As expected, the Judicial Conference has adopted rules that will limit the use of career clerks by federal judges, largely due to cost concerns. The Legal Times reports:
Chief Judge Thomas Hogan, chairman of the conference’s executive committee, told reporters that tens of millions of dollars would be saved over the next decade by managing the career clerk population. Currently, there are 291 career clerks, each with an annual salary of around $100,000, in chambers where another career clerk is employed. They’ll be grandfathered into the new system, of course.
The temporary — or “term” — clerks make anywhere from $50,000 to $80,000 a year, depending on their level of experience. Speaking of which, Hogan also touched on another trend: Anecdotally, he said, fewer law school grads are jumping right into clerkships. Instead, they’re working for a year or two at private firms, and then applying to the courts once they’ve paid off a good hunk, if not all, of their law school loans. It’s a win-win, he said. The judges get better help, and the help gets better pay.