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SMALL-MINDED: From Day Care to Playrooms, Catering to Kids Makes for Happier Lawyers,ClientsAuthor(s): JILL SCHACHNER CHANENSource: ABA Journal, Vol. 91, No. 7 (JULY 2005), p. 18Published by: American Bar AssociationStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/27844454 .
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IDEAS FROM THE FRONT
SMALL-MINDED
From Day Care to Playrooms, Catering to Kids Makes for Happier Lawyers, Clients
JILL SCHACHNER CHANEN
ISITORS TO THE NEW CHARLESTON, W.Va., office of Puliin, Fowler &
Flanagan might be surprised when they enter the building. Along with the latest in law firm
design and technology, they'll see and hear children?lots of them. Child care was a big issue for
the firm's employees, says partner Victor Flanagan. So when the
firm moved its office to a new, larger building, the law yers decided to add a day care center and preschool for children up to age 6.
"The single biggest problem we have with our staff is
Victor Flanagan's firm offers day care in its new building?and gives staffers a discount.
parents worrying [about] or having problems with day care," Flanagan says. "It's often not the parent or the child who is sick; it's the baby sitter."
Open since June, the Bright Beginnings Development Center is a joint venture between the firm and the Kana
ABA JOURNAL July 2005
wha Valley YMCA. Firm employees?lawyers and staff
alike?get first dibs on half the center's 42 spots, and
they also enjoy discounted rates, thanks to a firm subsidy. The remaining spots are reserved for the general public.
Ultimately, Flanagan says, the firm hopes to create an other facility on its property for older children. Currently, those children are bused to after-school activities at a YMCA facility less than a mile away.
Catering to the bassinet set also made sense for Des Moines lawyer Kristine Corcoran Frye. When she acquired extra office space, she decided against leasing it out in fa vor of turning it into a playroom.
She says it's nothing fancy: It's filled with an old couch and toys from her home. She also bought two television sets with built-in DVD players, a video game console, and some arts and crafts materials. But it's enough to keep her
daughter occupied during breaks from classes and on after noons when she's stuck at mom's office after school.
And it's really come in handy for clients. Often they prefer after-school or evening appointments, Frye says, and they will ask if they can bring their children along. "I say, 'Sure, just park them in the playroom.' They do not get it until they get here, and then they say, 'Wow.'
"
BUILDING BLOCKS OF GOOD BUSINESS FOR PANAMA CITY, FLA., SOLO JOHN GREEN, A FATHER OF
Iseven, providing a children's space was a given when he bought his own office building. In a conference room, there are computers loaded with educational software, plus small toys and art
supplies. Accommodating kids, Green says, is "a business basic"?something that just seemed like the "right thing to do in the everyday prac tice of law."
Janet Frickey of Lakewood, Colo., agrees. She's turned a vacant alcove in her reception area into a play area complete with toys, crayons and coloring books. Most of Frickey's clients come to her with workers' compensation, Social
Security and disability issues. They appreciate that they can bring their children along, she
says, yet still have a serious meeting that's rela
tively distraction-free.
Frickey's only regret was not being able to put together an on-site day care center for the many
members of her staff who have young children and no good care options.
San Francisco lawyer Wendy Bemis is already planning such an option for her firm, even though she and her law partner do not yet have children.
The two are moving to new office space this vear. and it will have room for a fully staffed nursery. "I am getting to the age where I want to have kids in the next 10 years," she says, "and I do not want
family to be something that I cannot do because I am > practicing law." S
Bemis hopes the on-site nursery also might give the firm ? an edge in recruiting. "If I were being recruited," she says, I "I'd like to work at a place like this." 5
This content downloaded from 62.122.79.37 on Wed, 11 Jun 2014 06:23:04 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
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