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Legal Aid Ontario

Legal Aid Ontario (LAO) is a publicly funded and publicly accountable non-profit corporation, responsible for administering the legal aid program in the province of Ontario, Canada. Through a toll-free number and multiple in-person locations such as courthouse offices, duty counsel and community legal clinics, the organization provides more than one million assists to low-income Ontario residents each year.[2]

Legal Aid Ontario (LAO)
Agency overview
Formed1998
Preceding agency
  • Ontario Legal Aid Plan (OLAP)
TypeLegal aid provision
JurisdictionOntario
Headquarters40 Dundas Street West
Toronto, Ontario
Employees501–1000
Annual budget$432.6 m CAN (2016).[1]
Agency executive
  • David Field, President and CEO
Parent agencyMinistry of Attorney General
Websitehttp://legalaid.on.ca

Legal help available edit

Established in 1998 through the Legal Aid Services Act[3] and successor to the Ontario Legal Aid Plan (OLAP), Legal Aid Ontario provides legal aid services to low-income individuals in the province of Ontario through duty counsel, community legal clinics, public legal education, summary legal advice, alternative dispute resolution, self-help materials and legal representation under the 'judicare' model.

The organization provides help with domestic violence, family law, child custody, refugee and immigration hearings, and poverty law issues. LAO also provides assistance in criminal cases where the accused is likely to go to jail if convicted. As many offences are considered hybrid, that being the courts may decide to prosecute as either a summary or indictable offence, legal aid applicants are assessed on a case-by-case basis.

LAO determines eligibility for legal aid based on the applicant's financial situation and if LAO can provide help with the legal issue. To qualify financially, an individual must make less than the amount in the table below for their family size.

Number of family members Income must be lower than[E 1]
1 $22,720
2 $32,131
3 $39,137
4 $45,440
5+ $50,803

LAO maintains a second eligibility criterion for when an applicant requires a lawyer to represent them. This criterion is typically reserved for only the most serious of cases where providing legal help solely by other means such as duty counsel, summary legal advice or self-help would be insufficient. Those that qualify for representation are given a "certificate" which can be used as a voucher to hire a lawyer of their choosing who accepts legal aid clients. Lawyers who accept these legal aid certificates are paid directly through Legal Aid Ontario in accordance with a rate that is designed to reflect the fees that would be typically paid by a client of modest means. In some cases, clients may have to repay Legal Aid Ontario some or all of the cost of their representation, depending on their income.[4]

Number of family members Income must be lower than[E 1]
1 $15,781
2 $28,406
3 $33,102
4 $38,026
5+ $42,874
Single boarders $10,352
  1. ^ a b "Am I eligible for a legal aid certificate?"

Legal clinics edit

Legal Aid Ontario helps fund a network of 76 legal clinics[5] throughout the province. These legal clinics provide advice, and in some cases representation, primarily for civil law matters on matters such as:

  • workplace safety
  • Canada Pension Plan appeals or issues
  • Employment Insurance appeals
  • insurance claims for long-term benefits, such as Ontario Disability Support Program
  • Power of Attorney, wills or estates (at a limited number of legal clinics)
  • Tenant protection (landlord and tenant issues, including referral to tenant duty counsel)

Legal clinics also play a large role in the provision of workshops and information sessions and the undertaking of law reform initiatives. Many legal clinics also publish brochures, booklets, pamphlets and fact sheets for the benefit of the public.

There are three types of legal clinics in Ontario, each providing different types of services:

  • Community legal clinics provide legal help within a specific geographic area of the province.[6] The services they offer can vary from one to another, depending on the needs of the local community.
  • Specialty legal clinics focus on specific areas of law not normally covered by the community legal clinics. These legal clinics help with issues such as minority and specialty language group rights, youth and elderly assistance, individuals with disabilities and HIV & AIDS matters.[7]
  • Student Legal Aid Services Societies (SLASS) operate out of Ontario's seven law schools[8] and provide legal advice and representation on matters such as criminal law, tenant issues, employee rights and small claims court. These legal clinics offer law students practical training and experience under the supervision of lawyers. SLASS clinics typically provide free legal assistance for students enrolled at the university and in some cases, students attending a local college.

