We have a dust-up between Fordham
Law School
, instigated
or certainly escalated by its Dean, William
Michael Treanor
, and Reed Smith,
which, a few days ago, canceled on-campus interviews scheduled for this week and next at Fordham. Unfortunately, students who had already signed up for those interviews
are reported “to have lost a potentially valuable interview slot.”  (Being unable to reschedule something worthwhile for those slots strikes me as the triumph of bureaucracy over common sense, but we’ll let that pass for the moment.)

Dean Treanor didn’t take this lying down, as
first reported
by Above the
Law, and released a memo to the “Fordham Law School community” banning Reed
Smith from participating in on-campus interviewing for the next five years.  The
Dean explained:

Ethics and professionalism are at the heart of the legal profession. At Fordham
Law, we strive to impart to our students the importance of these principles
through our curriculum, clinics, and activities–and during the job search
process. The importance of law schools instilling the tenets of professionalism
in students is a theme we continually hear from legal employers.

[…]

While disappointing, Reed Smith’s action is more disheartening because of
the lack of professionalism it conveys. The firm could have made its decision
earlier; in fact, it received its interview schedule prior to canceling its
participation. In my seven years as Dean, no other firm has canceled its
interviews after the schedule was released. […]

At Fordham Law, we require our students to conduct themselves with the utmost
professionalism, and we expect employers to demonstrate the same high standards.

Best,

Bill

Reed Smith’s response today, also covered on ATL, reads
in part
:

Like every major law firm, Reed Smith is faced with a very difficult set
of circumstances brought on by the global recession which has dramatically
reduced the demand for legal services. This has resulted in layoffs, deferrals,
fewer offers and now consideration about whether to have a 2010 Summer Program,
and if so, at what size. Firms have taken a variety of approaches to handling
the many issues raised by this environment. In all instances, Reed Smith has
tried to make carefully considered business decisions and has communicated
with the people affected by those decisions.

We have decided to maintain a 2010 Summer Program, although it will be a
smaller program than in prior years [and therefore] we decided to reduce
the number of schools we will visit for on-campus interviews. We immediately
and directly discussed our decision with all the law schools affected, including
Fordham. [W]hile we won’t be coming on campus, we will still be considering
students from their schools by reviewing resumes and conducting in-office
interviews.

Fordham is an outstanding law school and we regret that our decision has
caused problems for them. Reed Smith has many Fordham graduates in our lawyer
ranks; all of them valued members of our team.

Michael
Pollack
, Reed Smith’s Global Head of Strategy (and–disclosure–a
friend, but I haven’t spoken to him on this topic) also had this to say yesterday:

[T]his certainly isn’t a situation the firm was looking for and he suspects
the ban isn’t a good situation for the firm or the students. He said he hopes
Treanor would reconsider.

“We’re trying to run a business just like he’s trying to run a law
school and I appreciate the pressures that he is under and I would hope he
would appreciate the pressures we’re under.  […]  It’s
unfortunate that it didn’t fit within Fordham’s schedule and calendar, but
we’re trying to manage this thing as best we can.

“Does interviewing in August make sense when you’re trying to project
[what your needs will be] two years from now?” Pollack asked. “I
suspect not.”

Oh, and for the record, James Leipold, executive director of
NALP, was contacted by the diligent Legal Intelligencer reporter and
had this to say:

Leipold wouldn’t comment on the specifics of the situation between Reed Smith
and Fordham. Both are members of the NALP. But he did say there is nothing
in NALP guidelines that would govern a situation like this. While the association
has specifics on timing for when offers must be given or accepted, for example,
it doesn’t have anything regarding when firms can pull out of OCI.

“This particular fact pattern I’ve never seen before,” he said. “It’s
new” like many things in this market.

Credit Leipold for candor:  Many things in this market are
indeed, as he puts it with intentional or unintentional drollery, “new.”

May
we now review the bidding?

  • We are in the midst of the most pounding and serious recession of the post-WWII
    era;
  • 125 major law firms have
    announced or had confirmed layoffs
    (as of July)
    totaling 10,723 people, 4,015 attorneys and 6,708 staff;
  • AmLaw Firm #16 (Reed
    Smith) decides that it probably can’t, after all, realistically project its
    associate hiring needs two years hence;
  • And faced with a decision (presumably) to go through with sham interviews
    or to honestly announce its intentions, it chooses B;
  • Whereupon the Dean of US
    News law school #30
    , donning the robes of “ethics and professionalism,”
    decides to deprive his students of on-campus interviewing opportunities
    with that firm for the next five years.

I readily admit that there are many dimensions of law firm management which
baffle me, but I can usually understand the motivations and
endorse the goodwill of those behind the decision-making.

But I confess, Dear Readers, I find myself utterly over-matched by how they
make decisions in Academe.  It is a bridge too far for my brain.

Further
affiant sayeth not.

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