Jessica Booker
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- Aug 1, 2019
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Unfortunately It isn't always straight forward. However, some paralegals manage to still do vacation schemes.Hi @Jessica Booker how do people navigate paralegal roles in law firms and completing vacation schemes? Do many people have paralegal roles and still manage to do vacation schemes? Would this come up in reference checks to your employer or in any other way? thank you
Generally, most employment contracts will have a term that will say you cannot work for another organisation without approval from the firm. For law firms, this may also specifically say you cannot do any other legal work outside of those opportunities provided by the firm.
Such terms in employment contracts generally mean you can't do a vacation scheme without approval from the firm you are a paralegal with. If you choose to breach this term, don't tell the firm, and are then found out, you are at risk of 1) losing your paralegal job and 2) being dismissed through a form of misconduct.
Even if you do get approval, there can also be challenges with:
- Getting the specific time off for the vacation scheme, especially if you have colleagues who have already booked annual leave ahead of you.
- Conflict checks - if the two firms are very similar, compete for work with the same type of clients, or if they are working on the other side of major matters/cases to one another, conflict checks could stop you from working for both firms. Sometimes to get around this, vacation scheme students can be allocated to specific departments to ensure you wouldn't have access to information.
You would need to declare any employment in a reference check process for the vacation scheme too.