No more room at the bench, time to start getting rid of lawyers.

Subject:No more room at the bench, time to start getting rid of lawyers.
Date:Mon, 11 Jan 2010 03:33:07 +0000 (UTC)
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-greenbaum8-
2010jan08,0,4457698.story?track=rss

The American Bar Assn. allows unneeded new law schools to open and refuses
to regulate them. The government should consider taking steps to stop the
flow of attorneys into a saturated marketplace.

Remember the old joke about 20,000 lawyers at the bottom of the sea being
"a good start"? Well, in an interesting twist, thousands of lawyers now
find themselves drowning in the unemployment line as the legal sector is
being badly saturated with attorneys.

Part of the problem can be traced to the American Bar Assn., which
continues to allow unneeded new schools to open and refuses to properly
regulate the schools, many of which release numbers that paint an overly
rosy picture of employment prospects for their recent graduates. There is
a finite number of jobs for lawyers, and this continual flood of graduates
only suppresses wages. Because the ABA has repeatedly signaled its
unwillingness to adapt to this changing reality, the federal government
should consider taking steps to stop the rapid flow of attorneys into a
marketplace that cannot sustain them.

>From 2004 through 2008, the field grew less than 1% per year on average,
going from 735,000 people making a living as attorneys to just 760,000,
with the Bureau of Labor Statistics postulating that the field will grow
at the same rate through 2016. Taking into account retirements, deaths and
that the bureau's data is pre-recession, the number of new positions is
likely to be fewer than 30,000 per year. That is far fewer than what's
needed to accommodate the 45,000 juris doctors graduating from U.S. law
schools each year.

This jobs gap is even more problematic given the rising cost of tuition.
In 2008, the median tuition at state schools for nonresidents was $26,000
a year, and $34,000 for private schools -- and much higher in some states,
such as California. Students racked up an average loan debt in 2007-08 of
$59,000 for students from public law schools and $92,000 for those from
private schools, according to the ABA, and a recent Law School Survey of
Student Engagement found that nearly one-third of respondents said they
would owe about $120,000.

Such debt would be manageable if a world of lucrative jobs awaited the
newly minted attorneys, but this is not the case. A recent working paper
by Herwig Schlunk of Vanderbilt Law School contends that with the
exception of some of those at the best schools, going for a law degree is
a bad investment and that most students will be "unlikely ever to dig
themselves out from" under their debt. This problem is exacerbated by the
existing law school system.

Despite the tough job market, new schools continue to sprout like weeds.
Today there are 200 ABA-accredited law schools in the U.S., with more on
the way, as many have been awarded provisional accreditation. In
California alone, there are 21 law schools that are either accredited or
provisionally accredited, including the new one at UC Irvine.

The ABA cites antitrust concerns in refusing to block new schools, taking
a weak approach to regulation. For example, in 2008 the ABA created an
accreditation task force to study the need for changes, but saddled it
with a narrow charter. In the end, it proposed only cosmetic changes and
rejected out of hand the possibility of giving up control over
accreditation, calling the idea not viable and "draconian."

The task force also raised the possibility that if the ABA gave up its
accreditation authority, the Federalist Society, a conservative-leaning
interest group, could take over that job. This is an intellectually
dishonest red herring, likely injected to divert attention from the idea's
merits. The Federalist Society would have no reason to do this because the
technical, expensive accrediting process does not gibe with its mission,
nor would the Department of Education be likely to give it such authority.

The ABA has also refused to create and oversee an independent method of
reporting graduate data. Postgraduate employment information generally
provides the most useful facts for prospective students to study in
deciding whether to go to law school.

In many cases, the data that schools now furnish are based on self-
reported information, skewing the results because unemployed and low-
paying grads are less likely to report back. Law schools do this because
they want the rosiest picture possible for the influential rankings given
by U.S. News & World Report. Despite its ample resources, the ABA has
rebuffed calls to monitor the schools to get more accurate data, calling
the existing framework an effective "honor system."

Based on what happened with the accreditation task force, the ABA is not
likely to force change; it is too intertwined with the law schools. ABA
groups -- such as the task force, which was chaired by a former dean --
are stacked with school officials who have no incentive to change the
status quo. This is why the ABA should get out of the accreditation
business completely.

Unlike other professional fields such as medicine and public health, whose
preeminent professional organizations do not have control over the
accreditation of schools and programs, the ABA exercises unfettered power
over the accreditation of law schools.

The American Dental Assn., the nation's leading dental group, offers a
model for the ABA to follow. It accredits schools but assiduously guards
the profession and has allowed respected dental schools such as the ones
at Emory, Georgetown and Northwestern to close for economic reasons and to
prevent market saturation. Such a move by the bar association would be
unprecedented. Dental schools go even further to protect the profession's
integrity by collectively boycotting the U.S. News rankings.

The U.S. Department of Education should strip the ABA of its accreditor
status and give the authority to an organization that is free of conflicts
of interest, such as the Assn. of American Law Schools or a new group.
Although the AALS is made up of law schools, it is an independent,
nonprofit, academic -- not professional -- group, which could be expected
to maintain the viability and status of the profession, properly regulate
law schools, curtail the opening of new programs and perhaps even shut
down unneeded schools. The AALS has cast a very skeptical eye on for-
profit schools, compared with the ABA's weak hands-off accreditation
policies.

Although these would be unprecedented moves, they are necessary. The legal
profession must be saved from itself.


--
Nancy Pelosi, Democrat criminal, accessory before and after the fact, to
House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Charles B. Rangel of New York's
million dollar tax evasion. Charles B. Rangel is still under
"investigation" by a "closed door" House Ethics Committee.

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