How pandemic practice left lawyer-moms on the verge
Photo illustration by Elmarie Jara/ABA Journal
It is a law of physics that two objects cannot occupy the same space at the same time. Otherwise, matter can collapse in on itself like a black hole. If ever there was a moment when the principles of quantum mechanics applied to American households, this is it. After protracted stay-at-home measures with family members confined together working, studying, struggling the bottom fell out, exposing a void where a net was supposed to be.
As the world ground to a halt and parents scrambled for solutions, an uncomfortable truth emerged: Women are America’s default social safety net. It’s a regressive construct that has entrapped and hobbled working mothers across the spectrum including lawyer-moms. The pandemic simply tightened the screws.
Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle has appointed a former top lawyer from the clerk’s office to serve as the next director of the county’s Department of Human Rights and Ethics.