Ontario's New Law Society Tribunal
Long title
              An Independent Tribunal Within a Self-Governing Law Society: Ontario's New Law Society Tribunal
          Author(s)' contact information
          David Wright
Law Society Tribunal
130 Queen St W
Toronto, ON M5H 2N6 CANADA
dwright@lsuc.on.ca
              Law Society Tribunal
130 Queen St W
Toronto, ON M5H 2N6 CANADA
dwright@lsuc.on.ca
Conference title
              International Legal Ethics Conference
          Conference location
              London, UK
          Country
          Canada
              Year
              2014
          File
          ILEC 2014_0.pptx113.54 KB
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          Abstract
              In 2013, at the request of the Law Society of Upper Canada, the Legislature of Ontario, Canada passed the Modernizing Regulation of the Legal Profession Act which establishes the Law Society Tribunal. This marks a significant change in the approach to hearing and deciding discipline, licensing and other regulatory matters involving lawyers and paralegals. Previously, benchers (governors) directed all aspects of the quasi-judicial hearing process and most adjudicators were benchers. 
The approach to reform is based on the model of other administrative tribunals in Ontario, with some modifications in light of self-governance. The Law Society Tribunal is led by a non-bencher Chair and elected bencher Vice-Chairs appointed by the governors. Adjudicators include elected benchers and other lawyer, paralegal and lay members with adjudicative experience. The implementation of the model includes initiatives such as performance evaluation of adjudicators (including benchers), approaches to promoting consistency and increased professional development that have formed a key part of enhancing administrative justice in other boards and tribunals.
The presentation discusses the new model, the reasons for it, and its challenges. I will comment on the work done during the first months of the new Tribunal and the next steps in enhancing the quality, fairness and independence of quasi-judicial decision-making about regulation of lawyers and paralegals in Ontario.
          The approach to reform is based on the model of other administrative tribunals in Ontario, with some modifications in light of self-governance. The Law Society Tribunal is led by a non-bencher Chair and elected bencher Vice-Chairs appointed by the governors. Adjudicators include elected benchers and other lawyer, paralegal and lay members with adjudicative experience. The implementation of the model includes initiatives such as performance evaluation of adjudicators (including benchers), approaches to promoting consistency and increased professional development that have formed a key part of enhancing administrative justice in other boards and tribunals.
The presentation discusses the new model, the reasons for it, and its challenges. I will comment on the work done during the first months of the new Tribunal and the next steps in enhancing the quality, fairness and independence of quasi-judicial decision-making about regulation of lawyers and paralegals in Ontario.
Teaching Topics
          
      Other Topics
          
      Lawyer Regulation
          
      