History of legal aid in Ontario edit

In 1951, the provincial government passed the Law Society Amendment Act, 1951,[9] outlining the creation of a plan to assist low-income people and a small fund to cover its operation. However, lawyers who provided assistance did so entirely pro-bono and without being paid for their services.[10] By 1967, the Legal Aid Act was passed, dividing responsibility of operating the legal aid plan between the province and the Law Society of Upper Canada (LSUC). Legal help was to be provided through two methods: in-court duty counsel lawyers and the certificate program where recipients would be given a "voucher" that could be used to hire a lawyer to represent them for a certain number of hours. Legal services were limited to criminal matters where the accused faced a serious risk of going to jail and family matters heard in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice.[11]

Concerns were raised that this model of legal assistance did not provide individuals with sufficient representation, arguing that the legal issues of low-income clients were considerably different than of a paying customer. Part of this problem was due to a lack of lawyers interested in supporting low-income clients with so-called ‘poverty law’ matters, that being legal matters dealing with public assistance, tenant issues and welfare rights.[12] The creation of the community legal clinic system sought to alleviate this problem by providing low-income Ontarians with dedicated resources to help them resolve these matters. A few years later, these developments would be incorporated into the 1978 study, Report of the Commission on Clinical Funding[13] which ultimately played a significant role in the formation of the Ontario Legal Aid Plan (OLAP), the precursor to Legal Aid Ontario.[14]

Over the next decade as OLAP grew and the organization expanded the number of legal clinics, operation costs began to increase substantially. By the early 1990s and at the peak of the recession, OLAP was issuing more than 200,000 certificates a year and covering a broad range of criminal, family, refugee, and other civil claims. At the same time, the number of community legal clinics had almost doubled from 35 a decade earlier to 66, with costs jumping from $3.3 million to $22.1 million annually.[15] Faced with a recession, the province responded by freezing funding[16] and reducing the legal aid certificate program by $27.5 million. This cap resulted in a steep decline of certificates granted; more than 150,000 fewer were issued from 1994 to 1999. Emphasis began to shift towards more cost-effective services such as staff lawyers, duty counsel and Student Legal Aid Services Societies.

In 1998 and in response to the growing need for legal aid, the Mike Harris Progressive Conservative government, on recommendation by the 1997 report A Blueprint for Publicly Funded Legal Services: the Report of the Ontario Legal Aid Review,[17] introduced the Legal Aid Services Act which outlined the creation of an independent agency called Legal Aid Ontario (LAO).[18] The Act defined LAO as independent from, but accountable to, the Ontario government through the Ministry of the Attorney General. LAO would become the sole agency for establishing, administering, and monitoring the legal aid system within the province, and was granted the ability to "provide legal aid services by any method that it considers appropriate, having regard to the needs of low-income individuals… and the costs of providing such services and the Corporation’s financial resources."[19]

In recent years and in response to economic, client, and government pressures to improve service and reduce costs, LAO has begun adopting modern approaches to service delivery. Some of these changes have included the consolidation of offices across the province into nine district offices, the development of a toll-free service, information sharing with the Ministry of Community & Social Services for social assistance eligibility information, and the expansion of courthouse services. While the province has assisted with increased investment over the last few years, a major decline in funding from the Law Foundation of Ontario trust accounts[20] due to the financial situation in the late 2000s placed additional financial pressures on the organization. To address some of these issues, the Government of Ontario committed in 2014 to raising the eligibility thresholds to "allow over one million more people to qualify for legal aid services".[21] This increase however also had the consequence of an unexpected and unprecedented increased in demand for legal help, far beyond what Legal Aid Ontario anticipated.[22] As a measure to control spiraling costs, LAO halted the implementation of some of the newly expanded services until it matches available funding, froze staff salaries and maintained the current level of legal clinics funding for 2017/18.

Funding edit

Funding for Legal Aid Ontario comes primarily from the Province of Ontario, the Government of Canada and the Law Foundation of Ontario (LFO). The LFO administers the interest earned on lawyers' trust fund balances and Legal Aid Ontario receives 75 per cent of this income, resulting in revenue levels highly dependent on the Bank of Canada overnight rate and real estate activity levels.

