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In a bid to save money and to make the work process simpler, lawyers, as well as other professionals, have taken to sharing office space. They do not just share with co-workers, but with lawyers from other firms and with professionals from outside. There are advantages and drawbacks to this increasingly common practice of lawyers and shared office space.
Benefits of Shared Office Space
Most lawyers and other professionals share office space to reduce costs on everyday expenses like overheads. With remote working becoming increasingly common, offices are no longer the sole workplace. When resources are shared – not just the physical building and offices but also photocopiers, phone lines, internet connection, costs are reduced.
There is also a benefit to sharing human resources. Salaries are the most expensive single element of a business’ running costs. For two businesses to share an admin team can mean increased profit margin for both. If both businesses are run by the same person or people (for example, one is a law practice, the other in real estate), sharing resources is sensible.
Drawbacks of Shared Office Space
The practice of sharing office space is not forbidden under any professional conduct rules or guidance, but good practice certainly applies. Everything you do as a lawyer is bound to protect independence of practice, and the integrity of customer data. When offices are shared, there remains a risk to each of these things which could compromise your professional standing.
For example, lawyers representing separate businesses are not permitted to use joint letterheads. Similarly, external signs must not suggest that the lawyers work for the same practice; there is a high risk of solicitation which is strongly discouraged. This may be good reason for why you should share offices with non-lawyers, but this sets up other ethics problems such as client confidentiality and data security.
Practices That Could Disqualify You
Conflict of interest exists where there is risk of each lawyer taking adversaries in the same case. This has happened leading to disqualification of the respective lawyers. So long as there is no risk of such an event occurring (for example where one practices family law while the other is criminal law or contract law), this should not be an issue. Problems can occur when unassociated lawyers cover for each other when the other is out of office.
Always consult the ethics guidelines for both practices and industries. So long as such care is taken, office sharing can be mutually beneficial.
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Lawyers and their mental health is becoming more common. International campaigns over the last few years and celebrities opening up about their struggles means more than ever before, we are talking more. Some industries are prone to mental illness. Those who work in law know all too well the problems facing lawyers: Addiction to narcotics, prescription drugs and alcohol, Depression and anxiety, bi-polar disorders. A 2016 ABA study in association with the Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation finally confirmed what had been suspected for years – lawyers experience mental illness at much higher rates.
Mental Illness and Lawyers in 2019
A year after the study, the National Task Force on Attorney Well-Being set up for the purpose of making mental health recommendations to the law industry. Yet some commentators feel the recommendations do not go far enough. It does not focus so much on mental health as on substance abuse and alcoholism which is just one problem facing law professionals. Far less emphasis is given to depression, anxiety and other non-addiction related mental illnesses. According to a separate study, lawyers with depression and anxiety not related to addiction is about 20%.
Alcoholism is Still Problematic
That said, it is generally understood that lawyers consume too much alcohol. For decades, each state has had a Lawyer Assistance Programs to deal specifically with mental health problems caused by addiction – both alcohol and narcotics, legal and otherwise. Most have been successful at what they do, working to the same principles as Alcoholics Anonymous.
Far less attention has been paid to those other forms of mental illness. State LAPs do take calls from lawyers living with depression and anxiety, and they do refer such calls for external treatment. However, there is no dedicated service and it is this lack of professional service that those who work in the industry want to do something about.
General Depression Statistics
Depression is currently a leading life-limiting disability globally. Around ¼ of people will experience this type of mental illness during their life while the rate of depression in the general population at any given time is 7%. The ABA study mentioned at the beginning of the article found rates of depression among lawyers was considerably higher at 28% in the year prior to the survey. It’s been called “an epidemicâ€. Even more astounding, around 61% said they had suffered depression during their career. It must be reiterated that these figures do not relate to addiction.
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