Pro-lawyer regulator calls for solicitor complaints reform. THE ‘independent’ regulator of Scottish solicitors – the Scottish Legal Complaints Commission (SLCC) is calling on the Scottish Government to consult on reforms to the "complex and legalistic" system for handling complaints against solicitors and other legal practitioners in Scotland.
The ‘independent’ SLCC – controlled by the Law Society of Scotland and funded by legal fees from clients – has presented a paper titled Reimagine Regulation to Scottish Ministers – setting out six key priority areas the SLCC believes the Government, which has committed to consultation on a review of legal regulation, should focus on.
Explaining that the present system requires different processes depending on the level of seriousness attached to the complaint – inadequate professional service, unsatisfactory conduct or professional misconduct, with complaints sometimes having to restart under a different process – the SLCC wants to "reduce the whole process to three core stages", namely:
1. A single investigation – ensuring there are a range of flexible options to filter out vexatious and similar complaints and allowing processes proportionate to different levels; £200 or £20,000
2. Determination – by the same organisation in relation to lower level issues, or by prosecution at the professional tribunal for conduct which may lead to removal from the profession;
3. Appeal – to ensure accountability and meet the requirements of natural justice there should be a single opportunity to appeal at the conclusion of the process.
However, any limit of compensation is widely seen as a cave-in to the legal profession, given the fact accumulative financial losses suffered by clients of rogue solicitors can well exceed the £20,000 limit.
Reimagine Regulation – How pro-lawyer regulator views regulation.
The Law Society backed SLCC – is also calling for consultation on whether it is time for a single independent body to handle all aspects of complaints against the legal profession. The single investigatory body was the previous model when the Law Society of Scotland handled all complaints against it’s own member solicitors.
To achieve faster, more efficient, and more targeted complaints handling, paper claims the government must focus on a simplified customer journey, not institutions and legislative detail. A consultation should focus on the key questions:
a) Is it time for a single independent body to handle all aspects of complaints?
b) If not, how could stages and hand-overs be dramatically reduced - for example, a single investigation covering service and conduct, even if conduct is still prosecuted at an Independent tribunal?
c) How many chances of appeal should there be, and is it time to consider the Sheriff Appeal Court as a more proportionate forum than the Court of Session for consumer disputes
The SLCC contends other areas should also be explored such as:
* Whether complaints bodies should have more discretion, with appropriate safeguards, and less prescriptive legislation;
* How to ensure that compensation awarded is paid to the consumer;
* How issues of unfair fees should best be addressed;
* Whether it is time to move from "one size fits all" regulation to a focus on the areas of greatest consumer risk, engaging experts on how to tackle high risk areas;
* The appropriate balance between professional regulation and market regulation;
* And whether the SLCC should have the power to issue rules on how lawyers should handle complaints at first tier, and the power to impose "strict liability" offences where they do not have, or follow, their own internal process.
Reimagine Regulation - Appendices & further research:Following on from claims put forward in the SLCC’s call for a consultation, the regulator contends a framework Act allowing "proportionate and targeted" regulation would resolve complaints faster, benefiting consumers and lawyers; resolve complaints more cost efficiently, reducing the SLCC's operating costs paid for by the profession; increase the effectiveness of redress, a key public protection; reduce risk to consumers; and increase market confidence.
Commenting on the SLCC’s call for what some dubbed a window dressing exercise, former Law Society Director and now SLCC Chief executive Neil Stevenson said: "This is not about criticising current institutions or approaches – all organisations involved work hard to make the system work as best it can, and Scotland has an internationally well respected legal sector. However, after years of minor reforms we believe it's time to engage the Scottish public and legal community on what results we are trying to achieve with regulation and complaints handling, and the simplest and most efficient way to do that. We hope this paper provokes broad discussion, and that the fantastic opportunity of a review of current arrangements looks at big issues and not just adjusting technical detail with the current model.”
SLCC chair Bill Brackenridge said: "There is much to be proud of, but we are frustrated at a system which is more complex and legalistic than it needs to be. Based on feedback from lawyers and consumers, and drawing on expert evidence, we believe any consultation should aspire to improve the current system.”
Brackenridge continued: "Last year we helped hundreds of consumers reach an early settlement, and some areas of our work, like mediation, get hugely positive feedback from lawyers and consumers alike. We awarded over £400,000 of redress, but we also dismissed cases which were clearly unmerited, providing independent assurance and confirmation that a lawyer has actually provided an acceptable service."
Despite claims of high compensation payments, neither Mr Brackenridge or the SLCC has published figures revealing actual financial losses suffered by clients, compared to settlements and compensation awarded by the SLCC to victims of rogue solicitors.
