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sa国际传媒 lawyers urged to do mandatory free legal aid to unclog court system

Victoria lawyer Kevin McCullough wants the province鈥檚 12,000 lawyers to perform mandatory free legal aid to unclog the court system and reduce the number of people representing themselves.
Victoria courthouse generic photo
Victoria lawyer Kevin McCullough wants the province鈥檚 12,000 lawyers to perform mandatory free legal aid to unclog the court system and reduce the number of people representing themselves.

Victoria lawyer Kevin McCullough wants the province鈥檚 12,000 lawyers to perform mandatory free legal aid to unclog the court system and reduce the number of people representing themselves.

A resolution by McCullough and lawyer Danielle Young will go to the annual general meeting of the Law Society of sa国际传媒 on Oct. 30. It calls on the law society to amend its rules and require all practising lawyers to provide a minimum level of pro bono legal aid.

鈥淟egal aid is in a crisis,鈥 said McCullough, a criminal lawyer. 鈥淎nd this resolution is about access to justice.鈥

Lawyers and the law society have failed to deal with the crisis in access to justice, McCullough said. For the past 20 years, report after report has suggested that legal-aid programs should be expanded so more people could be covered. But regardless of which party is in government, those reports have fallen on deaf ears, he said.

鈥淣o informed person thinks lawyers are doing enough,鈥 McCullough said. 鈥淭he reason I believe the resolution is so important is that it will show the government and the public that we鈥檙e going to do something fairly extraordinary. It鈥檚 my hope that the public and the government will get how brutal the crisis is.鈥

This month, Attorney General David Eby launched a review of how legal aid is delivered in sa国际传媒, asking lawyer Jamie Maclaren to come up with a report with recommendations by Dec. 31.

Under the legal-aid system, people eligible for legal assistance are connected with private lawyers paid for by the Legal Services Society, a non-profit funded primarily by the provincial government. The society has a budget of about $80 million a year, recently boosted by $12 million from the province for 2018-2019.

In sa国际传媒, 1,000 lawyers are licensed to take legal-aid cases, which are assigned on a rotating basis. Those who are eligible for legal assistance can choose their own legal-aid lawyer. The income cutoff to receive legal aid is $1,580 a month for a single person ($2,580 for child protection cases) 鈥 if you earn more than that, you鈥檙e not entitled to legal aid.

In 2017-2018, legal aid made 26,000聽client referrals 鈥 a number dwarfed by the more than 130,000 people who are forced to represent themselves in criminal, family or small-claims matters each year in sa国际传媒

As a result, their cases take substantially longer, McCullough said. The hardest-hit area, he said, is family law, where individuals often make more than the cutoff to receive legal aid, but can鈥檛 afford a lawyer.

Currently, the average wait for a five-day criminal trial is more than nine months. The wait for a five-day hearing involving the Family Law Act or the Children, Family and Community Services Act is about 81脷2 months, and for a five-day small claims matter, it鈥檚 almost 10 months.

Those numbers fail to meet standards set by the Office of the Chief Judge, which require a five-day criminal trial to be held within eight months, a five-day Children, Family and Community Services Act trial to be held within six months and a five-day small claims matter to be held within eight months.

McCullough, who has done 34 murder cases and 29 dangerous-offender cases, said his resolution is aimed at private bar lawyers not doing legal-aid work. 鈥淭hose lawyers would absolutely benefit from a more robust聽justice system with fewer self-represented litigants before the court. They could get their cases before the court much more quickly.鈥

McCullough said what he wants is not a big ask.

The mandatory pro bono requirement would be fulfilled for two years if a lawyer takes on a summary proceeding criminal matter, one where some of the formal procedures are dispensed with.

It would be fulfilled for three years for a lawyer who takes on an immigration refugee claim, and four years if a lawyer takes on either a Family Law Act proceeding or a CFCSA proceeding.

鈥淭he reality is it鈥檚 a case that will take less than 10 hours to conclude.鈥

Lawyers who don鈥檛 want to do pro bono work could opt out by paying a penalty of an estimated $2,500 鈥 the equivalent of two criminal cases or one family law case 鈥 every four years to the Legal Services Society, he said.

Lots of lawyers do pro bono work, but because of solicitor-client privilege, they can鈥檛 tell people they鈥檙e doing something free for Client X, McCullough said.

鈥淢y resolution will make pro bono work accountable. It will provide a level of accountability and auditability that simply does not exist.鈥

If adopted, the move would nearly double the number of family cases legal aid does each year, McCullough said. He estimates it would extend legal-aid coverage to about 4,000 people each year.

鈥淚t鈥檚 100 per cent not about increasing the fees paid to lawyers. It鈥檚 strictly to do with expanding coverage to pick up self-represented litigants.鈥

Lawyers have to protect their self-regulation by acting in the public interest, he said.

鈥淲e have to show the public and the government that we, as a profession, will take steps to deal with the crisis in legal aid.鈥

If it鈥檚 adopted, it would raise the quality of litigation across the board, said McCullough.

鈥淚t would be fantastic for sa国际传媒 and fantastic for the courts.鈥

Some lawyers have reservations about McCullough鈥檚 resolution, however. Richard Schwartz, a criminal defence lawyer with a large legal-aid practice, said he鈥檚 worried the proposal will result in lawyers doing work in areas in which they鈥檙e not qualified.

鈥淚 am concerned that it is a proposal which simply asks lawyers to do even more pro bono work than they are already doing in order to ease the legal-aid funding concerns that we have long been trying to address,鈥 Schwartz said.

鈥淚f the law society believes there is an obligation for lawyers to further contribute to the Legal Services Society鈥檚 budget 鈥 they should simply seek a mandate to tax individual lawyers. But this is a cumbersome and inefficient way to deal with the issues that plague our court systems.鈥

Victoria lawyer Kirk Karaszkiewicz also expressed concern about McCullough鈥檚 resolution.

鈥淚n my 14 years in sa国际传媒, I have found that lawyers give a great deal of their time uncompensated to help people,鈥 Karaszkiewicz said.

Karaszkiewicz said lack of access to justice has less to do with lawyers not working hard enough than with system failures, arguing the government has failed to fund the justice system properly, from sheriffs and judges to other courtroom staff or legal aid for those who can鈥檛 afford a private lawyer.

Victoria lawyer Chris Considine said he has heard lawyers commenting that they鈥檙e very concerned about being required to do pro bono work in areas that they are not competent in.

鈥淰ery few lawyers know about criminal law. Very few lawyers, even less, know about family law. And so it would probably be a disservice to the public to suddenly foist somebody who鈥檚 not an expert in the area on the public. It would be like saying to a dermatologist: 鈥榃e want you to do cardiac surgery,鈥 鈥 Considine said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think the patient would be very pleased with that.鈥

In 2017-2018, legal aid made 19,179 client referrals for criminal-law services, 3,276 referrals for family-law services, 2,255 referrals for child-protection services and 1,327 referrals for immigration-law clients.

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> As part of the review of legal aid in sa国际传媒, members of the public can provide written submissions until Nov. 23 at [email protected].