Last 3 months headlines – Page 1647
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Adopting the terminology of big business demeans our profession
While other professions and enterprises are adopting terminology designed to elevate those who use their services, why is it that we are docilely using terms which demean our clients, our profession and the services we provide?
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Outrageous Abbey
I write in connection with your story last week, ‘Abbey strikes thousands from conveyancing panel’ (see [2009] Gazette, 26 March, 1). Abbey’s action is outrageous.
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Age old problem
The debate concerning age discrimination is set to continue. Might I suggest that newly qualified solicitors who are of mature years stop whingeing and show prospective employers how they can increase profit margins.
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Infrastructure investment provides opportunities for UK law firms
The UK’s legal sector remains pivotal to the broader financial services sector. Not only is English the language of international business, but English law provides the foundation for many legal systems around the world. In these uncertain times, people are questioning the extent to which ...
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Open and shut case?
Of the 150-odd people who packed out Chancery Lane’s reading room last week to discuss plans to admit journalists into family courts, we reckon that about 149 considered it a bad idea.
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Helping maintain the SRA’s freedom and independence
It has been a big week for the development of regulatory policy. Last Wednesday the Legal Services Board published a consultation document, asking how best to define and maintain adequate separation of the representative and regulatory arms of approved regulators.
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Only 14 firms become first-wave LDPs
The legal profession has largely snubbed the first wave of the Legal Services Act’s business structure reforms, with only 14 legal disciplinary practices up and running as the new regime came into force on Tuesday. The takeup remained low despite a one-month extension to the original ...
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Big four mortgage lenders reassure conveyancing panel firms
Four of the UK’s biggest mortgage lenders have reassured solicitors that they have no plans to cut firms from residential conveyancing panels. Last week, Abbey cut the number of law firm offices on its panel from 12,000 to 6,050, provoking dismay from those affected. Halifax, Nationwide, ...
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LPA registration fee slashed
Lasting Powers of Attorney (LPAs) can now be registered for just £120, the Ministry of Justice announced today. LPAs give people the power to plan ahead to when they are unable to make decisions for themselves, typically by appointing a relative or friend to take responsibility ...
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Solicitor jailed for insider dealing
A solicitor was jailed this week at the climax of the Financial Services Authority’s first criminal prosecution for insider dealing. Christopher McQuoid, 40, former general counsel at TTP Communications, and his father-in-law, James Melbourne, 74, were both found guilty of one count of insider dealing. At ...
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Access to civil justice is failing, says Association of District Judges president
Access to justice in the civil courts is worse than it was a decade ago and is set to decline further, according to the new president of the Association of District Judges. David Oldham, who took over last week from Edwina Millward, said that repeated ...
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Conveyancing solicitors warned on liability for incomplete searches in HIPs
Conveyancing solicitors could be liable for buyers’ losses if they accept defective searches, Law Society President Paul Marsh has warned, as new regulations on the contents of home information packs come into force. From next Monday, transitional measures that allowed packs to include incomplete personal local ...
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Local government solicitors urged to become less cautious
Local authority lawyers should lose their ‘cautious’ reputation, according to the new chair of Solicitors in Local Government (SLG). Guy Goodman told the SLG’s annual general meeting in Warwick last week that the profession faces a battery of immediate challenges, including changes to the code ...
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Personal injury lawyers blame NHS for rise in clinical negligence costs
Clinical negligence lawyers billing the NHS £130m a year have rejected a claim that their fees are ‘indefensibly expensive’ by blaming rising costs on the NHS Litigation Authority (NHSLA) and its panel solicitors. The NHSLA, in its submission to Lord Justice Jackson’s review of ...
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Child care application charges under parliamentary fire
Pressure is mounting on the government to abolish fees for child care application proceedings following two parliamentary interventions. Lord Laming (pictured), who investigated the deaths of Victoria Climbié and Baby P, told MPs last week that he sees no need for fees. Meanwhile Sir ...
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Practitioners condemn best value tendering for police station work
Practitioner groups have condemned the government’s ‘reckless’ and ‘cavalier’ decision to go ahead with the introduction of best value tendering (BVT) for criminal legal aid work. The Legal Services Commission last week announced that the scheme, under which firms bid for work at police stations, will ...
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Family courts in ‘unseemly gallop’ to open to press
The opening of family courts to the press is ‘moving at an unseemly gallop’, a leading high court judge in the family division said last week. Mr Justice Hedley told an emergency meeting at the Law Society that the new policy – announced by justice secretary Jack Straw late last ...
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Disappointing response to SRA diversity census
An attempt by the Solicitors Regulation Authority to gain an accurate picture of the profession’s ethnic breakdown is in peril because nine out of 10 solicitors have failed to respond to a diversity census. Only 14,000 of the 140,000 individuals emailed a questionnaire in December ...
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SRA chief warns of cost of Smedley proposals for City
The Solicitors Regulation Authority would need ‘considerable’ resources to implement the recommendations of Nick Smedley’s report on corporate firm regulation, its chief executive said last week. Antony Townsend told an SRA board meeting that ‘rising demands’ are being placed on his organisation. ‘We have the Smedley ...
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Draft bill would create two new bribery offences
Practitioners have welcomed government proposals to reform ‘antiquated’ bribery laws to create a framework of two general offences of giving and accepting bribes. Justice secretary Jack Straw last week published a draft bribery bill, modelled on recommendations made in the Law Commission’s November 2008 Report, Reforming ...