Showing posts with label public legal information. Show all posts
Showing posts with label public legal information. Show all posts

Friday, 14 June 2013

Dial-A-Law Updates Family Law Scripts

Dial-A-Law, a public legal information project of the Canadian Bar Association BC Branch, has just published a complete overhaul of its online library of family law scripts which, among other things, brings them up to date with the new Supreme Court Family Rules. The updated scripts address a wide range of family law issues, from divorce and annulment, to custody and guardianship, to child protection and family violence. A new script provides a general introduction to family law and the family court process.

The complete collection of Dial-A-Law scripts can be accessed at www.dialalaw.org or by calling 604.687.4680 in the Lower Mainland and 1.800.565.5297 elsewhere in British Columbia.

Thursday, 13 June 2013

Separated with Children Financial Workshop

The Justice Education Society is hosting two workshops in the new year to help parents deal with the legal, emotional, social and financial turmoil of separation. The workshops will deal with:
  • becoming financially independent
  • dealing with your ex and children about money
  • budgeting and debt issues
  • child support, spousal support and property divisions issues
The workshops are free. You just need to register ahead of time. Call the society at 604-775-0856 in the lower mainland or at 1-800-775-0856 from elsewhere.
VancouverMonday 21 February 2011, 6:30 to 9:30 pm

Port Coquitlam
Wednesday 23 March 2011, 6:00 to 9:00pm

Wednesday, 12 June 2013

Legal Aid News and Updates

LSS Launches Legal Advice Telephone Service (updated 24 November 2010)

On 1 November 2010, the Legal Services Society, the organization that provides legal aid in British Columbia, launched the Telephone Advice Line, rebranded as the Family LawLINE shortly thereafter, to answer questions about family law issues. The Family LawLINE is staffed by two lawyers who are available from 9:30 to 12:30 on business days. The service is intended for people who do not have a lawyer and do not qualify for representation through legal aid.

Callers must meet the legal aid eligibility criteria for legal advice, a different standard than the eligibility criteria for legal representation, and will be screened before being put through to one of the lawyers.

To contact the Family LawLINE, call:
604-408-2172 if you're calling from the Lower Mainland1-866-577-2525 if you're calling from elsewhere
I understand that calls will not be put through after 12:00.

This is not exactly a replacement for the former LawLINE, one of the services axed with the budget cuts implemented on 1 April 2010, but it's a start.

West Coast LEAF Publishes Report

On 9 November 2010, West Coast LEAF and the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives published a new report on legal aid in this province titled Rights-Based Legal Aid: Rebuilding BC's Broken System (PDF). The report provides a detailed review of the funding cuts suffered by the Legal Services Society since 2002 and the consequences of those cuts, and offers some recommendations about how to fix things.

LEAF recommends that the provincial legal aid system be revamped to provide services whenever human dignity is at stake and funding a mix of specialized legal aid clinics, private lawyers paid through a tariff system and staff lawyers in community-based non-profit organizations. The report is well written and deserves a read.

LEAF's other work on family law, legal aid and legal services includes:

Monday, 10 June 2013

DivorceMate Provides Free Advisory Guidelines Calculator

In April 2011, DivorceMate, one of Canada's major publishers of spousal support and child support software, published a new website, www.mysupportcalculator.ca. The website advertises lawyers and law firms, performs child support calculations under the Child Support Guidelines and, most importantly, performs spousal support calculations using the Spousal Support Advisory Guidelines formulas.

Although the spousal support calculators available at mysupportcalculator.ca do not generate results which match those produced by DivorceMate's expensive software for professionals and do not account for all of the factors which can impact on the Advisory Guidelines formula results (such as source of income, tax benefits, deductions and credits, payments to special expenses, and so forth), the results will be fine for most people most of the time.

(One point about the Advisory Guidelines deserves particular mention. The spousal support formulas will almost always produce some numbers for spousal support. However, the mere fact that the formulas — and the www.mysupportcalculator.ca calculators — generate numbers for amount and duration does not mean that someone is entitled to receive spousal support. Entitlement must be established first. Once entitlement is established, then the results have significance.)

DivorceMate deserves much praise for making these calculators publicly available. The new website goes a long way toward addressing the need for free, public calculators which can handle the complex math required by the Advisory Guidelines.

For an overview of the Advisory Guidelines formulas and a complete review of the data they require, see my paper "Obtaining Reliable and Repeatable SSAG Calculations" (PDF) from the website of the Department of Justice.

Update: 12 July 2011

Having updated my DivorceMate software, I am pleased to report that the results of the free www.mysupportcalculator.ca calculator are an almost exact match to the results generated by the professional software when the data are limited to match the www.mysupportcalculator.ca inputs. Good job, DivorceMate!

The Return of LawLINE?

LawLINE was one of the programs offered by the Legal Services Society, the organization that provides legal aid in British Columbia, that were terminated in 1 April 2010 as a result of cuts to the society's budget. LawLINE gave people telephone access to a lawyer for legal information and advice without having to pay for an initial consultation. From my point of view, programs like this are invaluable for people who might only have a small question that can be answered quickly and for people living in the more remote parts of the province; it was a real loss when the program was cut.

To get to the good news, I have heard from a reliable source that LSS may be reviving LawLINE in the next couple of months, or at least some other program that will look a lot like LawLINE. This is very welcome news indeed.

