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

Society Blog

Legal aid savings should be reinvested

19 Dec 08
Readers of the Scottish Legal Aid Board's annual report should look beyond the headline figures

Publication of the Scottish Legal Aid Board’s annual report this month could have caused some confusion among solicitors. The headlines highlighted an overall increase in the legal aid bill to record levels. Elsewhere, coverage and comment focused on high-earning QCs and firms. All at a time when so many legal aid practitioners are feeling the pinch. The confusion is understandable.

The full picture, as ever, lay in the small print. Credit should go to SLAB for attempting to draw attention to the fact that the rise in spending was principally due to the cost of serious criminal cases in the previous two years. In other words, the bill arrived in 2007-08 though a sizable portion of the costs had been incurred before then.

As ever when discussing legal aid, it is also worth remembering that the amount paid to firms must cover the expense of paying staff salaries and other overheads, such as rent, rates and the costs of running an office.

The overall increase, therefore, is unlikely to have had any impact on those dealing with bread and butter summary work. Also, they are practitioners affected by the current reduction in the number of prosecutions. And, perhaps more significantly, the Scottish Government’s budget for next year is based on a 6% drop in summary legal aid spending.

Needless to say, the Society continues to monitor the reforms to summary legal aid. Rest assured that if any resulting savings in the overall criminal justice budget are indentified, we will put forward the case for reinvestment in the legal aid system.

Oliver Adair is Convener of the Legal Aid Solicitors Committee
 

 

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