ABA Should Just Say No to Student Debt Report
A plea to the organization that considers itself the nation's foremost organization for attorneys.
July 24, 2015 at 02:30 PM
6 minute read
Dear ABA (especially members of the House of Delegates to the upcoming annual meeting in Chicago):
For years, America's dysfunctional system of financing legal education has produced too many lawyers for too few jobs—and too many law graduates with too much educational debt. A year ago, the ABA created yet another task force to consider the problem. The June 17, 2015, Final Report on the Financing of Legal Education embodies the failure of that task force's mission. It now goes to the House of Delegates for approval.
If the Delegates are interested in rehabilitating the ABA's credibility and restoring public confidence in the profession on an issue of critical importance to the country, they could take this simple step: Reject the task force report. That's right. Rather than giving the typical rubber stamp of approval amid flowery speeches thanking task force members for their time and effort in generating a hollow ABA statement summarizing the obvious, the House of Delegates could just say no.
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