Revenue ($ millions)[R 1] 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Province of Ontario[R 2] $256.1 $254.8 $260.5 $269.1 $283.9 $285.8 $315.4 $320.8 $335.7 $347.5 $350.2 $363.1 $395.3
Law Foundation of Ontario $24.2 $18.6 $30.7 $51.5 $56.4 $26.2 $4.8 $13.4 $19.1 $22.3 $25.6 $29.2 $25.2
Client contributions $13.1 $15.2 $15.7 $17.3 $18.9 $21.5 $21.9 $18.1 $15.4 $12.1 $10.0 $9.9 $10.0
Judgements, costs & settlements and other recoveries[M 1] $1.7 $1.5 $0.28 $0.41 $0.28 $0.30 $0.26 $0.52 $0.36 $0.68 $1.1 $0.76 $0.81
Investment income[M 1] $4.6 $3.0 $2.1 $1.4 $3.1 $3.1 $1.7 $0.27 $0.33 $0.25 $0.41 $0.60 $0.39
Miscellaneous income[M 1] $0.46 $0.73 $0.59 $0.66 $0.63 $0.97
Total $299.6 $289.3 $293.1 $339.7 $362.6 $336.9 $344.1 $353.6 $371.7 $383.4 $388.0 $404.2 $432.6
  1. ^ a b c A change in reporting was made in 2011 that saw the creation of a "miscellaneous income category" and the renameing of "judgements, costs and settlements" to "client and other recoveries" and "investment and other income" to "investment income".
  1. ^ Legal Aid Ontario annual reports
  2. ^ Province of Ontario funding includes the Federal Government contributions listed below.

The Federal government of Canada provides a portion of funding to contribute to criminal, immigration and refugee law and Youth Criminal Justice Act matters as well as other expenditures that fall under the Federal government's jurisdiction.

Contributions ($ millions) 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Federal government contributions $50.6 $50.6 $50.7 $50.7 $50.4 $50.1 $53.3 $53.1 $53.8 $51.1 $51.1 $50.7 $50.9

Criticism edit

In February 2008, the organization was criticized in an 87-page report by the Ontario Ombudsman for mishandling of funds in the legal defence of Richard Wills. The report, A Test of Wills, explains: "Legal Aid Ontario had estimated that Mr. Wills' defence would cost $50,000. When it was done, it, in fact, cost more than a million dollars". Wills, considered a person of means to fund his own defence, was charged with the murder of his longtime lover. In the months preceding his trial, he had transferred his assets into his wife's name. Subsequently, he applied to Legal Aid Ontario where he was effectively provided with a "no check/blank cheque" defence.[23]

There has been growing concern that Legal Aid Ontario's financial eligibility criteria lags behind not only other provinces but also the low-income cut-off. While recent efforts by the province are being made to narrow the gap, the first time since 1996,[24] it has been calculated that "legal aid financial eligibility guidelines are approximately half the unofficial poverty line in Ontario as calculated by Statistics Canada's Low Income Measure".[25] To rectify this, Legal Aid Ontario has committed to increasing the financial eligibility threshold by six per cent each year, starting in April 2017 until it falls in line with the low-income cut-off.[26]

There has also been a growing concern from the Superior Court on how Legal Aid Ontario is funding Family Law cases. On December 16, 2011, the Honourable Mr. Justice Pazaratz in the matter of Izyuk v. Bilousov, 2011 ONSC 7476 (CanLII)[27] in a 74 paragraph order pondered if Legal Aid Ontario provided the Applicant in the matter with "wings" so "she do whatever she wants in court, without ever worrying about fees – hers or anyone else's?" (para 4). In addition, his Honour observed paragraph 60 that the litigant "conducted herself as if her Legal Aid certificate amounted to a blank cheque – unlimited resources which most unrepresented Respondents would be hard-pressed to match." Finally, in paragraph 60 of the order his Honour explicitly stated "Encouraging settlement and discouraging inappropriate behaviour by litigants is important in all litigation – but particularly in family law, and most particularly in custody cases. No litigant should perceive they have "wings" – the ability to say or do anything they want in court, without consequences."

