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  • Recent Posts

    • leftbehindjd
      LLM programs at least top ones prefer work experience over grades. Law school grades are the least important factor. Thigs like personal statements are weighed the most.
    • CB2021
      Curious what the other countries were. You would think that Canadian rates would only be below rates in NY, London, and some other leading European markets. 
    • leftbehindjd
      Yes, many. I've worked in several roles.  Some examples: Legal Compliance Specialist or similar JD Advantage positions (some require a JD and some prefer a JD). The Legal Compliance Specialist at Amazon pays about 140k USD and that was low ball in the USA during 2021. There are many others. And if you want to practice in the USA, being called in Canada means absolutely nothing other than the work experience part. You can write the 2 day bar exam in Massachusetts directly for example, no articling or call required from Canada. In Canada it could be some corporate roles but government comes to mind such as the many many different investigator, policy, manager positions. In some branches like human rights and employment standards like a quarter of the officers are ex lawyers or went to law school. The pay difference between a lawyer position and non lawyer position in government only shows up late career and it's marginal for early and mid career depending on the level of the position. To be clear, there are very few lawyer positions in government, but many regular positions which are staffed by law school grads or non practicing lawyers. As for the cost, law school in Canada is pretty cheap. You can do any program and it would cost just as much. Try doing any degree in the USA and it will cost way, way more. I don't see cost in Canada being an issue at all unless you're going to an overpriced Ontario school. The real cost is the opportunity cost salary wise of going to school or doing underpaid articling placements.  I've talked to lots of people who regretted articling or grinding long hours at firms when they now have a chill job in government which only pays slightly less with very good hours and chill work etc.; they all say they wished they would have joined government directly from law school. Some do exactly that. The ones in big law firms all seem to have funeral black suit pictures and seem to always be looking for a way out to in house or government.
    • C_Terror
      Back when I was a first year, I was involved in a cross border PE deal (~$500M CAD) involving a Canadian target. Naturally, Canadian lawyers were working round the clock and advanced most of the paper + SPA. Easily two times the amount of Canadian lawyers vs US ones. Near Closing, funds flow showed our bill at $500K CAD, while our US counterpart's (a V20) bill was $3M CAD. Their second year's (aka Canadian first year) rate was more than what our M&A partner was billing.  The going rate now for a mid level M&A attorney in NYC is something like $1200-$1400 USD an hour. Canadian firms just can't compete. Also as a side observation, it's interesting how large Canadian clients have no issue paying huge NYC rates for for US work but will haggle down Bay Street rates for substantially the same work, but in Canada.
    • Lawstudents20202020
      My boss was just telling a story about being involved on a file with lawyers from New York, London, and a few other countries. There was more Canadian lawyers involved, had more experience and put in more hours, and they had the cheapest bill at the end of the day.
    • am0229
      Waitlisted yesterday. 85.8% on UBC scale after drops, 161, general category. 
    • helloall
      Don't forget they give above market clerkship bonuses while Canadian firms give a grand total of 0 (zero) dollars!
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