Society blog

Talk of the town

8 Feb 12

Some thoughts against the background of the mergers dominating the legal news

2011 reflections

21 Dec 11

The economic outlook remains poor, but other developments await in the coming year

Offer them hope

2 Dec 11

Message needed for the young in troubled times

View from Wick

18 Oct 11

Austin Lafferty's faculty visit to Caithness

ABS lift-off

14 Oct 11

Society wants to share draft handbook with those interested in setting up in Scotland

2020 vision

23 Sep 11

Society's objectives set out for today's SGM

Conference call to action

8 Sep 11

"One Profession" event highlights opportunities in the years ahead

Discrimination: bad for business

1 Jun 11

Society will lead in tackling negative perceptions of the profession by ethnic minority solicitors

Dealing with the new Parliament

12 May 11

Society wants to continue constructive relationship in dealing with legal issues

The AGM and the constitution

17 Mar 11

The constitution could do with updating even as regards participation in the meeting

Editors Blog

Heads and hearts

26 May 09
We all like to pay less, but do the arguments for the Flint motion stand up?

The debate over next year's practising certificate fee is reaching a crescendo ahead of Thursday's AGM.

Published comment in support of David Flint's motion for a budget based on a PC fee of £400 has basically fallen into two categories – a general allegation that the Society is inefficiently run, and a general desire to hit out at the Society for perceived past failings (the "What has it done for me?" approach).

Both are easy things to say, but what is the record? OK, I may be close to the Society (though not of it), but I have at least seen the recent Council debates on the annual budget and the fees to be asked of members.

The Society knows only too well that (a) it is heavily dependent on membership fees for the bulk of its income, and (b) despite the practising certificate being compulsory to practise as a solicitor, for a sizeable proportion of members that label is not in fact essential to the work they do, and it would be possible for them to opt out. So any suggestion that the Society has not scrutinised its spending very carefully is well wide of the mark. (Particularly so with last year's abortive office relocation, the whole point of which was to avoid having to spend money on maintaining their present unsuitable premises, until the project was sunk at a late stage by the property market collapse.)

As for the grievance factor, it seems naive to say the least to argue that because the current situation regarding, say, legal aid fees or home reports is not what the profession as represented by the Society has argued for, therefore the Society has not been doing its job. If that followed, then every solicitor who lost a court case would be open to the same allegation. A £400-based budget would most likely oblige the Society to look first at performing its specific regulatory duties rather than promoting members' interests on a wider front – are we not in danger of entering a vicious circle there?

As for the actual amount of the cut – roughly equivalent to next year's Complaints Commission levy – consider that the Commission's budget for 2009-10 is a shade under £3 million for doing only part of the work undertaken by the Society's Client Relations Office in 2008-09, yet the CRO's costs according to the draft accounts, combining employment costs and other expenses, amounted to £1,766,000. Others have reportedly described the £400 figure as "arbitrary" and it is hard to disagree.

Money talks, but solicitors should vote with the head rather than the heart on Thursday.

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