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01 June 2017
Issue: 7748 / Categories: Legal News
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Tasks for the Lord Chancellor post-election

Online courts and the promised review of LASPO (Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012) are two examples of the ‘groaning in-tray’ that the next Lord Chancellor will encounter, says Steve Hynes, director of the Legal Action Group.

The Prisons and Courts Bill will likely be back on the books if the Conservative win a majority, including online courts and the need both to provide safeguards for users and to assess which tasks can be delegated to non-legally qualified staff.

However, the hardest job for the Lord Chancellor, whoever he or she may be, will be balancing the books, Hynes writes in this week’s NLJ. Both the ongoing modernisation of the courts and the increased capital spending on the prisons estate have potential to overrun and to need more cash, he says. Hynes advises the Lord Chancellor to avoid further hikes in court and tribunal fees, as these combined with LASPO cuts to civil legal aid, are having ‘a clear chilling effect on access to justice’.

Issue: 7748 / Categories: Legal News
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MOVERS & SHAKERS

Foot Anstey—Jasmine Olomolaiye

Foot Anstey—Jasmine Olomolaiye

Investigations and corporate crime expert joins as partner

Fieldfisher—Mark Shaw

Fieldfisher—Mark Shaw

Veteran funds specialist joins investment funds team

Taylor Wessing—Stephen Whitfield

Taylor Wessing—Stephen Whitfield

Firm enhances competition practice with London partner hire

NEWS
Could an online LLM in Commercial and Technology Law expand your career options?
The controversial Courts and Tribunals Bill has passed its second reading by 304 votes to 203, despite concerted opposition from the legal profession
The presumption of parental involvement is to be abolished, the Lord Chancellor David Lammy has confirmed
A highly experienced chartered legal executive has been prevented from representing her client in financial remedies proceedings, in a case that highlights the continued fallout from Mazur
Plans to commandeer 50%-75% of the interest on lawyers’ client accounts to fund the justice system overlook the cost and administrative burden of this on small and medium law firms, CILEX has warned
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