The Honourable Mr. Justice Pazaratz further raised concerns on March 13, 2017, in the matter of Abdulaali v Salih, 2017 ONSC 1609 (CanLII)[28] again criticized the misuse of Legal Aid Funds by Family Law litigants. In the first paragraph of the order, the Honourable Mr. Justice Pazaratz states that "The next time anyone at Legal Aid Ontario tells you they're short of money, don’t believe it. It can't possibly be true. Not if they're funding cases like this." The Honourable Mr. Justice Pazaratz again in paragraph 31, frustrated by the wasteful use of taxpayer money and frustration with counsel stated: "To add motivation, I explained that if they didn't come to their senses I would formally request that the Area Director of Legal Aid Ontario attend before me to justify the obscene expenditure of tax money on a simple case with such an obvious solution." Both the matters of Izyuk v. Bilousov, 2011 ONSC 7476 (CanLII) and Abdulaali v Salih, 2017 ONSC 1609 (CanLII) have received extensive and critical coverage in the media.[29][30][31]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ [1] Legal Aid Ontario 2015/16 Annual Report. Accessed October 30, 2017
  2. ^ [legalaid.on.ca/en/about/default.asp "About LAO."] Legal Aid Ontario. Accessed June 6, 2017.
  3. ^ Legal Aid Services Act, S.O. 1998, c.26. Accessed July 29, 2010
  4. ^ "Am I eligible for a legal aid certificate: Contribution agreements - Legal Aid Ontario" Legal Aid Ontario / Aide Juridique Ontario. Accessed January 9, 2017.
  5. ^ "Fact sheet: Community legal clinics | Legal Aid Ontario" Legal Aid Ontario / Aide Juridique Ontario. Accessed January 7, 2017.
  6. ^ "Community Legal Clinics | Legal Aid Ontario" Legal Aid Ontario / Aide Juridique Ontario. Accessed January 7, 2017.
  7. ^ "Specialty Legal Clinics | Legal Aid Ontario" Legal Aid Ontario / Aide Juridique Ontario. Accessed January 7, 2017.
  8. ^ "Student Legal Aid Services Societies | Legal Aid Ontario" Legal Aid Ontario / Aide Juridique Ontario. Accessed January 7, 2017.
  9. ^ The Law Society Amendment Act, 1951, S.O., 1951
  10. ^ Levy H.J.. "In Effective Utilization of Private Lawyers in Indigent Defense: The Ontario Approach" in William F McDonald (ed) Defense Counsel. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications Inc, 1983. 171–193.
  11. ^ Attorney General / Ministère du Procureur général. Accessed July 2, 2010.
  12. ^ Abramowicz, Lenny. "The Critical Characteristics of Community Legal Aid Clinics in Ontario." Journal of Law and Social Policy 19 (2004): 70.
  13. ^ McMurtry, R. Roy (1997). (PDF). Osgoode Hall Law Journal. Vol. 35, no. 3. pp. 425–430. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 6, 2011. Retrieved June 9, 2010.
  14. ^ Grange, Hon. S.G.M. Ontario, Commission on Clinical Funding, Report of the Commission on Clinical Funding. Toronto: The Commission, 1978.
  15. ^ "Chapter 2: Development of the Legal Aid System in Ontario." Ministry of the Attorney General / Ministère du Procureur général. Accessed July 2, 2010. Table 2.1: Total Number of Certificates Issued and Annual Cost of Plan
  16. ^ The Toronto Star. "Hampton set to crack down on legal aid." Toronto Star, June 9, 1992, sec. News
  17. ^ "A Blueprint for Publicly Funded Legal Services: the Report of the Ontario Legal Aid Review". Ontario Legal Aid Review. 1997. Retrieved July 6, 2010.
  18. ^ Legal Aid Services Act, s.3
  19. ^ Legal Aid Services Act, s.14.1
  20. ^ "Funding for Legal Aid Ontario." The Law Foundation of Ontario / La Fondation du droit de l’Ontario. Accessed January 6, 2017.
  21. ^ "Giving More Ontarians Access to Affordable Legal Services: Province Doubling Number of People Eligible for Legal Aid." Government of Ontario / Gouvernement de l'Ontario. Accessed January 6, 2017.
  22. ^ "Legal Aid Ontario president says he’s not worried if agency audited" The Toronto Star. Accessed January 10, 2017.
  23. ^ (PDF), Ombudsman Ontario, 2008, archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-11-26, retrieved 2010-10-25
  24. ^ "Ontario Raising Legal Aid Eligibility Threshold Another 6%" Government of Ontario / Gouvernement de l'Ontario. Accessed January 6, 2017.
  25. ^ "Ontario’s financial eligibility standard for legal aid: falling behind the rest of Canada" Legal Aid Ontario blog / Blogue d'aide juridique Ontario. Accessed January 7. 2017.
  26. ^ "Legal Aid Ontario facing $26M deficit, scaling back services for criminal matters" Toronto Star. Accessed January 8, 2017.
  27. ^ Izyuk v. Bilousov, 2011 ONSC 7476, CanLII, 2011
  28. ^ Abdulaali v Salih, 2017 ONSC 1609, CanLII, 2017
  29. ^ Hamilton judge skewers legal aid system in decision, The Toronto Star, 2017
  30. ^ Better Alternatives to Legal Aid Increases, CanLII Connects, 2017
  31. ^ Sometimes Legal Aid Is the Problem, Not the Solution, Slaw, 2017

