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Transforming Legal Aid Consultation Events May 2013 Legal Aid Policy Team Ministry of Justice. Agenda and objectives. Objectives Opportunity to seek clarification on proposals Provide initial views/comments on the proposals Help prepare you to submit a response to consultation Agenda
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Transforming Legal Aid Consultation Events May 2013 Legal Aid Policy Team Ministry of Justice
Agenda and objectives • Objectives • Opportunity to seek clarification on proposals • Provide initial views/comments on the proposals • Help prepare you to submit a response to consultation • Agenda • Case for reform • Part 1: Eligibility and civil fees • Question and answer session • Part 2: Crime competition and crime fees
Case for reform • Continuing challenging financial environment • Need to examine why, what and how we pay • Legal Aid Reforms and LASPO • Impact on both civil and criminal legal aid • But mainly focused on civil legal aid • Need to do more: • improving public confidence • maximising return from limited resource • delivering best value for taxpayer • Focus now necessarily mainly on criminal legal aid
Eligibility, scope and merits • Five Proposals: • Restrict scope of legal aid for prison law • Restrict scope to cases that meet one of three criteria: • Involves the determination of a criminal charge • Engages the right to review of ongoing detention • Requires legal representation under Tarrant criteria • Use of prisoner complaints system discipline procedures, probation complaints system • Financial eligibility threshold in the Crown Court • Disposable household income - £37,500 or more • Hardship review • Payment on acquittal from central funds at legal aid rates
Eligibility, scope and merits – cont’d • Introduce a residence test • Two limb test: • Lawfully resident in the UK, Crown Dependencies or British Overseas Territories at time of application; and • Resident lawfully for 12 month period • Exceptions • Paying for permission work in judicial review cases • Providers only paid for permission application work if permission granted by the Court • Similar system to immigration and asylum UT appeals • Civil merits test • No longer fund cases in the borderline prospects of success category
Civil and expert legal aid fee reform • Proposals • Reduce fixed representation fees to solicitors in public law family cases • Harmonise advocacy fees in most civil (non-family) cases • Remove uplift in rates paid in immigration and asylum Upper Tribunal cases • Reduce fees for all experts by 20% 6
Crime competition • Introduction • Current market too fragile to sustain further fee cuts • Believe competitive tendering is likely to be best way to ensure long-term sustainability & value for money • Written Ministerial Statement – Dec 2011 • Written Ministerial Statement – Mar 2013 • Consultation on the proposed model, not on the principle • Key features of proposed model • Economies of scale • Economies of scope • Simplification and greater flexibility • Savings objective
Crime competition – cont’d • Key elements of proposed model • Scope of new contract: • All criminal legal aid classes of work except: • Crown Court advocacy • Very High Cost (Crime) Cases • Criminal Defence Direct services • Defence Solicitor Call Centre • Contract length • 3 year contract term plus up to 2 year extension • Geographical areas • Procurement areas based on 42 CJS areas • Join areas with low volumes with larger areas • Divide London into 3 areas aligned with CPS
Crime competition – cont’d • Key elements of proposed model – cont’d • Number of contracts • Variable by procurement area • Four key considerations: • Conflict – minimum of 4 contracts per area • Sufficient volume • Market agility – scaling up / scaling down • Sustainable procurement • Total contracts: around 400 • Types of provider • Partnerships, LDPs, joint ventures, ABSs
Crime competition – cont’d • Key elements of proposed model – cont’d • Contract value • Equal share of police station cases • All follow-on work • Client choice • Generally no choice in provider allocated • Continuity of representation • Exceptional circumstances • Case allocation • Case by case (e.g. each case, by surname, by day of month of birth) • Duty slots
Crime competition – cont’d • Key elements of proposed model – cont’d • Remuneration • Price competed: • Police station attendance – block payment • Magistrates’ court representation – fixed fee • Crown Court • Cases with less than 500 PPE – fixed fee • Cases with more than 500 PPE – grad fee • Admin set rates: all other classes of work
Crime competition – cont’d • Key elements of proposed model – cont’d • Procurement process • Two stage process: • Pre-Qualification Questionnaire • Invitation to tender • Delivery plan based on quality and capacity • Price • Implementation • Process to start in all procurement areas – autumn 2013 • Contracts awarded – summer 2014 • Service commencement – autumn 2014
Criminal legal aid fee reform • Three proposals • Restructure the AGFS • Harmonise basic fees for EGP, cracked & contested trials • Reduce daily attendance fee • Apply a taper for trials for day 3 onwards • Reduce all VHCC rates by 30% • New cases from implementation date • Work done on current cases on and after implementation date • Reduce the use of multiple advocates • Tighten criteria • Ensure criteria are applied consistently and robustly
Responding to the consultation Consultation closes: 4 June 2013 Ways to respond: Online at: https://consult.justice.gov.uk/ In writing to: Annette Cowell Ministry of Justice 102 Petty France London SW1H 9AJ By email: legalaidreformmoj@justice.gsi.gov.uk Enquiries: As above or by phone: 0203 334 3555 Response paper: Due to be published in autumn 2013 at MoJ website