Sentences with phrase «jobs in the law despite»

Not exact matches

Cuomo said that businesses in his Start - Up NY tax - break program should continue reporting to the state on how many jobs they create and how much money they invest in their operations, despite the requirement being eliminated by the budget he recently signed into law.
It's unlikely that Ms. Noerdlinger will lose her job, and despite the trouble with the unions, Mr. de Blasio and Police Commissioner Bill Bratton — who offers the mayor strong law enforcement credibility — maintain what the mayor has called «one of the best relationships I've had in all of my professional life.»
Limited - liability company 121 East Water Street, connected to DeFrancisco's wife and owner of the law firm's building, received $ 83,546 in Empire Zone tax credits, despite reporting only one job, the records show.
Despite his disdain for Greg, he realizes his son - in - law is the only option to take over the job.
As detailed by a 2014 report by the National Employment Law Project (NELP), manufacturing jobs in the US are now in the bottom half of all jobs in terms of pay, despite significant public subsidies and bailouts and widespread assumptions among politicians and the public that manufacturing is the backbone of the middle class.
Despite attempts by opponents to repeal the REPS law in recent years, a strong bipartisan group of legislators have voted numerous times to maintain the REPS, which has been a driving force behind NC's $ 7 billion clean energy industry and its 26,000 + jobs.
Despite this, in - house teams are overwhelmingly appointing law firms based on personal connections rather than a rational appraisal of which firms would be best for the job.
They do not seem to understand that law is different than many other professions such as the publicly employed doctors, nurses or teachers; and despite government and in - house legal jobs, law does not offer the wider array of corporate jobs available to accountants and engineers.
Despite juggling the transition into her new job alongside her final year of law school, she looks like a seasoned pro, carrying two BlackBerrys (one for personal use and one for council business) and reeling off the most important issues in her constituency.
A lawyer in Florida who was put out of business, along with every other real estate lawyer in her city, by a six - month long (that is all it took) campaign of predatory pricing, and who, needing to make a living, then took a job with that industry (but is no longer doing much law), went on to describe the level of service (despite the now four times greater cost than the lawyers ever charged) that her new employer and its non-competitors now deliver to the public as shit (her word).
Despite the perverse tendency of the competitive job market in law teaching to create a whole nation of law faculty who mimic their mentors at the elite schools, there has also been a recent increase in differentiation and specialization among law schools, as they are forced to pay more attention to local employment markets.
New law school graduates like the informality of the job - one new lawyer turned landman noted that «she can wear blue jeans to work instead of suits and high heels, the hours are pretty good despite the travel, and she doesn't have to bill in six - minute intervals like her friends working as associates at firms.»
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