I once memorably shared a stage at a public meeting organized by the Ottawa Writer’s Festival on the Access to Justice crisis with the (then) Treasurer of the Law Society of Upper Canada. It was a Saturday afternoon, and the hall was packed.

After his presentation – in which he sought to play down the A2J crisis (“it’s not really a crisis”), the Treasurer was asked by an audience member why the Society did not permit paralegals (whom the Society regulates) to offer family legal services to the large and growing number of family litigants who could not afford legal representation.

His answer: “Trust me, they are not ready”.

He was pressed on this. What did that mean? Who was judging this “readiness”? Why could paralegals not be trained in family law and supervised by lawyers? The Treasurer repeated the answer. The crowd grew restive. The moderator changed the subject.

To be fair to the then-Treasurer, his response falls into a long tradition of the legal profession telling the public not to worry, we have it covered, trust us. The problem is, this response is increasingly out of step with what the public needs, wants and expects from the legal profession.

Ontario and paralegals

Any day now, here in Ontario, we await the report of Bonkalo Review on Family Legal Services, charged with considering (among other questions) whether to expand the regulated practice of Ontario paralegals to family matters.

An assumption behind the Bonkalo Review – a welcome sign of the progress that has been made in the last few years in accepting that the reality of the A2J crisis – is that Canadians suffer most from the lack of affordable services in family law.

Ontario paralegals are presently prohibited from providing any assistance in this area. The licensing scheme run by the Law Society of Upper Canada (LSUC) specifies the areas of law in which paralegals can offer assistance – and these do not include family law.

I fervently hope that the report of the Bonkalo Review will recommend access by family litigants to trained and regulated paralegals who could “…conduct an intake interview with a family client, noting where a (specified) complex issue may need to be referred to a family lawyer… (and) could complete the application for divorce, the response to an application, and prepare and finalize an affidavit.” (from the NSRLP submission to Bonkalo).

The case for a credible and appropriate system of paralegal training – including training for working on family cases, appropriate supervision and the ongoing monitoring of such services – has been made over and over again.  I need not make it again here.

The real reason – we all know – that paralegals in Ontario are prohibited from offering services to otherwise unrepresented family litigants is sustained and vocal resistance from the legal profession; their feeling that they are “not ready”. More on this below.

Paralegals in British Columbia

In British Columbia, paralegals are not regulated by the Law Society (although this has been recommended) but there is an active profession working under the supervision of lawyers. Paralegals also participate in pro bono work. Unlike Ontario, there are no “subject-area” restrictions on paralegal work; the supervising lawyer is responsible for determining their paralegal’s competency to work in any area of law, subject to some task restrictions like giving legal advice and appearing in court (set out in the BC Code of Conduct Chapter 6 and at Appendix E).

The proposition that the BC Law Society should formally licence and regulate paralegals – widely seen as crucial to advancing both paralegal legitimacy and protecting the public – is being road-tested in a “designated paralegal” (DP) scheme introduced by the Society in 2013. The scheme expands the scope of DP family law work to include giving legal advice, giving and receiving certain undertakings, and appearing before a court or tribunal – subject to the discretion of their supervising lawyer.

Pilot Court Projects in the Supreme Court (until December 2014) and in the Provincial Court (which ended October 2015) allowed DPs to appear on behalf of family clients. A few weeks ago, the BC Law Society announced that Court Pilots would not be renewed, promoting some understandable outrage from A2J advocates. Others A2J advocates point out that the most important work of DPs may be the other aspects of the scheme (for example giving legal advice, appearing before tribunals), which continue.

But it is instructive to note how the decision to nix the court representation scheme came about, because it highlights yet again the tension among the self-interest of the profession, their gatekeeping power (it is lawyers who decide what DPs do), and the public interest.

The BC Law Society surveyed the 481 lawyers who participated in the DP program. Only 54 responded. Respondents were asked if they had ever sent a DP to court. 100% said no (interestingly, when asked “could DPs play a valuable role in court?” 70% replied yes).

If the supervising lawyers did not send their DPs to court, the Court Pilots were not going to herald change. Sadly, they have produced virtually no data on whether DPs can make effective appearances on behalf of family clients.

