What Are All Those Letters
After My Last Name?
By Kathy Miller, CLA, CAS
Originally Published in the March 2001 NALA Membership Newsletter
When people see the CLA and CAS designation
after my name it invariably provokes questions about the meaning of
these acronyms. After I explain that achieving the CLA requires
passing a two-day exam and that the CAS requires a further four-hour
exam-and that this is all voluntary-they look at me like I am crazy.
I remember thinking for years: "I don't need to take the CLA, I'll
be grandfathered in." Well, after way too many years of waiting for
the grandfather call (and after the first of my colleagues at work
passed the CLA), I decided to study for and sit for the CLA exam.
For those who have taken the CLA you know this exam is not easy.
Since I do better in a classroom setting than independent study, I
enrolled in a CLA Review course, bought the thick textbook, and
submitted my application with necessary transcripts to NALA. Midway
through the review course, I announced to all my fellow students "If
I hadn't paid approximately $500 for this I would walk out and not
take the !@#%#@!$^ exam."
You could spot me as the person with the stack of vocabulary
flashcards, yellow highlighters, and a dog-eared book by Virginia
Koerselman on my lap instead of my trusty lap-top computer, writing
mock essays with a pencil.
The first weekend in December of 1996, on a rainy Friday, there I
was with my #2 pencils (and more nerves than I knew I had) taking
the CLA exam. After a short debate with myself I went back on
Saturday for the second day. I still don't remember how I got home
that night after finishing the exam – I was in a non-alcoholic daze.
Then, the real anxiety started. After a seemingly interminable
six-week wait for results I was thrilled when I finally received the
letter from NALA announcing that I had passed all sections and was
now a Certified Legal Assistant.
NOW WHAT?
After all this, why would I study for the California Advanced
Specialist certification? Because the CAS was my ultimate goal.
Those who take the Louisiana state specialty exam can take it before
the CLA, but cannot use the designation until they successfully pass
the CLA. If California had offered this option, I would have taken
the exams in reverse order – the CAS, then the CLA.
I have been a litigation paralegal since the dinosaur ages – at
least it seems I have been around since then. From Senior Partner to
Baby Associate, I am the one they call with litigation questions. I
can remember the “new” Discovery Act, Selectric typewriters, carbon
paper and the requirement that file your 1,000 interrogatories with
the court. Luckily, I did not let my veteran status lull me into not
studying for the CAS exam. Some of the questions were easy, but some
were not.
Again, the endless six-week wait, and this time I suffered from a
case of “examination remorse.” I had the horrifying experience of
looking up some of the questions I remembered from the exam, only to
discovery that I had answered them incorrectly. So the tension was
palpable when the envelope arrived that would reveal whether I could
call myself a CAS. I opened the letter like a gambler squeezing the
last card out of a possible straight flush, and screamed for joy to
discovery that I was a new CAS.
WHAT’S IT WORTH?
I wish I could say I got an immediate pay raise by adding “CLA and
CAS” after my name, but that would be a stretch. My annual raises
after passing each exam were better than expected, but I can’t say
they were directly tied to the exam results, although my
achievements were noted in my annual reviews and announced via
e-mail to the rest of my firm.
I can confidently state that one of the greatest rewards of
certification was becoming part of a special society. I was only the
13th paralegal in California to achieve the CAS designation in civil
litigation. When I put those letters after my name on letters or
e-mails, I am proudly proclaiming: "I know California Litigation!”
Another benefit of certification is informally serving as a
"Certification Ambassador" educating paralegals and attorneys on the
CLA, CLAS and CAS credentials. We have 10 paralegals at my firm, and
when the first earned her CLA, none of the attorneys knew about the
exam - what a perfect opportunity to explain the CLA to over 100
lawyers. As we increased the number of CLAs, we continued our
in-house publicity and education. We now have five CLAs and one of
our part-time paralegals recently divulged that she felt extreme
pressure to take the CLA exam.
A NATIONWIDE NETWORK
Taking and passing the CLA makes me part of a club that has more
10,000 members. These are peers who have met the challenge of
learning a host of legal terms, proper grammar, and legal research
techniques. They are versed in new substantive areas of law, have
revisited their high school civics lessons, and successfully written
a timed essay using only the principles of law stated in the
question.
This nation-wide network of colleagues constitutes an invaluable
litigation tool that I may call upon when I need information. The
value of this resource is illustrated by a recent case in which my
firm in Orange County, CA, needed to take the deposition of a
witness residing in Nevada. Although I knew California procedures
and did preliminary research about Nevada’s requirements, various
courts (as every litigation paralegal knows,) have their “local
rules” or peculiarities. Since the impending deadline for this
deposition precluded any possibility of redoing a kicked document, I
dusted off my NALA Convention list of attendees and located a CLA in
Las Vegas. After a quick phone call, I had a facsimile of the
required Nevada form, leads for a court reporting service and
conference room and an invitation to visit the next time I was in
town.
CLA SETS THE STANDARD
One of the arguments I have heard for not taking the CLA is that the
paralegal does not practice Federal Law and, thus, the test is not
relevant to them. The relevance of the CLA, however, can be
illustrated by the experience of a paralegal who recently worked at
my firm in California and fulfilled a lifelong dream of moving to
Arizona.
She polished her resume and responded to paralegal job
advertisements, but did not receive many calls (perhaps 10 percent)
for interviews. When she did go for an interview, she was invariably
asked about her non-CLA status, and discovered that because Arizona
is third in the nation (behind Florida and Texas) with the greatest
number of CLAs, certification is expected of paralegals there.
She wisely took the necessary steps to sit for and pass the CLA
exam, and again sent out her resume. This time, she received
requests to interview on 90 percent of her inquiries. She also
happily discovered that her starting salary was higher than that of
another paralegal who started at the same public entity on the same
day.
ACCOMPLISHMENT AND EMPOWERMENT
I have talked to paralegals who have taken the CLA and to some with
CAS or CLAS designations. They almost universally speak of being
"empowered" by the process, even is situations outside the legal
profession (one was encouraged to participate in a 60-mile
walk-a-thon benefiting breast cancer research). Others enjoy the
respect that certification evokes from the legal community.
A friend of mine with her CLA and CAS unexpectedly found herself
looking for a job after working for the same attorney for over a
decade. Although her job interview skills were a bit “rusty,” she
was pleased to find that each of the attorneys with whom she
interviewed commended her for her certification achievements.
AN ADDED BENEFIT FOR ME
Most practicing legal assistants have heard: “you should go to law
school” more times than we care to remember. So, an unexpected
benefit of certification for me is that I now have a clear
perspective of one of the reasons I will not be going to law school.
To become an attorney in California requires three years of classes
in torts, constitutional law, contracts, legal research and the rest
of the law school curriculum (demanding a significant percentage of
your waking hours). Then you face the bar exam – which is three days
not two, as for the CLA – and you either pass the entire exam or
have to retake it in its entirety. And you have to wait six months,
not six weeks, for the results. I now realize how much I love the
career fulfillment that comes from being a legal assistant. I
delight in being recognized as a person with specialized knowledge,
and I am proud to declare my professional commitment and expertise
with two sets of initials after my name.