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Association of Community Legal Clinics of Ontario
  • Community Legal Education Ontario (CLEO)
  • Law Society of Upper Canada
  • Lawyer referral service
  • Legal Aid Services Act, 1998 at Service Ontario e-Laws
  • Ontario Ministry of the Attorney General: Legal Aid Ontario
  • Ontario Regulation 106/99 at Service Ontario e-Laws
  • Ontario Regulation 107/99 at Service Ontario e-Laws

legal, ontario, publicly, funded, publicly, accountable, profit, corporation, responsible, administering, legal, program, province, ontario, canada, through, toll, free, number, multiple, person, locations, such, courthouse, offices, duty, counsel, community, . Legal Aid Ontario LAO is a publicly funded and publicly accountable non profit corporation responsible for administering the legal aid program in the province of Ontario Canada Through a toll free number and multiple in person locations such as courthouse offices duty counsel and community legal clinics the organization provides more than one million assists to low income Ontario residents each year 2 Legal Aid Ontario LAO Agency overviewFormed1998Preceding agencyOntario Legal Aid Plan OLAP TypeLegal aid provisionJurisdictionOntarioHeadquarters40 Dundas Street WestToronto OntarioEmployees501 1000Annual budget 432 6 m CAN 2016 1 Agency executiveDavid Field President and CEOParent agencyMinistry of Attorney GeneralWebsitehttp legalaid on ca Contents 1 Legal help available 2 Legal clinics 3 History of legal aid in Ontario 4 Funding 5 Criticism 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksLegal help available editEstablished in 1998 through the Legal Aid Services Act 3 and successor to the Ontario Legal Aid Plan OLAP Legal Aid Ontario provides legal aid services to low income individuals in the province of Ontario through duty counsel community legal clinics public legal education summary legal advice alternative dispute resolution self help materials and legal representation under the judicare model The organization provides help with domestic violence family law child custody refugee and immigration hearings and poverty law issues LAO also provides assistance in criminal cases where the accused is likely to go to jail if convicted As many offences are considered hybrid that being the courts may decide to prosecute as either a summary or indictable offence legal aid applicants are assessed on a case by case basis LAO determines eligibility for legal aid based on the applicant s financial situation and if LAO can provide help with the legal issue To qualify financially an individual must make less than the amount in the table below for their family size Number of family members Income must be lower than E 1 1 22 7202 32 1313 39 1374 45 4405 50 803LAO maintains a second eligibility criterion for when an applicant requires a lawyer to represent them This criterion is typically reserved for only the most serious of cases where providing legal help solely by other means such as duty counsel summary legal advice or self help would be insufficient Those that qualify for representation are given a certificate which can be used as a voucher to hire a lawyer of their choosing who accepts legal aid clients Lawyers who accept these legal aid certificates are paid directly through Legal Aid Ontario in accordance with a rate that is designed to reflect the fees that would be typically paid by a client of modest means In some cases clients may have to repay Legal Aid Ontario some or all of the cost of their representation depending on their income 4 Number of family members Income must be lower than E 1 1 15 7812 28 4063 33 1024 38 0265 42 874Single boarders 10 352 a b Am I eligible for a legal aid certificate Legal clinics editLegal Aid Ontario helps fund a network of 76 legal clinics 5 throughout the province These legal clinics provide advice and in some cases representation primarily for civil law matters on matters such as workplace safety Canada Pension Plan appeals or issues Employment Insurance appeals insurance claims for long term benefits such as Ontario Disability Support Program Power of Attorney wills or estates at a limited number of legal clinics Tenant protection landlord and tenant issues including referral to tenant duty counsel Legal clinics also play a large role in the provision of workshops and information sessions and the undertaking of law reform initiatives Many legal clinics also publish brochures booklets pamphlets and fact sheets for the benefit of the public There are three types of legal clinics in Ontario each providing different types of services Community legal clinics provide legal help within a specific geographic area of the province 6 The services they offer can vary from one to another depending on the needs of the local community Specialty legal clinics focus on specific areas of law not normally covered by the community