Work-life balance is increasingly an issue for burned-out lawyers of both genders, parents in particular. Law students interviewing at firms increasingly ask whether they’ll have a life once they have a job. Our roundup keeps track of this hot topic for you.



Patricia Oliver, who came to the firm a little more than a year ago from Heller Ehrman, said the concierge has been more than a trivial convenience for her. Several weeks ago, she ran into a storm of car troubles, from locking her keys in the trunk to a flat tire to a fender bender.

“I called the concierge, Joel, and said, ‘I don’t know what to do,’” she said. “He said, ‘Don’t worry about anything � when do you need your rental car?’”

It wasn’t just the 10 to 20 hours he saved her on all of her auto woes; it was also the psychological effect of having the stress lifted, she said.

Oliver said that Liner Yankelevitz has something of a spa-like atmosphere in general. From its light-filled Westwood space to the veggie breakfast burritos, there’s something about it that makes her feel healthier, she said.

“It feels like a place of healing,” she said. “When I see my friends from Heller, they say ‘You look completely different: relaxed and happy.’”