*By which we mean “completely made up.”
I encourage you to read the report, which is truly fascinating. But for those of you who don’t have time to devour the whole thing, I have selected some of the more notable findings that have not been widely discussed:
- The number of recent law school graduates who have yet to find full-time employment practicing law remains at historically high levels. 20% of recent graduates are working as baristas, bartenders, or Pilates instructors, mostly in Belltown.
- Of the recent law school graduates who are practicing law full-time, 90% report that working as a barista, bartender, or Pilates instructor is starting to look pretty good right about now.
- When asked what motivates WSBA members to continue practicing law, the most common response among those under 35 years old was, “Are you kidding me? I have $100,000 in student loans to pay off.” The most common response among those 35 and over was, “Are you kidding me? I’m going to need $100,000 to get my kids through college in a few years.”
- 79% of WSBA members are 40 or more years of age, making this the bar’s largest diversity group. Members in this category reported the following as their greatest areas of concern: 1) finding work/life balance, 2) finding the restroom, 3) finding the volume control on their smartphones, and 4) finding a TV station that still shows Matlock.
- 72% of WSBA members reside in Western Washington, 10% reside in Central and Eastern Washington, and 18% reside outside the state. Among the Western Washington lawyers, 75% were unaware that the state extended eastward beyond the Cascade Mountains and had assumed “Eastern Washington” referred to Washington, D.C.
- Among WSBA members who identified themselves as civil litigators, 95% reported that they were “just on my way to court” and unavailable to answer the remaining questions. 85% of those respondents promised that their assistants would follow up on the questions right away. 5% of them did so.
