But personal injury lawyers concerned about arbitration delays
The
2012-13 auditor general’s report shows an attractive market has opened
up for lawyers who now do a chunk of the dispute resolution work for the
Financial Services Commission of Ontario, but their peers in the
personal injury bar are still unhappy with the timelines for arbitration
once the mediation process fails.
In her report last week, auditor
general Bonnie Lysyk noted that two years ago, the province approved
FSCO’s request for an additional $38.2 million over three years to hire
outside alternative dispute resolution services to supplement the work
performed by its own staff. At the time, the FSCO system was suffering
from a severe mediation backlog issue that frustrated lawyers and their
clients.
Now, with help from ADR Chambers, Lysyk noted “the backlog had been eliminated.”
“According
to FSCO, backlogged mediation cases were being assigned to the service
provider at the rate of 2,000 files per month. New applications received
on or after November 29, 2012, were being assigned to FSCO mediators
within a couple of days,” according to Lysyk.
There were 29,000
cases waiting for assignment in March 2012, she noted. But as of August
2013 “all mediation files had been assigned . . . and the backlog had
been eliminated.”
Personal injury lawyers say they can now get
mediation dates three months after they apply, a massive improvement
from a year-long wait a few years ago.
While it’s a good
accomplishment, lawyer Darcy Merkur says personal injury counsel now
have a new hurdle. Once mediation fails, getting arbitration dates
involves a lengthier process, says Merkur, a partner at Thomson Rogers.
“Now
when we file for mediation, we’re confident we’ll get a mediation date
in a timely way. The hurdle has become that after the mediation fails,
getting an arbitration date is prolonged. We’ve now switched the
bottleneck from the front end to the next end.”
It normally takes
about nine months to get from a failed mediation to arbitration, Merkur
adds, noting he’s now seeing even longer timelines.
Lawyers at personal injury law firm McLeish Orlando LLP have also noticed the arbitration bottleneck.
“There’s
a sense in our office that there is a delay in getting dates for
arbitration and pre-arbitration dates,” says John McLeish.
According
to the auditor general, the elimination of the mediation backlog is
partly the result of fewer applications for mediation received each
month.
“In 2012/13, FSCO received approximately 25,300 new
applications for mediation, a 29 per cent decrease from the 35,700
applications received in 2011/12,” wrote Lysyk.
“FSCO indicated
that this decrease was likely due to the September 2010 legislative
changes to the [statutory accident benefits schedule] that helped reduce
the number of disputes, as well as the auto insurance industry’s
increased focus on fraud.”
But Merkur says the decreased volume of applications isn’t at all a result of changes to the benefits schedule.
“What’s
really happening is that now that the line is shorter [for mediation],
no one is jumping to get in line,” he says, adding that the legislative
changes have actually caused more disputes with insurance companies.
Under the updated rules, family members who care for accident victims
can’t get compensation for their work unless they have “incurred” costs
to do so by, for example, giving up their day jobs or working fewer
hours.
It’s a change Merkur calls “unfair” that’s a cause of more disputes with insurers.
McLeish,
meanwhile, notes his concern about the disputes that aren’t possible at
all as a result of the legislative updates. He notes, for example, that
some injuries “that are nothing but minor” now fall into minor injury
guideline, which means victims of car accidents simply cannot bring
applications forward to fight their insurers.
Source: lawtimesnews.com/201312163673/headline-news/auditor-general-credits-province-with-eliminating-fsco-mediation-backlog#
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