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SAN
FRANCISCO, April 1, 2009: The economy has not diminished
the commitment of legal departments and law firms to advancing
women and minorities, according to participants in the first
meeting of the Project for Attorney Retention (PAR)'s Diversity
and Flexibility Connection, held on March 27 at the Chicago
office of Schiff Hardin LLP.
"This
inaugural session demonstrated just how serious General
Counsel remain about working together with our outside counsel
to address diversity effectively, and about understanding
the connection between diversity and flexibility. We enjoyed
a frank discussion about how clients can best support, and
measure, law firms' performance with respect to retaining
and advancing diverse and women attorneys," said James
Potter, Senior Vice President, General Counsel & Secretary,
Del Monte Foods Company, who co-chairs the Connection with
PAR Co-Director Joan C. Williams.
The
group also discussed how to solve the challenges of providing
work-life balance in ways that are consistent with clients'
need for responsiveness. "The meeting allowed a mutual
exchange between general counsel and law firm leaders about
the challenges we-and they-face in retaining and promoting
proportionate numbers of women, including women of color,"
said Michael Nannes, Chairman of Dickstein Shapiro LLP.
The
Connection involves companies that have taken leadership
roles in the Call to Action, the program launched in 2004
in which law firms' clients have sent a clear message that
they expect their law firms to reflect the diversity generally
represented by the U.S. consumer. Currently, only 17% of
law firm partners are women, and only 4% are people of color.
The long hours lawyers work are one reason why these numbers
have risen so slowly. Nationwide, 95% of mothers age 25
- 44 work fewer than 50 hours a week, and 82% of women become
mothers. Even single women often find it harder to work
full time, according to the American Bar Association Commission
on Women's Visible Invisibility: Women of Color in Law Firms,
and other studies.
The
general counsel participating in the initiative, chosen
because of their leadership on issues of diversity, are
Dennis J. Broderick, Senior Vice President, General Counsel
& Secretary, Macy's Inc.; Catherine A. Lamboley, Senior
Vice President, General Counsel & Corporate Secretary
(retired), Shell Oil Company; Jeffrey J. Gearhart, Executive
Vice President and General Counsel, Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.;
Michele Coleman Mayes, Senior Vice President & General
Counsel, Allstate Insurance Company; Teri Plummer McClure,
Senior Vice President of Legal Compliance and Public Affairs,
General Counsel & Secretary, United Parcel Service;
Roderick A. Palmore, Executive Vice President, General Counsel
& Secretary, General Mills Inc.; James Potter, Senior
Vice President, General Counsel & Secretary, Del Monte
Foods Company; Thomas L. Sager, Senior Vice President &
General Counsel, DuPont Company; Douglas G. Scrivner, General
Counsel, Secretary & Compliance Officer, Accenture;
Laura Stein, Senior Vice President & General Counsel,
The Clorox Company; Leslie M. Turner, General Counsel, Coca-Cola
North America; and Danette Wineberg, Vice President, General
Counsel & Secretary, The Timberland Company.
The twelve law firm leaders participating in the connection
are Thomas Milch (Arnold & Porter LLP), Kent Gardiner
(Crowell & Moring LLP), Michael Nannes (Dickstein Shapiro
LLP), Lee Miller (DLA Piper), Steven Lowenthal (Farella
Braun + Martel LLP), Gordon Davidson (Fenwick & West
LLP), Steven B. Pfeiffer (Fulbright & Jaworski LLP),
Patrick Dunican (Gibbons P.C.), Keith Wetmore (Morrison
& Foerster LLP), Robert Riley (Schiff Hardin LLP), Thomas
Cole (Sidley Austin LLP), and Elliott Portnoy (Sonnenschein
Nath & Rosenthal LLP).
"These law firms were chosen because of their sustained
and effective efforts to support nonstigmatized flex programs,
including promotion of flex lawyers to partnership. Our
goal is to craft practical action steps for firms and clients
who want to step up their support of diversity and flexibility,"
noted PAR Co-Director Cynthia Calvert.
"It
was an exceptional first meeting, but it's only a start,"
commented Del Monte GC James Potter. The group expects to
meet again in June. PAR will release a report of the Connection's
work and recommendations in the fall of 2009, after which
the Connection will enter a second phase in which a wider
circle of law firms and in-house departments will be invited
to participate.
PAR,
a nonprofit organization that studies the advancement of
women lawyers and work/life issues for all lawyers, is headquartered
at University of California Hastings College of the Law.
Its co-directors are Joan C. Williams, distinguished professor
of law at Hastings, and Cynthia Thomas Calvert, a former
law firm litigation partner. PAR is funded by its law department
and law firm members. For more information, visit PAR's
website at www.pardc.org.
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