Law Commission Report A Mixed Bag
16 March 2004
Law Commission report a mixed bag
The Law Commission's report "Delivering Justice For All"
contains some
useful ideas, but large parts of it are
simply change for the sake of
change, say National MPs
Richard Worth and Tony Ryall.
"If the Government is
truly concerned about access to justice then
priority
should be given to increased court resources, new technology
and
improved case management, rather than trialling new
structures with their
associated costs.
"Many of
the recommendations of the commission would not be supported
by
National. Among the more striking are:
* A
national network for the provision of initial legal advice
where the
interface with the present Legal Aid system is
not clear.
* Establishing an additional court to be
known as the Community Court with
power to imprison for
up to ten years and with a responsibility for
preliminary
hearings of indictable offences.
* Scrapping the exercise
of judicial functions by Justices of the
Peace.
* Retaining the Employment Court as a specialist
court rather than merge
it within the existing courts
structure.
* The increase in jurisdiction of the Maori
Land Court to include all
disputes involving communal
Maori assets.
* The decision that family proceedings
should remain closed to the general
public.
"The
strike rate of the commission in implementing its reports
through
legislation is not brilliant. The danger is that
the proposals in the
report which are of merit will not
be translated into action.
"Victims and defendants
are waiting too long for their cases to be heard.
Shifting the front doors is not going to speed things
up. That should be
the priority, as National has been
stating for the past six months," said
Mr Worth & Mr
Ryall.
Ends