header-logo header-logo

Bar wants LSB to ‘do less’

17 February 2021
Categories: Legal News , Profession , Regulatory
printer mail-detail
In its response to the Legal Services Board's draft strategy for legal services regulation and business plan 2021-22, the Bar Council advised the board to ‘do less and do that better’

The LSB's business plan set out three themes, including ‘competence’, under which it proposed routine checks on lawyers and ongoing formal reviews of competence.

Announcing the plan, Helen Phillips, Chair of the Legal Services Sector, LSB, said: ‘We need to reshape legal services to better meet the needs of society.

The LSB first proposed a single regulator for all legal services in 2016. Last year, Professor Stephen Mayson’s review of regulation, ‘Reforming legal services’, concluded that it was time to move to a single regulator.

However, the Bar Council accused the LSB this week of having ‘fallen into the trap’ of behaving as though it regulates legal services, rather than overseeing the regulation of leal services. It said the LSB’s strategy aim of a single regulator for all legal services was not a ‘proper and lawful exercise’ of its powers, and ran counter to the Legal Services Act 2007, which purposefully did not merge the various professions.

Moreover, the Bar Council said, the LSB’s intention of ‘reshaping legal services to better meet society’s needs’ was inappropriate for a body mandated to providing oversight of regulation.

Categories: Legal News , Profession , Regulatory
printer mail-details

MOVERS & SHAKERS

Red Lion Chambers—Maurice MacSweeney

Red Lion Chambers—Maurice MacSweeney

Set creates new client and business development role amid growth

Kingsley Napley—Tim Lowles

Kingsley Napley—Tim Lowles

Sports disputes practice launchedwith partner appointment

mfg Solicitors—Tom Evans

mfg Solicitors—Tom Evans

Tax and succession planning offering expands with returning partner

NEWS
The rank of King’s Counsel (KC) has been awarded to 96 barristers, and no solicitors, in the latest silk round
Neurotechnology is poised to transform contract law—and unsettle it. Writing in NLJ this week, Harry Lambert, barrister at Outer Temple Chambers and founder of the Centre for Neurotechnology & Law, and Dr Michelle Sharpe, barrister at the Victorian Bar, explore how brain–computer interfaces could both prove and undermine consent
Comparators remain the fault line of discrimination law. In this week's NLJ, Anjali Malik, partner at Bellevue Law, and Mukhtiar Singh, barrister at Doughty Street Chambers, review a bumper year of appellate guidance clarifying how tribunals should approach ‘actual’ and ‘evidential’ comparators. A new six-stage framework stresses a simple starting point: identify the treatment first
In cross-border divorces, domicile can decide everything. In NLJ this week, Jennifer Headon, legal director and head of international family, Isobel Inkley, solicitor, and Fiona Collins, trainee solicitor, all at Birketts LLP, unpack a Court of Appeal ruling that re-centres nuance in jurisdiction disputes. The court held that once a domicile of choice is established, the burden lies on the party asserting its loss
Early determination is no longer a novelty in arbitration. In NLJ this week, Gustavo Moser, arbitration specialist lawyer at Lexis+, charts the global embrace of summary disposal powers, now embedded in the Arbitration Act 1996 and mirrored worldwide. Tribunals may swiftly dismiss claims with ‘no real prospect of succeeding’, but only if fairness is preserved
back-to-top-scroll