Tuesday, 2 April 2013

BC Family Law Resource Relaunched as Wiki with Courthouse Libraries

I am very excited to announce that today Courthouse Libraries BC has relaunched my former website, JP Boyd's BC Family Law Resource, under their Clicklaw Wiki banner as JP Boyd on Family Law. This new wiki is completely up to date for the Family Law Act and the amended rules of the Provincial Court and the Supreme Court.

BC Family Law Resource

In early 2001 I got the bright idea of setting up a public legal education website that would provide a stem-to-stern overview of family law, written in plain language that would be accessible to as many British Columbians as possible. This was long before the Ministry of Justice had put together its brilliant website on family justice and five or six years before the Legal Services Society released its excellent Family Law in British Columbia website.

After months of writing and coding webpages by hand — using the high technology of Microsoft's WordPad no less! — I hit the "send" key in November, and my idea was up and running as JP Boyd's BC Family Law Resource at www.bcfamilylawresource.com.

As time passed, I added more and more pages and more and more features, such as editable templates for common court forms as well as examples of what the forms looked like when finished, child support and spousal support calculators, a table of cases mentioned in the website, an alphabetical index, a glossary of eight- or nine-hundred legal words and phrases, a list of websites run by British Columbia family law lawyers and law firms, an internal search engine powered by Google and more.

As my website grew, so did traffic. Over the past year, traffic has regularly peaked at over 1,000 unique sessions per day during the work week and a total of more than 27,000 sessions per month. Taking my annual expenses and this volume of traffic, plus the traffic to my blog, into account, I figure my costs are around six ten-thousandths of a cent per visitor.

The New Family Law Act

Needless to say, the enactment of the Family Law Act in 2011, though undoubtedly a very, very good thing for most British Columbians, became the source of much soul-searching for me. Not only was I aghast by the prospect of retooling the 58 primary pages and 15 or so subsidiary pages in my website, some of which are really quite lengthy, I began to be concerned about how my website would survive in the event I was hit by a bus, left practice or lost the energy to maintain the website for some other reason altogether.

Courthouse Libraries BC to the rescue!

JP Boyd on Family Law

I've had very a cordial working relationship with Courthouse Libraries for a number of years now and have collaborated with them on a number of training programs for lawyers, public librarians and the general public, working with wonderful people like Janet Freeman (the LawMatters program coordinator), Nate Russell (a legal community liaison), Meghan Maddigan (a legal community liaison) and Drew Jackson (the redoubtable director of client services). One of them, likely Nate or Drew, had the masochistic idea of converting my website to a wiki platform — the rather robust and user-friendly platform that makes Wikipedia work — under the Courthouse Libraries banner.

After some thought, I realized that the proposal was brilliant. It would give me the comfort of knowing that my website would survive any career changes or a cataclysmic loss of enthusiasm; it would expand the pool of people contributing to the website beyond myself, and perhaps create a sense of community ownership; and, the content I had created would be significantly enriched with the input of people with different voices and different opinions. Even better, the wiki platform included a nifty book mode that would allow readers and libraries to make a print copy of all or part of the wiki in a smartly-designed, user-friendly book format. How cool is that? I accepted their proposal and Nate and Drew went to work.

Over the past year or so, Courthouse Libraries has worked to collect the funding needed to buy a new server and the software to go with it, and hire the graphic designers and copy editors needed to take my amateurish efforts to a more polished level. An advisory committee composed of Megan Ellis QC, a senior and well-respected family law lawyer, and representatives from the British Columbia Library Association, the Legal Services Society and Courthouse Libraries was established in late 2012, and has provided invaluable guidance for the transition. More recently, Megan has begun to assemble a stellar editorial team of experienced family law lawyers and family law lawyers new to practice to nurture and grow the wiki into the future.

Thanks

I am extremely grateful for the expertise and time devoted to this project by Megan, Nate and Drew, and the not insignificant resources that Courthouse Libraries has allocated to establishing the new wiki. I am also humbled that the content of my former website, www.bcfamilylawresource.com, could possibly have been worthy of such attention and care.

I would like to extend my most sincere thanks to everyone involved, and in particular to Nate and Drew for their patience, energy and professionalism and dedication to this project. Thank you.

Get Involved!

If you're interested in contributing as as writer, commentator or as a member of the editorial team please contact Courthouse Libraries at:
1.800.665.2570
editor@clicklaw.bc.ca

Tuesday, 19 March 2013

Family Law Act Online Resources

Now the dust has begun to settle, I thought it would be helpful to put together a collection of links related to the new legislation. Here it is, and I will be updating it as the Queen's Printer is able to generate updated material. Bookmark this post by clicking on the title.

Legislation and Regulations
Rules of Court and Practice Materials
Rules of Court
Ministry of Justice Resources

Tuesday, 30 October 2012

Family Law Act: New Resource for Justice System Workers and Advocates

I've put together an overview (PDF) of the new Family Law Act for people who work in the justice system and legal advocates. Please feel free to download and to distribute, reproduce and reuse as you'd like, as long as it's not for a commercial purpose.

This overview will be updated from time to time to clarify issues and correct typos. The current version is dated 7 November 2012 (previous version - 3 November 2012); please download the updated document (PDF).

Wednesday, 17 October 2012

Legal Aid Publishes Booklet on Family Law Act

The Legal Services Society, the organization providing legal aid services in British Columbia, has announced the publication of a new booklet, Guide to the New BC Family Law Act (PDF). The booklet is based on a series of posts on the legislation published between February and September this year on the Electronic Legal Aid News blog, and is written in accessible plain language.

LSS has done a great job discussing and publicizing the Family Law Act. The society's Family Law in British Columbia website in particular is an extremely useful resource.