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06 October 2020
Issue: 7905 / Categories: Legal News , Profession
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Bar seeks justice budget increase

Some criminal barristers are being paid less than the national minimum wage of £6.45 per hour, according to the Bar Council

In its submission to the Treasury spending review this week, the Bar Council highlighted the financial difficulties some practitioners are enduring despite working full-time at the publicly funded criminal Bar. Some barristers in their first two years of practice were, in 2019/20, earning less than £13,000 per year pre-tax after they had paid essential expenses and memberships. This worked out at £6.25 per hour, the Bar Council said.

The Bar is urging the Treasury to increase the justice budget by £2.48bn to improve the courts and provide effective early legal advice to prevent problems spiralling out of control.

Chair of the Bar, Amanda Pinto QC said: ‘The spending review is the government’s chance to protect the rights of the British public and restore confidence in law and order in this country.

‘The justice sector is now in a dire state: outrageously long delays to people’s cases and shockingly low fees for legal professionals.’

Read the Bar’s spending review submission at: bit.ly/3jlYrK6.

Issue: 7905 / Categories: Legal News , Profession
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NEWS
The Legal Action Group (LAG)—the UK charity dedicated to advancing access to justice—has unveiled its calendar of training courses, seminars and conferences designed to support lawyers, advisers and other legal professionals in tackling key areas of public interest law
The Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 transformed criminal justice. Writing in NLJ this week, Ed Cape of UWE and Matthew Hardcastle and Sandra Paul of Kingsley Napley trace its ‘seismic impact’
Operational resilience is no longer optional. Writing in NLJ this week, Emma Radmore and Michael Lewis of Womble Bond Dickinson explain how UK regulators expect firms to identify ‘important business services’ that could cause ‘intolerable levels of harm’ if disrupted
As the drip-feed of Epstein disclosures fuels ‘collateral damage’, the rush to cry misconduct in public office may be premature. Writing in NLJ this week, David Locke of Hill Dickinson warns that the offence is no catch-all for political embarrassment. It demands a ‘grave departure’ from proper standards, an ‘abuse of the public’s trust’ and conduct ‘sufficiently serious to warrant criminal punishment’
Employment law is shifting at the margins. In his latest Employment Law Brief for NLJ this week, Ian Smith of Norwich Law School examines a Court of Appeal ruling confirming that volunteers are not a special legal species and may qualify as ‘workers’
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