Dozen: Griffin makes helping women her law
“She’s never too busy to answer a question. I think everyone feels comfortable knocking on her door.”
   
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      The Daily Progress
     
    
    
Published: December 27, 2011
Published: December 27, 2011
When Yvonne Griffin is not fighting for her 
clients in the courtroom, she is fighting to empower other women in the 
legal profession.
“She’s done a lot for the field of law in Virginia. 
She’s done a lot for women,” said Mike Griffin, Griffin’s husband of 31 
years.
Yvonne Griffin was made a partner at Tucker Griffin Barnes, P.C. in 1997. Mike Griffin works as the firm’s business manager.
“She’s really been a great mentor to the women 
coming through the firm. She always takes the young attorneys under her 
wing,” he said.
Of the seven partners at Tucker Griffin Barnes, only
 one, founding partner Bill Tucker, is male. Tucker said this fact is 
due largely to Griffin’s influence.
Together, he and Griffin founded the Women’s Legal 
Group at their firm, which provides legal counsel “from a woman’s point 
of view.”
“A woman lawyer sometimes has a different 
perspective,” Tucker said. “We [men] don’t have feelings, but a woman 
does. Maybe that’s not such a bad thing in the law.”
Sometimes, Griffin noted, clients are drawn to Tucker Griffin Barnes because they are seeking a female attorney.
“When you run your own business, you are constantly 
looking for ways to differentiate yourself,” Griffin said. “I’ve had men
 who’ve hired me who have said ‘women are meaner than men,’” she added.
Griffin is known to be an “aggressive advocate” for 
her clients, Lynn Bradley, another partner at Tucker Griffin Barnes, 
said, but outside of the courtroom she said Griffin is very 
even-tempered and approachable.
“She’s never too busy to answer a question. I think 
everyone feels comfortable knocking on her door,” Bradley said. “I think
 she’s a really good mentor for attorneys whether they are male or 
female.”
Griffin is active in legal organizations that serve 
men and women alike. She serves on the governing board for the Virginia 
Trial Lawyers. In the past she has been a member of the American Bar 
Association, the Thomas Jefferson Inn of Courts and the Association of 
Trial Lawyers of America.
Though Griffin is a successful full-time lawyer, it is hard to find a more dedicated wife and mother.
Even with a lengthy list of college degrees, 
personal achievements and community involvement, she lists her marriage 
and son, Sam, 20, as her proudest accomplishments.
Perhaps that is why Griffin is such a strong 
advocate for other women who are juggling their professional lives with 
their responsibilities at home.
Together with Tucker, Griffin started the Bring Your Babies to Work program at their firm nearly two decades ago.
After one of Tucker’s paralegals became pregnant, 
the firm was faced with the possibility of losing a strong member of 
their legal team.
“We decided we would rather have her at 80 percent 
capacity than at zero percent capacity,” Yvonne Griffin explained, and 
so the firm began to allow mothers to bring their infants to work with 
them every day, rather than spending money on costly child care in the 
first weeks of life.
This allows mothers to spend more time with their 
children, but also brings them back into the workforce sooner after 
giving birth, even if they may be a bit distracted.
“It’s important for babies and mamas to bond,” Griffin said. “It’s been a good thing all the way around.”
Though Griffin did not enact this company policy 
single-handedly, she was instrumental in making it “more than words on a
 page,” Bradley said. She added that Griffin went out of her way to make
 women feel comfortable with the unusual policy, and encouraged them to 
bring their children to work.
When Bradley was an associate with Tucker Griffin 
Barnes she became pregnant with her daughter. The firm allowed her to 
work part-time — as little as two days per week — so that she could 
spend more time with her child.
“As a lawyer, that’s practically unheard of,” she 
said. As her daughter got older, Bradley added more and more time to her
 workload before coming back full-time after her daughter started 
kindergarten.
“They didn’t penalize me in any way when I came 
back,” she said. In fact, the firm welcomed Bradley as a partner just 
one year later.
Griffin said she knew she wanted to be a lawyer as 
early as the fifth grade, and has been practicing law since graduating 
from the College of William & Mary’s law school in 1988. For the 
past 18 years, she has served exclusively as a personal injury lawyer. 
Her caseload deals with car wrecks, wrongful death and medical 
malpractice.
“I enjoy helping people who need help,” she said. “It’s one of the paramount reasons I’m a lawyer.”
Griffin’s caring and generous spirit is evident 
outside of the office, as well. She is involved with the Blue Ridge 
Chapter of the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, where she served as 
vice president from 2004 to 2005 and secretary in 2006.
“Being a part of the community where you practice is
 also very important. I like doing things that make the community a 
better place,” Griffin said.
Griffin’s husband noted her involvement with efforts such as the Toy Lift and Buford Middle School’s Rule of Law Day.
In 2000, Griffin and her law partners put on the area’s Fourth of July fireworks celebration.
“There just wasn’t another organization that would 
or could take the necessary steps to make this important and historic 
event happen,” Mike Griffin said, adding that Yvonne was involved in the
 production of the fireworks show for several more years.
Despite all of her accomplishments, Griffin is 
humble and grateful to her coworkers at Tucker Griffin Barnes for their 
expertise and dedication to the legal field.
Yvonne T. Griffin
Tucker Griffin Barnes P.C.
Charlottesville, VA
434-973-7474
www.TGBLaw.com
Inquire@TGBLaw.com
 
 
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