Headlines – Page 1261

  • News

    Law firms sign up to equal pay reporting

    2011-09-22T00:00:00Z

    National firm Eversheds (pictured) and northwest firm DWF have become the country’s first law firms to join a government scheme to publish gender equality data. News that the two firms have signed up to the Home Office’s Think, Act, Report scheme follows a Legal Services Board ...

  • News

    Report card

    2011-09-22T00:00:00Z

    The annual report of the Ministry of Justice is worth a good ferret, as there are always gobbets to be unearthed among the notes to the accounts. The nation’s magistrates might be concerned to note that HM Courts Service posted a massive £153m overspend, reflecting a newly discovered deficit in ...

  • News

    Ready to rock, paper, scissors

    2011-09-22T00:00:00Z

    Kenneth Clarke is an impatient man, and not just when he’s waiting in the queue for the Commons canteen. The justice secretary wants cases to be wrapped up much quicker in the future – and we think we may have a solution for him right here ...

  • News

    ‘Mad Fred’ Rondel

    2011-09-22T00:00:00Z

    By the time I met Norbert ‘Mad Fred’ Rondel, the club owner acquitted of organising the robbery which led to the Spaghetti House siege in 1975, he was a relatively benign old man selling second-hand cars in Lambeth. Could I find him a computer to help with the resurrection of ...

  • News

    Charity in legal aid challenge on clinical negligence

    2011-09-22T00:00:00Z

    Action Against Medical Accidents has launched a legal challenge against the government’s controversial plans to scrap legal aid for clinical negligence cases. The charity has issued judicial review proceedings, arguing that the Ministry of Justice's decision to remove such cases from scope is irrational and unfair. ...

  • News

    Telephone gateway plan could face judicial review

    2011-09-22T00:00:00Z

    Government plans to introduce a mandatory telephone gateway to the civil legal aid scheme are facing a legal challenge which is supported by The Law Society. The Public Law Project, acting on behalf of ten specialist legal aid firms, has issued an application for permission to apply for a judicial ...

  • News

    Advocacy accreditation will be implemented ‘circuit by circuit’

    2011-09-22T00:00:00Z

    The controversial Quality Assurance Scheme for Advocates (QASA) will be implemented in stages, but there will be no pilot, it has emerged. A report to the Bar Standards Board indicated that consideration was being given to piloting of the scheme, which is due to ...

  • News

    Letterhead change

    2011-09-22T00:00:00Z

    Elizabeth Muirhead’s letter questions the need for firms to change their letterheads, websites and emails to say ‘authorised and regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority’ from 6 October, when our new Handbook and Code of Conduct come into effect. The reason for the change is to ...

  • News

    Family bar warns of ‘bleak’ future at national meeting

    2011-09-21T00:00:00Z

    Family barristers have warned of a ‘bleak’ future for family justice if the government’s legal aid cuts are implemented as planned. At a national meeting last weekend, the Family Law Bar Association said the reforms set out in the Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders ...

  • News

    Claimants will ‘never see’ ten per cent damages uplift

    2011-09-21T00:00:00Z

    Government plans to introduce a 10% uplift on general damages have again been called into question, amid concern that they are reliant on the co-operation of insurers. The increase, recommended by Lord Justice Jackson in his review of civil litigation costs, was intended in part to ...

  • News

    Dundas & Wilson in merger talks

    2011-09-20T00:00:00Z

    Edinburgh-headquartered Dundas & Wilson, one of Scotland’s so-called ‘big four’ law firms, has has begun merger talks with London-based Bircham Dyson Bell. In a joint statement released on Tuesday by the managing partners of each firm, the pair confirmed that talks have begun which may lead ...

  • News

    ABSs ‘not attractive’ to City firms, new research suggests

    2011-09-20T00:00:00Z

    City law firms do not generally see alternative business structures as attractive, because they are reluctant to cede control of the firm to source external funding that they do not need. This is one conclusion of the first of a series of studies looking at ...

  • News

    EU-wide training: the impossible dream

    2011-09-19T00:00:00Z

    What would you do if you had to draw up a plan for training 1.4 million legal personnel in European Union law in 27 member states? You would either run for the exit, or make a hopeful start somewhere.

  • News

    Regulator considers ‘reflective approach’ on continuing professional development

    2011-09-19T00:00:00Z

    The Solicitors Regulation Authority is to commission research on continuing professional development schemes in other professions and internationally as part of its review of CPD, the Gazette has learned. The regulator said it will examine a range of schemes in use, including the more ‘reflective’ approach ...

  • News

    Lib Dems call for legal aid to be retained in benefits appeals

    2011-09-19T00:00:00Z

    The Liberal Democrats have condemned the cuts to legal aid for welfare benefits appeals. At its autumn conference, the party called on the government to retain legal aid for people appealing welfare benefit decisions, and voted through a motion condemning the government’s welfare reform plans. ...

  • News

    Community sentences are no soft option

    2011-09-19T00:00:00Z

    The prison population has reached a record high of 87,120, according to figures released on Friday by the Ministry of Justice. But does being tough on crime mean offenders have to go to prison, or are community sentences and reparation actually tougher? And are the latter ...

  • News

    New solicitor training model could shake up the City

    2011-09-19T00:00:00Z

    A groundbreaking solicitor training model has launched this week, targeting City law firms and in-house legal departments. The first non-legal service provider to be authorised by the Solicitors Regulation Authority to take on trainees, Acculaw claims it will cut costs and improve efficiency for firms looking ...

  • News

    Law Society announces Excellence Awards shortlist

    2011-09-19T00:00:00Z

    The Law Society has today unveiled the shortlist of lawyers and firms nominated for this year’s Excellence Awards. The 17 awards recognise outstanding achievement by legal professionals at firms of all sizes across England and Wales, in categories ranging from community investment to client service, with ...

  • News

    LSC ‘performed strongly’ in 2010/11, says MoJ

    2011-09-16T00:00:00Z

    The departing chief executive of the Legal Services Commission (LSC) cut the organisation’s running costs by 11% in 2010/11. Carolyn Downs achieved a £15m underspend on the organisation’s £135m administrative budget, through ‘targeted efficiency savings generated in year against staff, estates and costs’. ...

  • News

    Decisive actions are needed in changing times

    2011-09-16T00:00:00Z

    Despite the delay in the regulation to license alternative business structures and the full implementation of the Legal Services Act, it is imperative that law firms decide now what direction their firm is planning to take. We can categorise the profession simply into three areas; the ...