The History of Legal Aid
The History of Legal Aid
The History of Legal Aid
This paper sets out the origins of the legal aid system and how it developed over the years until the
election of the coalition government in 2010
Please note: This appendix was written by Sir Henry Brooke and considered by the Bach Commission.
It should not be read as the collective work of the commission.
September 2017
Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
Contents
Preface.............................................................................................................................................. 4
The Origins of Legal Aid .................................................................................................................... 5
The First Period (1945-1970) ............................................................................................................. 7
The Second Period (1970-1986) ........................................................................................................ 8
The Third Period (1986-1997) ......................................................................................................... 10
The increase in costs of the legal aid scheme ............................................................................... 10
Cuts in Eligibility .......................................................................................................................... 11
Law centres and nfp advice agencies ........................................................................................... 11
The introduction of a cap to legal aid expenditure ....................................................................... 12
The Fourth Period (1997-2005) ....................................................................................................... 13
The Community Legal Service ...................................................................................................... 14
The failure of the CLS Partnerships .............................................................................................. 19
The Criminal Defence Service....................................................................................................... 21
The Fifth Period (2005-2010) .......................................................................................................... 22
Total Expenditure on all forms of legal assistance ........................................................................ 22
Eligibility and Coverage ................................................................................................................ 23
Some more statistics ................................................................................................................... 24
CLACs and CLANs ......................................................................................................................... 25
Other Developments ................................................................................................................... 28
Specialist support .................................................................................................................... 28
Best Value Tendering (BVT)...................................................................................................... 28
Price Competitive Testing (PCT) ............................................................................................... 28
Preferred Suppliers .................................................................................................................. 29
Peer Review............................................................................................................................. 29
Lord Carter’s Review ................................................................................................................ 29
The Carter Report (2006) ......................................................................................................... 30
1
This paper was written by Sir Henry Brooke, the Vice-Chair of the Access to Justice Commission. Sir Henry
had over 40 years’ experience as barrister, QC and senior judge before he retired as Vice-President of the
Court of Appeal (Civil Division) in 2006. Since then he has, among other activities, been Chairman of the Civil
Mediation Council and the Patron of the Public Law Project. He has had over 50 years’ experience of the
operation of the legal aid system, and led for the Bar Council in its response to the Cabinet Office’s Scrutiny of
Legal Aid in 1986.
2
Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
3
Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
Preface
Between May and July 2016 I was involved in the task of sorting out and reordering the large quantity
of valuable information which came to Lord Bach’s Access to Justice Commission in response to its Call
for Written Evidence.
It seemed to me unrealistic to attempt to chart the future without understanding something of the
past, and in this essay I will be sketching out the history of legal aid in England and Wales between the
report of the Rushcliffe Committee in 1945 (which led to the Legal Aid and Advice Act 1949) and the
fall of Mr Gordon Brown’s Government in May 2010.
In this endeavour I have drawn very heavily on three books published by the Legal Action Group which
are all still available through its online website: Justice, Redressing the balance, written in 1997 by
Roger Smith, when he was still director of LAG; The Justice Gap, written in 2009 by Steve Hynes, the
new Director of LAG. and the journalist Jon Robins; and Austerity Justice (2012), also written by Steve
Hynes. I have also drawn on three volumes in the Hamlyn Lectures series – the State of Justice (Michael
Zander, 2000), Judging Civil Justice (Hazel Genn, 2008) and Lawyers and the Public Good (Alan
Paterson, 2012). All these books form compulsory reading for anyone studying this subject.
It is not possible to understand the growth of expenditure on legal aid without appreciating that in
England and Wales our form of adversarial system of justice is very much more complex (and much
more expensive as a direct consequence) than the systems of justice in other developed countries. As
a former chairman of the Law Commission I know that there has never been any very effective drive
to simplify the law, and Parliament has shown no inclination or willingness to do anything other than
add year by year to a mass of often fiendishly complicated legislation. And when successive official
reports have recommended some limitation in the scope of the jury system, Parliament has always
rejected the call, without doing anything very much by way of recognising just how expensive this
system is when it is used for long, complex trials. These are some of the reasons why it has been
ludicrous for ministers, arriving new to the problems, to repeat the mantra that we have the most
expensive legal aid system in the world without doing anything much to understand, let alone to try
and remedy, the underlying causes.
