{"id":28127,"date":"2018-08-17T15:19:00","date_gmt":"2018-08-17T22:19:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spijue.wpengine.com\/news\/mead-prepares-for-jump-from-attorney-to-judge\/"},"modified":"2018-08-17T15:19:00","modified_gmt":"2018-08-17T22:19:00","slug":"mead-prepares-for-jump-from-attorney-to-judge","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/home\/mead-prepares-for-jump-from-attorney-to-judge\/","title":{"rendered":"Mead prepares for jump from attorney to judge"},"content":{"rendered":"
When she was 25, Amy Mead was living in Boston, working at the Hard Rock Café and wondering what to do with the rest of her life.<\/p>\n
She and her roommate Jackie both worked at the restaurant and had active social lives, making friends with numerous musicians in the area. It was a fun time of her life, Mead recalls, but she wasn’t sure what to do next. She asked her roommate what she thought.<\/p>\n
“Why don’t you go be a lawyer?” Jackie suggested. “One, you like to argue with me and two, all of our friends are in bands and they’re going to need an attorney.”<\/p>\n
It stuck. More than 25 years later, Mead was clearing out her office at the Sealaska Corporation headquarters building in downtown Juneau, preparing to jump from being the city’s municipal attorney to her new job as a Superior Court judge. Her final day with the City and Borough of Juneau was Friday, and her first day on the bench is Tuesday.<\/p>\n
Her decision to go from attorney to judge came with the same suddenness as her decision to go from the Hard Rock Café to being an attorney. Mead, now 51, said she loves being a lawyer and had never really thought about being a judge until recently. She has been the CBJ’s municipal attorney since 2013, and said it’s been a rewarding, intriguing experience.<\/p>\n
Positions have been opening up as of late, and Mead said she began to consider what it would be like to sit on the bench.<\/p>\n
“I started thinking about that when there started being some openings, and I started thinking about what that job would entail and what I thought I could bring to that position,” Mead said. “I have about 15 years left in me, maybe a little bit more.”<\/p>\n
Mead applied when former Juneau District Court Judge Keith Levy announced his retirement<\/a> in 2016, but did not get the position. Kirsten Swanson earned the position<\/a> and began in December 2016. This year, Superior Court Judge Louis Menendez and District Court Judge Thomas Nave both retired<\/a>, leaving two more open positions.<\/p>\n