Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Planned Service Disruptions Averted: Legal-Aid Deal Reached In B.C.

The Canadian Press, 29 Mar, 2019 09:17 PM

    VANCOUVER — The British Columbia government is to provide a one-time grant of $7.9 million to help develop a new approach to legal-aid funding, averting a withdrawal of the service on Monday.


    The Association of Legal Aid Lawyers says an agreement it has reached with the province means members will not limit or suspend the work they do.


    The province says the deal includes an increase in payments to legal-aid workers from April 28 until Oct. 31 while a long-term agreement is negotiated.


    The association says the agreement shows the government is taking legal-aid lawyers seriously.


    Earlier this month, the association's members voted to limit or suspend legal aid to back their demands for a funding increase to better pay lawyers.


    The association says the only pay increase legal aid lawyers have received in 28 years was in 2006 when their hourly rate was boosted by 10 per cent.


    It argues the average spent per person on legal aid in 1993 was $25.22 and, accounting for inflation, should now amount to about $40.


    Under the agreement, the province will provide $4 million and $3.9 million will come from the Legal Services Society, a non-profit organization that oversees legal aid.


    "We recognize there is work to be done to improve the legal-aid system both for British Columbians and the counsel that represent them in court," said Attorney General David Eby. "Legal-aid lawyers provide services to some of the most vulnerable members of the province, and we will continue to work with LSS to address the historical underfunding of legal aid."

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Tina Fontaine Asked For Help Before She Died, Was Told No Beds: Advocate

    Daphne Penrose says in her report into the death of Tina Fontaine that social workers and others ignored multiple signs that the girl was spiralling downward and in danger.

    Tina Fontaine Asked For Help Before She Died, Was Told No Beds: Advocate

    Promising BMX Cyclist Aidan Webber From Nanaimo Dies In Workplace Accident Off Vancouver Island

    A post on the Nanaimo BMX Facebook page says Nanaimo resident Aidan Webber died Sunday.

    Promising BMX Cyclist Aidan Webber From Nanaimo Dies In Workplace Accident Off Vancouver Island

    Woman Seriously Injured When Avalanche Strikes During National Park Adventure

    Woman Seriously Injured When Avalanche Strikes During National Park Adventure
     A woman is listed in critical, life-threatening condition in a Calgary hospital after she was caught in an avalanche near Field, British Columbia.

    Woman Seriously Injured When Avalanche Strikes During National Park Adventure

    RCMP Search For Dognapper After Theft Of Pooch From Fenced Yard In Kelowna, B.C.

    RCMP Search For Dognapper After Theft Of Pooch From Fenced Yard In Kelowna, B.C.
    Police say the theft happened at about 7:30 p.m. on March 9, in the city's Mission area.    

    RCMP Search For Dognapper After Theft Of Pooch From Fenced Yard In Kelowna, B.C.

    Volunteers In Vancouver To Tally Homeless On Streets And In Shelters

    Vancouver's annual homeless count is to begin tonight and will continue through all city neighbourhoods for 24 hours. The count has been done every year since 2010.

    Volunteers In Vancouver To Tally Homeless On Streets And In Shelters

    Renewed Efforts To Find Montreal Boy A Year After His Disappearance

    Renewed Efforts To Find Montreal Boy A Year After His Disappearance
    MONTREAL — A year after 10-year-old Ariel Jeffrey Kouakou vanished after setting out to visit a friend in north-end Montreal, new efforts are being launched this week to find him.    

    Renewed Efforts To Find Montreal Boy A Year After His Disappearance