Professor Paterson observed in 2012 (see page 75 of his book of lectures) that recent research had
showed the bulk of the drivers for the increasing cost of legal aid lay outside the control of the legal
profession. They included the creation of more and more criminal offences and the passing of more
and more legislation without proper impact assessments; playing intergovernmental budget games –
over VAT on legal fees and increasing court fees – which involved huge payments to the Treasury; and
the failure of government agencies (central and local) to fulfil their legal obligations. This final point
came up again and again in the evidence we received on the need for costly tribunal systems in the
social welfare field to undo the effect of swathes of bad initial decisions that are made within
Government.
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By Sir Henry Brooke
There was also the Poor Man’s Lawyers movement, first established at the end of the nineteenth
century at Mansfield House and Toynbee Hall, charitable settlements in East London, which provided
pro bono help that stopped short of representation in court. In 1926 one of its founders explicitly
recognised the limitations of charity in providing access to justice, saying that it made the rule of law
“an anaemic attenuated make-believe which we flash in the eyes of the poor as justice”. 3 A little
earlier a committee chaired by Mr Justice Finlay, responding to a witness who had used the analogy
of health to argue for a “Legal Hospital System”, expressed the view that while it was the state’s
interests for people to be healthy, it was not necessarily in its interest for them to be litigious.
There was always a tradition by which lawyers on occasion provided pro bono services on an ad hoc
basis, but this was an unpredictable source of assistance and attracted a strong social stigma because
of its explicit link with the concept of pauperism.
During the Second World War the Law Society had had to set up a salaried divorce department
because of the non-availability of pro bono lawyers, but it was not anxious to continue this service
after the war, and in 1944 the Coalition Government set up the Rushcliffe Committee, chaired by Lord
Rushcliffe, a former backbench Conservative MP, to advise it on the way forward.
The Committee reported in 1945, and the post-war Labour Government accepted its
recommendations, saying in a White Paper in 1948 that legislation would be introduced
“to provide legal advice for those of slender means and resources, so that no one would be
financially unable to prosecute a just and reasonable claim or defend a legal right; and to allow
counsel and solicitors to be remunerated for their services.”
Legal aid, however was never one of the four pillars of the new welfare state.4
Under the Legal Aid and Advice Act 1949 legal aid was to be available in all courts and tribunals where
lawyers normally appeared for private clients. Eligibility should be extended to those of “small or
moderate means”, and above a free limit there should be a sliding scale of contributions.
There should be a test of merit: for civil cases they should be judged on a basis similar to that applied
to private clients. Legal aid was to be funded by the state, but administered by the Law Society. The
Lord Chancellor was to be the responsible minister, assisted by an advisory committee. Means
investigations were to be undertaken by the National Assistance Board. Barristers and solicitors
should receive adequate remuneration.
2
In CJ Sansom’s novel Revelation, set in 1543, the hero Matthew Shardlake was one of two barristers
appointed to plead before the Court of Requests in support of poor men’s pleas. He was promoted to
sergeant at the time of his appointment.
3
FCG Gurney Chapman, Justice and the Poor in England (1926) p 21.
4
These were the NHS; universal housing; state security (benefits); and universal education.
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Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
The essence of the system established by this Act was that if a citizen with a legal problem could
establish that he/she qualified for legal aid under the means test and the merits test, he/she had an
entitlement to legal aid. There was an annual budget approved by Parliament, but if the budget was
exceeded, a supplementary grant was always obtained. This applied to both civil and criminal legal
aid.
The history of legal aid since then can be conveniently divided into six periods:
I. 1945-1970. The foundation of legal aid. The emergence of the first challenge to its structure
through the law centre movement.
II. 1970-1986. The opening of the first law centre in North Kensington. This period witnessed
the absorption by the private profession of the law centre threat.
III. 1986-1997. Lord Hailsham, as Lord Chancellor, initiated the first intended cuts to civil legal aid
eligibility. The Conservative Government began to prioritise the restraint of the legal aid
budget in the face of unprecedented rises in cost. A Consultation Paper was published in 1995
and a White Paper in 1996. The Labour Party, which won the 1997 election, had a looser
commitment to future policies, but it was determined to live within the Conservative party’s
spending estimates.
IV. 1997-2005. The Access to Justice Act 1999 created a new Community Legal Service and a
Criminal Defence Service. The former represented an attempt to plan the provision of poverty
legal services through Community Legal Service Partnerships, but this ambitious project had
failed by 2005 when new policies had to be adopted. The latter created a structure for the
provision of criminal legal aid, which was continuing to increase in cost at an exponential
rate. It also saw the absorption of criminal legal aid in the Crown Court and the higher courts
into the mainstream legal aid budget.
