Law Firms May Hire Law Students as Unpaid Interns For Pro Bono Cases

Last week, the U.S. Department of Labor clarified its position on unpaid internships for law students at law firms, explaining that under federal law, unpaid internships are permissible in some circumstances.

The federalĀ Fair Labor Standards ActĀ (ā€œFLSAā€) generally does not permit individuals to volunteer to work unpaid for for-profit businesses such as law firms. The FLSA has a very broad definition of which individuals qualify as employees, and requires employers to pay their employees minimum wage and overtime (unless an exemption or exclusion applies).

However, law students are permitted to work as unpaid interns for private law firms under limited circumstances. The internship must be for the benefit of the intern, and must be similar to training which would be given in a law school clinical environment. The intern must not displace regular employees, and must work on non-fee-generating pro bono cases so that the law firm derives no immediate advantage from the internship. Additionally, the intern and law firm must understand that the intern is not entitled to wages, and that the intern is not necessarily entitled to a job at the end of the internship.

Recent law school graduates who have not yet passed any bar examination areĀ notĀ permitted to work as unpaid interns under the same circumstances. The Department of Labor reasoned that graduates have already completed their legal education, so law schools would not have the same ability to act as intermediaries between graduate interns and law firms.

To schedule your free initial consultation,Ā contact us onlineĀ or call (619) 342-8000 today!

SHARE

COMMENTS & DISCUSSIONS

Related Posts

w=2500

Federal Court Holds All Plaintiffs in Precedent-Setting Title IX Case Can Sue San Diego State University for RetaliationĀ Ā 

Haeggquist & Eck, LLP is proud to co-counsel on this landmark case with Bailey & Glasser, LLP and Casey Gerry  ...
Read More
Title IX sex discrimination case HAE

Title IX Sex Discrimination Case Against SDSU Moves Forward Again: Court Holds All Women Athletes Can Sue For Damages, Future Discrimination Can Be BarredĀ 

Haeggquist & Eck, LLP is proud to co-counsel on this landmark case with Bailey & Glasser, LLP and Casey Gerry.   ...
Read More
Court makes landmark decision in favor of student athletes in Title IX lawsuit

Sex Discrimination Case Against SDSU Moving Forward on All Counts: Equal Athletic Financial Aid, Retaliation, and Equal Treatment

SDSU Women Win Nationā€™s First Ruling that Female Student-Athletes Denied Equal Athletic Financial Aid Can Sue Their Schools for Damages ...
Read More
Translate Ā»