Each year, ƹƵ’s Marketing & Communications department profiles members of the graduating classes. Students chosen were nominated by staff and faculty for their contributions to the life of the University. Click here for more information about 2025 commencement exercises.
When Steven Meerschaert was leaving his longtime career in mental healthcare to go to law school, he never envisioned his experience going beyond the classroom setting.
“Get in there, get the degree and get out,” he thought.
But after Meerschaert arrived at ƹƵ School of Law, he found it to be the exact opposite. He immersed himself in the Riverfront Campus, becoming president of two student organizations and executive director of another, among other opportunities.
“I don’t know where the line is between involved and overinvolved — I probably was on the overinvolved side,” Meerschaert said.
On Friday, May 9, Meerschaert will graduate from Detroit Mercy School of Law, grateful for how his experience turned out.
“I found that one of the most rewarding things I did here was finding communities where I believed in what they were advocating, and I wanted to advocate on their behalf,” he said. “And when I started thinking about it and doing it, I realized, ‘Well, that’s the whole reason I’m going to law school.’ ”
Meerschaert spent more than a decade working as a mental health counselor in areas of addiction and substance abuse. But he began reflecting on his career and life during the COVID pandemic. There was a sense of purpose, passion and accomplishment that Meerschaert felt from his career, but a feeling of repetition was setting in. He was working on the administrative side of mental health then and challenges started to feel the same.
“My father had passed away early in the pandemic, and I was looking at really what I wanted to do for the rest of my life,” he said.
The law held a fascination for Meerschaert during his career, as he worked primarily with people battling addictions and who had sought treatment through legal means.
“I had these experiences that kindled an interest in law, and this seemed like the perfect time for me to make that transition,” Meerschaert said. “My daughter was at a point where she was very stable and busy and wasn’t needing quite as much of me at home.”
Meerschaert sought a law education that was going to be practical and local, so he could be present with his family. ƹƵ checked those boxes. He began law school in the fall of 2022.
“I wanted to find something that was going to give me the best value and education for my dollar,” he said.
He jumped in with both feet.
Meerschaert started out with Moot Court, which provides students with hands-on lawyering experience through appellate court simulations. He competed in internal and national competitions through Moot Court, eventually becoming its executive director of external competitions. In that role, Meerschaert selected and developed ƹƵ’s teams that compete nationally.
Meerschaert also led a pair of student organizations as president: the American Constitution Society and the Mental Health Association, the latter of which holds a special place in his heart.
“We are really advocating for the mental health needs of legal professionals and law students, with a special eye on advocating for the needs of the law students at Detroit Mercy,” Meerschaert said.
A 2023 study published in the journal Healthcare reported that attorneys are twice as likely as other working U.S. adults to have suicidal thoughts. Other studies show that the occupation faces significant risk for suicide.
Meerschaert’s work with the Mental Health Association earned him a spot on the Michigan Supreme Court’s Commission on Well-Being in the Law, along with Associate Dean Ieisha Humphrey. The appointment allowed Meerschaert to collaborate with judges and lawyers to help combat mental health issues in the legal profession. He also sought ways to make a difference in mental health at Detroit Mercy Law.
In 2023, Meerschaert worked with Humphrey on a Titan Innovation Fund proposal to establish mental health counseling services at the Riverfront Campus.
Meerschaert’s proposal was one of 18 to receive funding during the first year of University President Donald B. Taylor’ initiative for change.
He believed that it was important to start combatting mental health issues while students are in law school — where struggles can start to build — rather than waiting until they have graduated and are practicing attorneys. As a former counselor himself, Meerschaert said having access to mental health counseling services at Detroit Mercy Law would also help to reduce barriers that students may face in seeking help, such as lack of privacy or the high cost of care.
“I talked to a number of administrators and faculty here and all of them agreed wholeheartedly that the need is significant,” he said. “They have all come across students who are experiencing different levels of crisis, either coming from home, their past or something directly linked to their law school experience.”
Once Meerschaert walks across the Calihan Hall stage during Commencement, it will be time to study for the bar exam. He’s accepted a position at Secrest Wardle, a defense firm based in Troy, Mich., where he’s worked as a law clerk for more than a year.
As Meerschaert reflects on the past three years at Detroit Mercy Law, he is grateful for a well-rounded educational experience.
“It’s the writing, the advocating, the doctrine of learning, getting all of that wrapped into one,” he said. “That’s the real beauty of it and what I’ve enjoyed the most about my experience.”
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