Staff Attorney
Who we’re looking for
Are you someone who cares deeply about the lands and waters of Southeast Alaska? Are you action-oriented and interested in doing something meaningful to create impact for the long term benefit of our communities? Do you want to apply your legal skills toward protecting this one-of-a-kind place? Are you excited to support a team of campaign staff to strategize on and develop campaign goals? Do you find it satisfying to deep dive into research and help evaluate actionable paths in environmental watchdog work? Are you a strategic thinker; a planner and a doer who loves details and efficiency? Are you excited to empower the people and hold agencies accountable? Then you might just have what it takes to be our new Staff Attorney!
Position summary
SEACC is seeking a motivated legal professional to join our team as a Staff Attorney. The title and scope of this position will be tailored to the experience and qualifications of the selected candidate. The salary range for this role is wide to accommodate either an early career or more seasoned professional. At least five years of experience in the field is required to qualify for the higher end of the salary range.
Position summary: Staff Attorney
This position reports to SEACC’s Executive Director and works closely with the Policy Analyst and campaign staff.
The Staff Attorney will work independently and as part of a team, including with staff, community members, and partner organizations such as Alaska Native Tribes, commercial fishermen, business owners, local government officials, hunters and fishers, and other conservation groups.
The ideal candidate will thrive in a rapid-fire environment with hard-working colleagues. We are looking for someone who is innovative, creative, and passionate about Southeast Alaska, who can serve as our Staff Attorney and will primarily act as analyst and commenter on a wide array of technical and legal documents and permit applications, and lead our participation in processes with significant regulatory and legal components. This work will entail significant collaboration with outside attorneys, technical experts and others. This role is less focused on leading litigation and more ensuring our standing to influence regulatory outcomes with high-quality statutory basis in technical comments and sustained participation in permitting and planning processes.
Who You Are
At minimum candidates MUST have:
Juris Doctorate or LLM in Environmental Law;
Familiarity and experience with environmental law.
All candidates should bring:
Familiarity with the federal regulatory process, including NEPA environmental review, notice-and-comment rulemaking, and agency appeals;
An understanding of Alaska government and politics;
Genuine commitment to SEACC’s conservation mission and the communities of Southeast Alaska;
Comfort working in a small, fast-paced, and nimble nonprofit environment;
A collaborative spirit and ability to work with a team in both a project leadership and individual contributor capacity;
Excellent legal research, analysis, writing, and speaking skills;
Knowledge of legal procedures (federal and state);
Admitted to the Alaska Bar or willing and able to do so as needed.
Other qualifications that would be beneficial
Experience with litigation in Alaska state or federal court;
Demonstrated knowledge of public lands and Indigenous rights (including Free, Prior, and Informed Consent practices);
Experience working with Tribal governments or on Indigenous rights issues;
Big picture thinking: seeing beyond individual tasks to understand how they fit into the overall campaign strategy/SEACC strategy;
We know there is not one ideal candidate who has all of these traits — if you have a mix of interests, skills, and experience related to the above, and a passion for this work — please don’t let a gap in your strengths for this role stop you from applying or reaching out.
What Else You Should Know
SEACC recognizes, supports, and values all forms of diversity and inclusion in the workplace.
What You’ll Do
In coordination and collaboration with the SEACC team, you’ll work to further SEACC’s mission and vision in these key areas:
Help translate complex legal and regulatory issues into accessible materials for SEACC staff, partners, and the public;
Conduct legal research and analysis as well as produce written technical comments on proposed state and federal actions;
Develop technical comments, legal memoranda, FOIA requests, and talking points;
Review legal mechanisms of proposed state and federal timber sales, mining permits, and other conservation-related actions in Southeast Alaska and flag emerging legal issues;
Track and manage timelines for state and federal action requirements;
Oversee and track research, document preparation, and comment submissions to build a strong public record on resource development projects;
Ensure SEACC builds a strong record to preserve legal standing in case of future litigation;
Represent SEACC in agency proceedings, public hearings, and coalition settings;
Review and recommend possible cases for litigation;
Guide SEACC campaign strategy grounded in statute, regulation, and policy, with the aim of influencing outcomes on the Tongass and Inside Passage;
Assist with litigation in coordination with outside counsel and partner organizations.
$78,000 to $115,000 annually