@eppink

November 30th, 2010

Ritchie Eppink

Legal Aid Lawyer

Justice Architect at Idaho Legal Aid Services, Inc.

Member, National Lawyers Guild

Today we’re tweeting with legal aid lawyer, justice architect and friend to the poor and oppressed @eppink

This is the funnest thing I’ve done today (I hope). What do I do first?

  1. @Eppink, thank you for joining us today on Twitter. Tell us: who is @Eppink?
    I’m about home, family, hard times, whiskey, salvation, rebellion, patriotism, tragedy, rowdiness, heartbreak &love. &Mother. & God.
    And my opinions throughout the day are prob not those of my employer. Just to be clear.
  2. Understood. Tell us about your law practice.
    I’m a legal aid lawyer, providing civil legal services to disadvantaged families who can’t really access them any other way.
  3. Can you talk a bit more about your clients? Who are they? What types of problems are they facing?
    Low-income families (<$2300/mo fam of 4) in crisis- e.g., abt to be homeless, escaping violent abuse, losing access to meds.
  4. You wrote that 80% of the poor seeking legal aid are turned away. How do you decide which cases to take on?
    We set formal priorities w/ client and board input. & then each case is assessed for merit and potential impact. It’s tough.
  5. What happens to the ones you can’t help? Do they have other options?
    Great q’n. Pro bono or self-help is about it. The latter is very hard for those w/ little education and under v high stress.
  6. Can you tell us about one of the more significant client representations you’ve had?
    I have some bad faith foreclosure cases rt now w/ major legal import. Most signif to me tho are the dozens who’ve cried in gratitude
  7. That must be extremely satisfying. What do you tell every new client before you start working for them?
    We look together at all that’s going on & try to minimize stressors, so they can make good decisions while in a tough spot.
  8. What’s the most active area of your practice at the current time? Is that typical?
    It’s all off the charts. Job loss, budget cuts, & record income disparity are leaving all kinds in our lobby. I hope it’s atypical.
  9. Me too. You’ve called yourself an “emergency room lawyer.” What does that mean?
    To be effective at this work, you can only triage, treat, and move on. & some DV clients literally arrive at my desk bloody.
  10. What’s the hardest part about being a legal aid lawyer?
    Limited resources. No $$ usually for depos, fancy trial prep, etc. It’s like trying to fix a transmission w/ a hammer & some twine.
  11. So what can be done to improve the current state of legal aid in this country? Is money the biggest obstacle? The only one?
    Besides $$, reduce the cost & complexity of common legal experiences (divorce, bankruptcy). & require the bar to serve all.
  12. You’ve said that you were homeless before starting law school. How did you get from there to here? What did it teach you?
    W/ lots of help from friends, family, & mentors. It’s taught me the honesty, humility, and common sense that too many lawyers need.
  13. How do you describe what you do to people you meet at a cocktail party?
    I design justice. Then build it with sweat, beer, and carefully chosen words. And then defend it from its enemies.
  14. That’s fantastic! What led you to become active on Twitter? Has it been a worthwhile endeavor?
    I joined @twitter with the surge at start of @sxsw 2007. It motivates me to keep track of caselaw & legislation, mainly.
  15. Are you active in other Web 2.0 / social media channels? Which ones?
    Not really. Can’t stomach @facebook, decided @foursquare wasn’t helping much, but do keep up w/ @linkedin. I mean to keep it simple.
  16. What is the most significant issue currently facing the legal profession?
    The profession handles the #accesstojustice problem like an alcoholic in denial. We’re a public utility leaving millions in the cold
  17. What will the legal landscape look like in 10 years?
    In the USA, we live in Rome. If we don’t check our decadence, it will look ever more embarrassing for the bench and bar.
  18. What would you do if you weren’t a lawyer?
    Easiest one yet! The same thing: “leave something of sweetness and substance in the mouth of the world,” however I could.
  19. How do you want to be remembered? (And no fair giving the same answer as the last question….)
    How abt another quote? What you leave behind is not what is engraved in stone monuments, but what is woven into the lives of others.
  20. What do you do when you’re not working?
    Grow & handcraft vege food, hunt out sublime nooks of NW wilderness, bike around cars in DT Boise. And most of all, share.
  21. What advice can you pass along to lawyers currently under- or unemployed due to the economic crisis?
    1 Network to build trust & respect. 2 Soak in CLE whenever possible. 3 Be vigilant to avoid emotional and career dead ends.
  22. And finally, what advice do you have for people going to law school today?
    If yr going b/c you want to help people, then think about other ways before you commit. If yr going for more $$, don’t.

Great advice. Thank you so much for answering our questions today. It was a pleasure getting to know you and your practice

This was an unmitigated blast! Thanks ever so much for the opportunity.