legal clinics These legal clinics help with issues such as minority and specialty language group rights youth and elderly assistance individuals with disabilities and HIV amp AIDS matters 7 Student Legal Aid Services Societies SLASS operate out of Ontario s seven law schools 8 and provide legal advice and representation on matters such as criminal law tenant issues employee rights and small claims court These legal clinics offer law students practical training and experience under the supervision of lawyers SLASS clinics typically provide free legal assistance for students enrolled at the university and in some cases students attending a local college History of legal aid in Ontario editIn 1951 the provincial government passed the Law Society Amendment Act 1951 9 outlining the creation of a plan to assist low income people and a small fund to cover its operation However lawyers who provided assistance did so entirely pro bono and without being paid for their services 10 By 1967 the Legal Aid Act was passed dividing responsibility of operating the legal aid plan between the province and the Law Society of Upper Canada LSUC Legal help was to be provided through two methods in court duty counsel lawyers and the certificate program where recipients would be given a voucher that could be used to hire a lawyer to represent them for a certain number of hours Legal services were limited to criminal matters where the accused faced a serious risk of going to jail and family matters heard in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice 11 Concerns were raised that this model of legal assistance did not provide individuals with sufficient representation arguing that the legal issues of low income clients were considerably different than of a paying customer Part of this problem was due to a lack of lawyers interested in supporting low income clients with so called poverty law matters that being legal matters dealing with public assistance tenant issues and welfare rights 12 The creation of the community legal clinic system sought to alleviate this problem by providing low income Ontarians with dedicated resources to help them resolve these matters A few years later these developments would be incorporated into the 1978 study Report of the Commission on Clinical Funding 13 which ultimately played a significant role in the formation of the Ontario Legal Aid Plan OLAP the precursor to Legal Aid Ontario 14 Over the next decade as OLAP grew and the organization expanded the number of legal clinics operation costs began to increase substantially By the early 1990s and at the peak of the recession OLAP was issuing more than 200 000 certificates a year and covering a broad range of criminal family refugee and other civil claims At the same time the number of community legal clinics had almost doubled from 35 a decade earlier to 66 with costs jumping from 3 3 million to 22 1 million annually 15 Faced with a recession the province responded by freezing funding 16 and reducing the legal aid certificate program by 27 5 million This cap resulted in a steep decline of certificates granted more than 150 000 fewer were issued from 1994 to 1999 Emphasis began to shift towards more cost effective services such as staff lawyers duty counsel and Student Legal Aid Services Societies In 1998 and in response to the growing need for legal aid the Mike Harris Progressive Conservative government on recommendation by the 1997 report A Blueprint for Publicly Funded Legal Services the Report of the Ontario Legal Aid Review 17 introduced the Legal Aid Services Act which outlined the creation of an independent agency called Legal Aid Ontario LAO 18 The Act defined LAO as independent from but accountable to the Ontario government through the Ministry of the Attorney General LAO would become the sole agency for establishing administering and monitoring the legal aid system within the province and was granted the ability to provide legal aid services by any method that it considers appropriate having regard to the needs of low income individuals and the costs of providing such services and the Corporation s financial resources 19 In recent years and in response to economic client and government pressures to improve service and reduce costs LAO has begun adopting modern approaches to service delivery Some of these changes have included the consolidation of offices across the province into nine district offices the development of a toll free service information sharing with the Ministry of Community amp Social Services for social assistance eligibility information and the expansion of courthouse services While the province has assisted with increased investment over the last few years a major decline in funding from the Law Foundation of Ontario trust accounts 20 due to the financial situation in the late 2000s placed additional financial pressures on the organization To address