Being young in the real
legal profession (social welfare law) must be a lot like being young
elsewhere in the UK at the moment. The chances are that you haven't
got a job, are scrabbling by you fingernails to survive and, to add
insult to injury, increasingly you are expected to do unpaid
internships just to fill gaps in your CV so that you can get a paying
job at some dim and distant point on the horizon.
You will probably have
huge debts from putting yourself through university, then law school.
As many members of the admirable group Young Legal Aid Lawyers have
recently said (find them here http://www.younglegalaidlawyers.org/),
it's actually quite insulting to be expected to make money for the
firm where you have achieved a placement, without being paid
anything for your time.
I respect that. The
labourer is worthy of his or her hire.
At worst interns are
stuck at the photocopier doing a minimum wage job without a minimum
wage. At best you take witness statements, produce bundles for
hearings, sit on the phone to speak to benefit call centres or the
Legal Aid Agency (actually, that's one of the worst tasks) but you're
struggling to survive in London.
Unpaid internships are
cheap for employers. There is good anecdotal evidence that they
perpetuate the success of the economically privileged . Only those
who have family who can support them can make it through the lean
years when you're starting as a lawyer. Doh!
Let me nevertheless ask
you to consider volunteering at Hackney Community Law Centre for a 3
month internship, or suggesting this to someone else who might be at
a loose end. You can find the details here.
http://www.hclc.org.uk/2014/05/were-recruiting-3-new-interns/
The reason we are
asking you to volunteer for 4 days a week with an expense allowance
of only £80 (currently unsponsored) is that we bloody need
you. Actually, Hackney and east London needs you. I'm going to put on
my Kitchener moustache.
The benefits cuts that
we have seen in the last 2 years are as savage as I have seen in 20
years of practice. The levels of need are higher than I can remember.
Colleagues who have been in the game for 40 years or more agree that
there is something serious going on.
After all, there is a
reason that numbers of people relying on food banks has shot into the
stratosphere.
We want you to help
families who have been stranded in this country with the wrong
immigration papers so that children in our schools can eat properly.
We want you to help
really disabled people who lose their sickness benefits win on
appeal at a benefits tribunal. 40% win anyway, 68% win with your
help.
We want you to help the
homeless mum we saw today who, due to a Council error (they lost the
benefits form) has to take her disabled son out of special needs
school when she is made homeless and placed in emergency
accommodation out of London. Exporting London's poor is no solution
to a kinder future.
We want you to help
fight race claims when an employer is racist, sex claims when an
employer is sexist or homophobic, and we recognise that many worship
their religion in loving kindness and should be allowed to do so for
all our sake.
Law Centres are voluntary organisations. We do have salaried staff, but without volunteers we would lose a reason to exist and would struggle to survive. I want to thank two of
our volunteer interns for the important work that they have done for
us recently.
Erwin helped a client obtain a backpayment of Housing Benefit covering seven months. It is possible that thanks to his hard work a family of 4 may keep its home. Shame legal aid for benefits has been all but abolished.
Ishaq helped Hilton and this week 2 clients were recognised as refugees. You wait forever for a bus and then 3 arrive. I'll be disappointed if we don't get a third victory soon. Shame that immigration legal aid has been cut to the bone.
Frankly, we're tilting at windmills. Please come and tilt at our windmills. If no-one is prepared to try, we will be a smaller and meaner society. And while you're at it, please celebrate all our wonderful volunteers.
Be our intern. Make a difference.