- delaying the introduction of community legal advice centres (CLACs) and community legal advice networks (CLANs) until April 2010. There are 15 in the pipeline with four yet to be announced;
- a 2% increase on non-family fixed fees;
- an increase on childcare pre-proceeding fixed fees from £347 to £405;
- a 5% increase in fees for mental health and immigration tribunal work;
- delaying the introduction of family litigators' graduated fees;
- an amnesty on historic unrecouped payments on account over six years and where the amount outstanding is less than £20,000;
- delaying the introduction of best value tendering in criminal legal aid by six months to a date ‘not before’ July 2009;
- and no price competitive tendering for civil law family work before 2013.
The joint statement said that the agreement was ‘designed to provide a significant period of certainty and stability’ for providers to ‘enable them to adapt to the changes to the legal aid system that have already been introduced and to consider and plan for the future’.
There was a note of contrition on the part of the LSC and the MOJ over their stance on the legal challenges to the unified contract and its conflict with public procurement regulations. ‘They regret that the implications of those regulations were not recognised earlier and acknowledge that the Law Society was justified in commencing those proceedings,’ the statement said.
Chancery Lane will discontinue its judicial review proceedings launched against the LSC in February on the strength of the deal which it was claimed would ‘provide tangible benefits for legal aid practitioners’ and which would ‘establish procedures designed to ensure a closer and more constructive relationship between parties in the future’.
Bill Montague, managing partner of Dexter Montague & Partners, who jointly brought claims against the LSC with the Law Society last year, said that settlement marked ‘a watershed in the relationship between legal aid practitioners and the LSC’. Des Hudson, chief executive of the Law Society, said that the ‘more consultative approach embraced by the LSC’ would ‘hopefully allow us to work with them to address some of the most pressing issues’. ‘However, we still have serious concerns about the future of legal aid,' he added.
Read Jon Robbins' article This is Jacqui: she's here to save you from eviction in The Observer Sunday 13 April 2008.
1 comment:
Thats great news about the defferred CLACS and CLANS. But what about those that are still going through such as Hull ? Why should the public unfortunate enough to be in areas already going through the CLAC process be used as a poorly supported experiment and lose their excellent not for profit services? No one has fought back against a CLAC at a local level more than Hull CAB. We shall continue to fight to make sure that a CLAC does not happen,especially since that the LSC nor Hull City Council have followed the correct consultaion proceedures. Any advice / support most welcome.
Ray Davies, Unite, The union.
( anon was easier to post ! )
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