Basing Legal Services Reform on Facts, not Feelings

Given the potential for qualified paralegals to enhance A2J for Canadians, it seems important to establish the basis for future policy decisions on the regulation of paralegal work, no matter the province.

Some lawyers are highly supportive of paralegals and the expansion of their role. It is also reasonable and logical for lawyers with greater experience and more years of training to guide and mentor paralegals (although more experienced paralegals may also be appropriate supervisors). But it is important to call out the obvious tension here between the gatekeeping role of the profession, and their vested interest in maintaining their monopoly.

And there is a third problem – the result, perhaps, of the privilege and entitlement some (by no means all or even most) lawyers feel about their legal services monopoly.

This is the historical tendency for policy decisions on legal services regulation to be based on feelings (strange, I have always thought, given the centrality of reason to the lawyer’s training and role).

Some of these feelings are understandable – a feeling that lawyers are “always better” – a feeling that paralegals “aren’t sufficiently educated or experienced” (as the Treasurer said). I understand these feelings, but feel bound to point out that neither empirical evidence nor research support such statements – and neither answers the pressing question of access to affordable legal services. Moreover, there are good arguments that paralegals may be more experienced and better equipped than lawyers for some legal tasks.

But even more worrying are declarations that flatly ignore empirical evidence to the contrary, often alluding to anecdotal “evidence” – along the lines of “someone once told me…”, “I heard that…” – without hesitation or embarrassment.

Here are a few examples of assertions used to oppose the expansion of paralegal services that I still hear and read frequently:

  • “There is no ‘crisis’ of A2J: rates of self-representation haven’t changed for 15 years.” (completely untrue; for just a few of myriad examples see the figures provided by the Ontario Ministry of the Attorney-General, the Court of Queen’s Bench Alberta, and the British Columbia Court of Appeal)
  • “In my experience the growth of self-represented litigants in the court system is not the result of high legal costs associated with high lawyer fees.” (despite studies showing this to be the primary factor in self-representation in Canada, the US, England and Wales and Australia)

Some of those making these assertions claim that they have conducted research (for example, “our research that has scanned across North America we can find no empirical evidence…”. Mmmmm. Maybe they should have had their paralegals do the research…)

  • “There is no evidence that paralegals are less expensive than lawyers”. No empirical studies yet, but try persuading a member of the public that someone who charges $75 an hour is likely to end up costing them as much as someone who charges $350 an hour. My colleague Noel Semple points out that increasing market supply generally drives down prices (moreover paralegals are likely to enter the family legal services market carrying less student debt than junior lawyers, who gravitate to more lucrative work to pay down their debt load).

#AltFacts or Reality?

In a post-Trump world, the assertion of “alternative facts”, and feelings trumping facts, is endemic. But surely we are much too sensible to fall for this in Canada?

Let’s make 2017 the year of sensible, thoughtful, well-monitored paralegal expansion – and call out arguments that are self-serving, ignorant of the facts, or both.

5 thoughts on “2017 Could be the Year of the Paralegal – Or, Will #AltFacts Prevail?

  1. ASanctionedCanadian says:

    It’s all about Money…You just can’t trust anybody anymore from The most powerful man in the world….The president of the USA …..to The Lawyers and Law Society Members…Because it is the Business prime directive to Maximize profit at all costs….Shake the hand of your customer and tell them we are here to help you and then lie and bill everything you can until there is no more to get then settle the matter so you can get on to the next sucker… As in the circus they say ..There is a sucker born every day and Every guest is your sucker… LOL Sad but true

  2. sandra olson says:

    The question of access to justice is sort of massaged, in my mind, by the presence of paralegals. Think of access to justice as being able to walk in the door of a building. freely and unapposed. If however, when you get in there, you are ignored, ,mocked, ridiculed, lied to about procedure, tricked by disappearing files. or being left sitting in a discovery room booked weeks in advance while the apposing counsel is with the disappeared files in another jurisdiction having the case dismissed because you are not there, then please tell me how having a paralegal there with you, waiting to help cross examine the witnesses and examine the evidence, is going to help you access justice? The central issue of access to justice seems to me, to mean the right to full disclosure and examination of the evidence, full honesty and accountability in behavior from both court staff and judges. And possibly, dare i dream,,, the right to the respect of being spoken to curteously and honestly by all members of the legal community. There ARE already rules in place to deal with this. But if no one is following them please tell me,,, how is the presence of paralegals going to change this???? The issue of tribunals replacing the courts to handle family matters is not a good one. Tribunals do not follow the law. They follow only their own act. Judges or adjudicators they hire are dependent upon being re hired, so mostly will rule in favor of the public body who is in opposition to you or to the judical body who wants to get rid of you. There is no appeal from the decision of a tribunal, so you would have to go to court anyway if you disagree with the ruling. You may as well just go to court.

