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Bose McKinney & Evans, Indianapolis’ fifth largest law firm, is cutting 25 employees, including 10 attorneys, because
of the recession.
This is the first public announcement in Indiana of any lawyer layoffs as a result of the economic downturn.
Ken Crook, Bose managing partner, said the “reduction in force” would affect two paralegals and 13 support staff
in addition to the attorney cuts â?? all at the downtown Indianapolis office. He announced the cuts March 26 and told
Indiana Lawyer they would be effective within a week. The layoffs affected employees in the litigation, business, real estate,
and intellectual property practice groups.
Crook said the recession continues to affect the firm’s clients and therefore certain
practices within the firm. He added, “the silver lining, if there is one” is the realign- ment will help position
the firm to continue to effectively serve its clients into the future.
Firm management met with employees the day the cuts were announced to discuss how the layoffs will impact the firm. Crook
said they provided some more information about the reduction beyond what was formally announced. He declined to talk more
about what employees were told.
He also said there was no correlation that the reduction came near the end of the first quarter, and he declined to talk
about how the firm decided which positions to cut.
These cuts are on top of the 11 administrative and operational staff positions the firm eliminated in January.
Other Indiana firms have also reduced support staff in recent months but deny those were because of the tumultuous economy.
Many other firms nationally are making similar cuts because of the economy and these measures are painful but necessary,
Crook said.
Looking ahead, he anticipates the economy will be soft through 2009. However, the firm will continue its summer associate
program.
Bose McKinney & Evans had 137 attorneys as of Jan. 22, 2009, according to the Indianapolis Business Journal’s list
of largest Indianapolis-area law firms. The firm has two offices each in Indianapolis and Northwest Indiana and one each in
West Lafayette, Washington, D.C., and Raleigh, N.C.
Every law firm
Don’t read too much into the Indianapolis attorney layoffs, said William Henderson, associate professor of law at Indiana
University Maurer School of Law â?? Bloomington and director of the Law Firms Working Group, a research network devoted
to the study of the law firm.
“Every corporate law firm in the country is experiencing a downturn because their clients are,” Henderson said.
Henderson said that for a mid-size, Midwest market, Indianapolis’ market is stronger than most.
Most law firms are based on a model that requires firm growth, he said, but it’s one that doesn’t work well with
today’s economy. As firms build their workforce, they also incur more costs â?? more people, more space, more
technology.
“Clients are hurting for cash flow so they’re looking at their legal budgets for the first time,” said
Henderson, who rhetorically asked where money is going to come from to support all firm’s attorneys if there’s
no increased revenue and the work isn’t there.
There’s no way of counting how many attorneys have been let go in Indiana or nationwide because many firms make cuts
with no public announcements and say it’s because of performance, even if it’s really because of the economy,
said Henderson. That reasoning makes it harder for those who have lost their jobs, he believes.
“I’d rather be let go because of the economy. The reason is less hurtful and painful than a stealth layoff,”
said Henderson, noting that it’s easier to tell a potential employer you were let go because of the economy than for
performance.
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