Reimagine Regulation
The current arrangements for legal complaints, and how complaint outcomes are used to improve standards in the legal sector, are too complex, involve too many stages, and pass through too many organisations. Faster, more efficient, and better targeted regulation can be delivered, to the benefit of consumers and the sector, by significant legislative reform.
The SLCC’s paper Reimagine Regulation - SLCC priorities for a consultation on legal services regulation sets out six key priority areas we believe the government should consult on when they deliver on their commitment to launch a 'consultation to review legal regulation'. The changes would benefit both consumers and lawyers, by:
1. Unravelling the current complex complaints maze
2. Reducing statutory detail that focuses on processes, not outcomes for people
3. Ensuring that when redress is awarded the client receives it
4. Targeting risk, and not seeing all legal services as the same
5. Embedding the consumer principles
6. Learning from complaints and data to improve future outcomes
The Scottish Legal Complaints Commission claims their aim in this mainly public relations driven exercise - is to ensure that if there is a government consultation or review around the regulation of legal services then the key issues we set out are opened up for debate by consumers, the public and lawyers. Final decisions on these issues are for the government and for parliament.
Scottish Ministers have so far not commented on whether they will launch any loaded consultation on the SLCC’s published paper.
Get involved
The SLCC has issued a call for consumers and the legal profession to become involved in the debate:
If you are interested in this area and wish to assist the debate then you can:
* publish an article discussing our ideas
* invite us to come to speak to you, or ask to visit us, or for us to send further information
* Contact your MSP or your professional body
* blog or tweet - copy us in @slcccomplaints and use the hashtag #ReimagineRegulation
* share views with the SLCC by email to consult@scottishlegalcomplaints.org.uk
Previous media investigations, reports and coverage of issues relating to the SLCC can be found here: Scottish Legal Complaints Commission - A history of pro-lawyer regulation.
more window dressing and playing for time
ReplyDeletethis 'calling' for a consultation will achieve as much as the consultation itself - nothing.
Please no more SLCC!They are corrupt we know it!
ReplyDeleteAnother desperate attempt by the SLCC to justify their existence when we all know thanks to you the whole thing is another Law Society scam.
ReplyDeleteThey probably dreamed up this whole scam to cover over the fine job you have done on informing the public what actually happens in self regulation and lawyers covering up their own crimes.
From reading the details this sounds more like something aimed at solicitors rather than clients - the majority of whom are as clueless as a boat without a rudder.
ReplyDeleteIn any case it appears your blog is doing a good job of provoking the slcc into occasional activity even if as you say this is little more than public relations.
Keep up the excellent consumer protection!
Nothing involving the SLCC will be 'independent' - quite the opposite as your many factually accurate reports confirm time and time again.
ReplyDeleteAs for SLCC Chief executive Neil Stevenson claiming that "Scotland has an internationally well respected legal sector"......self praise is no recommendation.
Dr Hans Koechler, speaking as a UN Observer and EEC Advisor on Democracy and Human Rights and as someone who IS internationally respected, compared the Scottish legal system to that of a "Banana Republic" in an interview with the Sunday Times.
Go away and do your homework Mr Stevenson.
The thing I find most offensive about these documents you have published from the SLCC is their expectation people who already had their lives shattered by their own solicitors are going to have to wade through all of this to give what you correctly term a "pro lawyer" regulator an idea of how they should be regulating the legal profession instead of covering up for their own kind.
ReplyDeleteI honestly wish I had known about your blog years ago and not become involved a legal dispute that ended up costing ourselves and our neighbours dearly after we all realised our solicitors from two separate firms in Glasgow were playing us off against each other to prolong our dispute in court for nothing more than their own fees and useless expert after expert and one expert in particular who was told by the sheriff he was wasting court time.
You may also take from my remarks a bitter and shared experience with the SLCC which I compare to nothing short of physical and mental abuse leaving us feeling shattered and at wits end.
@ 14 July 2016 at 16:02
ReplyDeleteThe Law Society of Scotland play a significant role at the SLCC ... and it is likely they had input into the current #ReimagineRegulation PR exercise ...
@ 14 July 2016 at 21:58
Many clients are made to feel they are clueless about the law and given false expectation by the legal profession when engaging legal services ... purely for generating business.
@ 15 July 2016 at 09:44
Good points ...
@ 15 July 2016 at 16:56
Good points echoed by many who have contacted DOI regarding dealings with the Scottish Legal Complaints Commission.
If you wish to share details of your case and treatment by the SLCC, in confidence, please email the blog.