  3. Chris Budgell says:

    Perhaps it would be worth finding out how many practicing lawyers had substantial experience as paralegals before entering law school. I’m sure there are some, though I wouldn’t venture to guess how many.

    I would ask them about their level of confidence that they were capable of becoming lawyers.

  4. Rob Harvie says:

    Ok. I’ll weigh in from what I hope is a slightly objective perspective from the lawyer profession.

    Firstly, personally, I think legal service should be like accounting services. Educate the public that there IS a difference between a lawyer and a paralegal, including issues of regulation and insurance – but then allow the public to decide what their risk/benefit tolerance is, including the reality that even the best lawyer can’t predict with any certainty outcomes in family matters. If the public wants paralegals formally trained and insured, personally, i would let the market decide that too (see Uber). Enough with babysitting and parenting responsible adults about what they need “for their own good.”

    Then, allow the market to determine what people want and need – over time, either paralegals will prove to be a major benefit, or they will not.. but the paternalism of the profession over the public, in my opinion, is a little bit overdone.

    Secondly – “lawyers” as a group, are too often scapegoated regarding cost. We have an overly complex and unpredictable justice process, a growing requirement induced by regulators and the courts for lawyers to spend client funds on protecting themselves against potential litigation for negligence – combined with a change in client expectation where more than ever, the general public demands their own vision of “justice” with, in my opinion, a decreasing realization of their own weaknesses and risks in making those demands. It’s a “perfect storm” – combined, unfortunately, with lawyers who also insert their own egos and interests into litigation at the same time making things more complex and less likely to be resolved yet.

    And – sadly – each group is fond of pointing fingers at the other – and when there is a growing refusal to break down the responsibility of each group for the broad problems justice has – in favor of polarization of “us” v “them”, well, things are not likely to improve (see U.S. electoral results – where, IMHO, there is enough blame on both left and right to share).

    At the same time, in Alberta, my brief interaction with non-lawyer delivery has been luke-warm – but, as correctly stated above, that’s pure anecdotal experience. As the Cromwell Report and the CBA Futures report both opined, there is a sad absence of data on A2J issues – and rather than do “what we think” will help, why not open the gates, let non-lawyers do what they want to do – and then study the results of that in a fuller and more effective way through collection and analysis of actual data?

    For example (plug coming) – in Alberta, I have recently been involved in a group seeking to expand availability and use of limited scope retainers for the public and lawyers – where lawyers are hired for limited purposes by clients – the Alberta Limited Scope Retainer Project. At the same time, we are also making data collection a part of that project, so that we can find out, beyond anecdotal commentary, how much LSR’s “work” for both lawyers and the clients… with no preconceptions. Maybe it will show its a win/win, or maybe it’s a lose/lose… time will tell.

    For further information on that, feel free to contact myself at rgh@huckvale.ca, or John-Paul Boyd, at jpboyd@ucalgary.ca

  5. sandra olson says:

    reply to rob harvie,, i agree,, the public should have the right to make their own decisions. But we sort of do now. we either can afford lawyers, or not. If we cannot,, it might be helpful to have someone help with paper preparation, but the biggest problem remains,, when we, the public show up in court. we are met with discrimination, dirty tricks of behavior from court staff, other lawyers, and judges. There is step one, offer help. Step two, change the mind set and behavior of court staff and judges. step three, stop making summary judgement applications to get rid of the self represented, and insist that no summary judgement occur without some form of discovery occurring. We all know you cannot assess the merits of a case without discovery of the evidence. And finally, step 4, develop honesty and transparency ie: full disclosure of evidence rules that actually are followed. If you cannot win your case without hiding half the evidence, you know justice has not been done. And that is what is supposed to be ANY outcome in court. Winning illegally is not the goal.

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