some of these issues the Government of Ontario committed in 2014 to raising the eligibility thresholds to allow over one million more people to qualify for legal aid services 21 This increase however also had the consequence of an unexpected and unprecedented increased in demand for legal help far beyond what Legal Aid Ontario anticipated 22 As a measure to control spiraling costs LAO halted the implementation of some of the newly expanded services until it matches available funding froze staff salaries and maintained the current level of legal clinics funding for 2017 18 Funding editFunding for Legal Aid Ontario comes primarily from the Province of Ontario the Government of Canada and the Law Foundation of Ontario LFO The LFO administers the interest earned on lawyers trust fund balances and Legal Aid Ontario receives 75 per cent of this income resulting in revenue levels highly dependent on the Bank of Canada overnight rate and real estate activity levels Revenue millions R 1 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016Province of Ontario R 2 256 1 254 8 260 5 269 1 283 9 285 8 315 4 320 8 335 7 347 5 350 2 363 1 395 3Law Foundation of Ontario 24 2 18 6 30 7 51 5 56 4 26 2 4 8 13 4 19 1 22 3 25 6 29 2 25 2Client contributions 13 1 15 2 15 7 17 3 18 9 21 5 21 9 18 1 15 4 12 1 10 0 9 9 10 0Judgements costs amp settlements and other recoveries M 1 1 7 1 5 0 28 0 41 0 28 0 30 0 26 0 52 0 36 0 68 1 1 0 76 0 81Investment income M 1 4 6 3 0 2 1 1 4 3 1 3 1 1 7 0 27 0 33 0 25 0 41 0 60 0 39Miscellaneous income M 1 0 46 0 73 0 59 0 66 0 63 0 97Total 299 6 289 3 293 1 339 7 362 6 336 9 344 1 353 6 371 7 383 4 388 0 404 2 432 6 a b c A change in reporting was made in 2011 that saw the creation of a miscellaneous income category and the renameing of judgements costs and settlements to client and other recoveries and investment and other income to investment income Legal Aid Ontario annual reports Province of Ontario funding includes the Federal Government contributions listed below The Federal government of Canada provides a portion of funding to contribute to criminal immigration and refugee law and Youth Criminal Justice Act matters as well as other expenditures that fall under the Federal government s jurisdiction Contributions millions 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016Federal government contributions 50 6 50 6 50 7 50 7 50 4 50 1 53 3 53 1 53 8 51 1 51 1 50 7 50 9Criticism editIn February 2008 the organization was criticized in an 87 page report by the Ontario Ombudsman for mishandling of funds in the legal defence of Richard Wills The report A Test of Wills explains Legal Aid Ontario had estimated that Mr Wills defence would cost 50 000 When it was done it in fact cost more than a million dollars Wills considered a person of means to fund his own defence was charged with the murder of his longtime lover In the months preceding his trial he had transferred his assets into his wife s name Subsequently he applied to Legal Aid Ontario where he was effectively provided with a no check blank cheque defence 23 There has been growing concern that Legal Aid Ontario s financial eligibility criteria lags behind not only other provinces but also the low income cut off While recent efforts by the province are being made to narrow the gap the first time since 1996 24 it has been calculated that legal aid financial eligibility guidelines are approximately half the unofficial poverty line in Ontario as calculated by Statistics Canada s Low Income Measure 25 To rectify this Legal Aid Ontario has committed to increasing the financial eligibility threshold by six per cent each year starting in April 2017 until it falls in line with the low income cut off 26 There has also been a growing concern from the Superior Court on how Legal Aid Ontario is funding Family Law cases On December 16 2011 the Honourable Mr Justice Pazaratz in the matter of Izyuk v Bilousov 2011 ONSC 7476 CanLII 27 in a 74 paragraph order pondered if Legal Aid Ontario provided the Applicant in the matter with wings so she do whatever she wants in court without ever worrying about fees hers or anyone else s para 4 In addition his Honour observed paragraph 60 that the litigant conducted herself as if her Legal Aid certificate amounted to a blank cheque unlimited resources which most unrepresented Respondents would be hard pressed to match Finally in paragraph 60 of the order his Honour explicitly stated Encouraging settlement and discouraging inappropriate behaviour by litigants is important in all litigation but particularly in family law and most particularly in custody cases No litigant should perceive they have wings the ability to say or do anything they want in court without consequences The Honourable Mr Justice Pazaratz further raised concerns on March 13 2017 in the matter of Abdulaali v Salih 2017 ONSC 1609 CanLII 28 again criticized the misuse of Legal