@AKunkel_GPLaw

October 26th, 2010

Anne Kunkel

Commercial real estate, agriculture, and transactional lawyer

Partner, Givens Pursley LLP

Board Member, Sustainable Futures

Today we’re tweeting w/ Idaho RE lawyer, foodie & winie, & Mountain States Super Lawyers “Rising Star in real estate”

  1. @AKunkel_GPLaw, thank you for joining us on Twitter. Tell us, who is @AKunkel_GPLaw?
    Second year partner at a mid-size full service firm, in Boise, Idaho, married to a State Appellate PD, 3 cats, 1 dog.
  2. Tell us about your law practice.
    Commercial real estate, ag law and biz/corp transactions, lending, with a good measure of liquor licensing thrown in
  3. Everything is better with a good measure of liquor licensing…. What type of clients do you represent?
    Entrepreneurs, banks, restaurateurs, business folks, farmers, you name it, no one kind of client, peeps who want to do deals
  4. That’s a diverse group. What is the single most important legal issue affecting them?
    Lack of available financing. Deals there, pple want to them, but finding $ is impossible, multifamily sector is strong tho
  5. What do you tell every new client before you start working for them?
    It may seem expensive but it’s a lot cheaper to do the deal right first than litigate about it later. Sorry litigator tweeps
  6. Tell us about one of the more significant client representations you’ve had.
    BoDo, mixed use prjct w/ enviro, bond, reg, city development participation, finance elements. gr8 exp 4 then baby lawyer
  7. Why do your clients hire you?
    being dealmaker instead of dealbreaker. Clients don’t want lawyers killing deals, think outside the box to get things done
  8. What’s the most active area of your practice at the current time? Is that typical?
    REO properties, smaller one off transactions, business restructuring. No, practice was 80% finance before Gr8 Recession
  9. You touched on this briefly: how is the economic crisis affecting your clients? Are you seeing any signs of recovery?
    Lack of financing stopped deals. Yes, creative financing helping deals 2 get some traction. Non RE biz and HC pretty strong
  10. You’re on the Board of Sustainable Futures (http://bit.ly/bmYue4). How does that experience make you a better lawyer?
    Important to realize its not all about making $, but helping people. It humbles you, puts even the bad times in perspective
  11. How is real estate law evolving in response to the growing demand for green building and sustainability?
    lot of uncertainty b/c of differing standards. Hinders decision making, a great time for RE attys to counsel and advise.
  12. How do you describe what you do to people you meet at a cocktail party?
    I am a “dirt/business lawyer” with a niche specialty in liquor, liquor licenses that is.
  13. How do you generally market your practice? Does social media play a big part in your marketing efforts?
    Good wrk, word of mouth, prof org m-ships/r-ships, community involvement. Still getting handle on how 2 best use FB & Twtr
  14. How long have you been active on Twitter? Has your Twitter strategy changed over that time?
    bit over a yr. Use more actively for info; thought sharing, communication, connection with community, no longer on sidelines
  15. Have your Web 2.0 activities led to any additional referrals or client engagements?
    some based on website 411, but rly allows me 2 keep in touch w peers leading 2 referrals. Relationships bring clients
  16. Indeed. Let’s switch gears here: what is the most significant issue currently facing the legal profession?
    Maintaining quality standards in a super fast communication world. Good work still takes time, clients need to understand
  17. What will the legal landscape look like in 10 years?
    Billable hour will be exception, more flat fees, lifestyle choice will structure practice instead of $ no hard offices
  18. What would you do if you weren’t a lawyer?
    independent wealth, no really, I’d love to go to culinary school, or event planning, using management skills I’ve learned
  19. How do you want to be remembered?
    Prof: a person who gets things done, trustworthy. Personal: the most positive pessimist ever met, more than my job, sincere
  20. What do you do when you’re not working?
    Worry about not working. Seriously, watch a lot of sports (Go UK!), golf (badly), volunteer, garden, search out delish food
  21. What advice can you pass along to lawyers currently under- or unemployed due to the economic crisis?
    Its just $, don’t get lost in the stress, maintain r/ships, pple survived worse economy. Need to follow own advice at times
  22. Finally, what advice do you have for people going to law school today?
    Think of JD outside of the trad’l practice. JDs open lots of doors, not just law & Econ will get better, always does

Thank you so much, Anne, for your good advice and a great interview. I enjoyed learning about you and your practice

Thanks. This was good fun.

    TWEN·TY-TWO TWEETS

    \twən-tē tü twētz\ (noun)

    1. live Twitter interviews with practicing lawyers who tweet
    2. a forum where lawyers tell their stories, one tweet at a time
    3. the hottest legal marketing mash-up on Twitter

     

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