC, HHS, HUD, VA, etc. Just jobs, not soul-crushing BIG LAW or high-stress DOJ.
Woah, 22:36 you're CRAZY to recommend DOJ. I have a LOT of friends there (I can think of 8 off the top of my head) and they work way harder than me, and I head my practice group and work my ass off. They sleep in the office. No joke.