Aid Funds by Family Law litigants In the first paragraph of the order the Honourable Mr Justice Pazaratz states that The next time anyone at Legal Aid Ontario tells you they re short of money don t believe it It can t possibly be true Not if they re funding cases like this The Honourable Mr Justice Pazaratz again in paragraph 31 frustrated by the wasteful use of taxpayer money and frustration with counsel stated To add motivation I explained that if they didn t come to their senses I would formally request that the Area Director of Legal Aid Ontario attend before me to justify the obscene expenditure of tax money on a simple case with such an obvious solution Both the matters of Izyuk v Bilousov 2011 ONSC 7476 CanLII and Abdulaali v Salih 2017 ONSC 1609 CanLII have received extensive and critical coverage in the media 29 30 31 See also edit nbsp Law portal nbsp Ontario portal nbsp Canada portal nbsp Politics portalCanadian law Duty counsel Government of Ontario Law Society of Upper Canada Lawyer referral service Legal aid Ministry of the Attorney General R v BrydgesReferences edit 1 Legal Aid Ontario 2015 16 Annual Report Accessed October 30 2017 legalaid on ca en about default asp About LAO Legal Aid Ontario Accessed June 6 2017 Legal Aid Services Act S O 1998 c 26 Accessed July 29 2010 Am I eligible for a legal aid certificate Contribution agreements Legal Aid Ontario Legal Aid Ontario Aide Juridique Ontario Accessed January 9 2017 Fact sheet Community legal clinics Legal Aid Ontario Legal Aid Ontario Aide Juridique Ontario Accessed January 7 2017 Community Legal Clinics Legal Aid Ontario Legal Aid Ontario Aide Juridique Ontario Accessed January 7 2017 Specialty Legal Clinics Legal Aid Ontario Legal Aid Ontario Aide Juridique Ontario Accessed January 7 2017 Student Legal Aid Services Societies Legal Aid Ontario Legal Aid Ontario Aide Juridique Ontario Accessed January 7 2017 The Law Society Amendment Act 1951 S O 1951 Levy H J In Effective Utilization of Private Lawyers in Indigent Defense The Ontario Approach in William F McDonald ed Defense Counsel Thousand Oaks CA Sage Publications Inc 1983 171 193 Attorney General Ministere du Procureur general Accessed July 2 2010 Abramowicz Lenny The Critical Characteristics of Community Legal Aid Clinics in Ontario Journal of Law and Social Policy 19 2004 70 McMurtry R Roy 1997 Celebrating a quarter century of community legal clinics in Ontario PDF Osgoode Hall Law Journal Vol 35 no 3 pp 425 430 Archived from the original PDF on July 6 2011 Retrieved June 9 2010 Grange Hon S G M Ontario Commission on Clinical Funding Report of the Commission on Clinical Funding Toronto The Commission 1978 Chapter 2 Development of the Legal Aid System in Ontario Ministry of the Attorney General Ministere du Procureur general Accessed July 2 2010 Table 2 1 Total Number of Certificates Issued and Annual Cost of Plan The Toronto Star Hampton set to crack down on legal aid Toronto Star June 9 1992 sec News A Blueprint for Publicly Funded Legal Services the Report of the Ontario Legal Aid Review Ontario Legal Aid Review 1997 Retrieved July 6 2010 Legal Aid Services Act s 3 Legal Aid Services Act s 14 1 Funding for Legal Aid Ontario The Law Foundation of Ontario La Fondation du droit de l Ontario Accessed January 6 2017 Giving More Ontarians Access to Affordable Legal Services Province Doubling Number of People Eligible for Legal Aid Government of Ontario Gouvernement de l Ontario Accessed January 6 2017 Legal Aid Ontario president says he s not worried if agency audited The Toronto Star Accessed January 10 2017 A Test of Wills PDF Ombudsman Ontario 2008 archived from the original PDF on 2010 11 26 retrieved 2010 10 25 Ontario Raising Legal Aid Eligibility Threshold Another 6 Government of Ontario Gouvernement de l Ontario Accessed January 6 2017 Ontario s financial eligibility standard for legal aid falling behind the rest of Canada Legal Aid Ontario blog Blogue d aide juridique Ontario Accessed January 7 2017 Legal Aid Ontario facing 26M deficit scaling back services for criminal matters Toronto Star Accessed January 8 2017 Izyuk v Bilousov 2011 ONSC 7476 CanLII 2011 Abdulaali v Salih 2017 ONSC 1609 CanLII 2017 Hamilton judge skewers legal aid system in decision The Toronto Star 2017 Better Alternatives to Legal Aid Increases CanLII Connects 2017 Sometimes Legal Aid Is the Problem Not the Solution Slaw 2017External links editOfficial website Association of Community Legal Clinics of Ontario Community Legal Education Ontario CLEO Law Society of Upper Canada Lawyer referral service Legal Aid Services Act 1998 at Service Ontario e Laws Ontario Ministry of the Attorney General Legal Aid Ontario Ontario Regulation 106 99 at Service Ontario e Laws Ontario Regulation 107 99 at Service Ontario e Laws Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Legal Aid Ontario amp oldid 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