V. 2005-2010. The legal aid budget had now been brought more or less under control at a figure
of £2.1 billion, but Community Legal Advice Centres (or Networks), a new venture, were
showing no signs of becoming firmly established, and there was a long-running dispute
between the Government and the legal profession over the former’s desire to introduce
arrangements for price competitive tendering for legal aid contracts.
VI. 2010-2016. The austerity policies of the new Coalition Government required significant cuts
to be made to the legal aid budget. The Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders
Act 2012 made very substantial changes to the arrangements for civil and family legal aid,
introducing for the first time the concept that legal aid would only be available for those legal
topics which came within the scope of the new statutory scheme. Lawyers’ fees were
reduced, and the dispute about the appropriateness of competitive tendering in the criminal
courts continued to rumble on.
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Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
Divorce work in the High Court was to be the first target of the new scheme, and there would then be
a gradual extension of the scheme into other areas of civil work. In the early 1960s legal aid was
available in the county courts and in the magistrates’ courts. Criminal legal aid expanded in the 1960s,
particularly after a committee chaired by Mr Justice Widgery had identified with clarity in 1964 the
principles on which legal aid should be available to those charged with criminal offences in
magistrates’ courts. 5 The administration of criminal legal aid in the Crown Court and also in the higher
courts was until quite recently under the control of those courts.
By 1970 overall legal aid expenditure was still low. There had been an annual rate of expansion of
over 50% in terms of costs, but the scheme was still overwhelmingly concerned with the consequences
of divorce and other matrimonial problems. Social welfare law6 was largely ignored. A 1969 survey
of legal aid certificates in Birmingham revealed 86% family; 9% personal injury, and 5% others.
In 1969-1970 the Advisory Committee said that greater attention should be given to the needs of
people appearing before tribunals. It called for some form of ancillary legal services. This was the
time of the radical lawyers’ movement in the USA, which supported the civil rights movement in the
1950s and 1960s and led to the acceptance of legal services as an integral part of President Johnson’s
“war against poverty”.
In the Society of Labour Lawyers’ pamphlet Justice for All (December 1968) Michael Zander described
the work of the US neighbourhood law firms in the United States. In this country community-based
groups were now springing up, and community action involved experiments with the use of the law
to back its campaigns. At about the same time Conservative Lawyers published a pamphlet called
Rough Justice which called for more planning of legal services, together with grants for solicitors to
set up practices in poorer areas.
5
Crown Court cases and criminal cases in the higher courts were not included in the legal aid budget until April
2003.
6
This term included landlord & tenant, immigration, welfare benefits, consumer law, debt, and employment
cases.
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Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
The first law centre was opened in North Kensington on 17th July 1970. Its lawyers worked with the
Notting Hill Residents’ Association. Its aim was to provide:
“a first rate solicitors’ service for the people of the North Kensington community; a
service which is easily accessible, not intimidating, to which people could turn as
they would to the family doctor – or, as someone who could afford it, to the family
solicitor”.
In answer to this initiative the Legal Aid Advisory Committee advocated the creation of a new and
flexible legal advice service, whose beneficiaries would be the private profession. Law centres, it
thought, should be transferred to the direct control of the Law Society.
Legal Aid expanded throughout this period both in its range of schemes and in expenditure. A new
Green Form scheme was introduced for advice and assistance on any matter of English law on the
basis of a simplified test of income and expenditure, which was carried out by the solicitor.
Duty solicitor schemes in magistrates’ courts were gradually expanded, and they became statutory in
1984. Duty schemes for advice in police stations, as per the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984
(PACE), were introduced two years later.
At the beginning of this period legal aid had constituted a very minor source of income for the legal
profession. By 1975-76, however, it constituted 7% of the total fees earned by solicitors, rising to 11%
ten years later. 30% of the Bar’s income came from legal aid in 1977 (20% of it from criminal legal
aid), when the Royal Commission on Legal Services pointed to the Bar’s dependence on legal aid as a
source of income. During the 1970s the number of those practising at the Bar roughly doubled, while
the size of the solicitors’ profession increased by 50%.
The causes of the increase in legal aid expenditure included a massive increase in criminal work, with
legal representation for criminal cases in magistrates’ courts now being the norm: there was an
increase from 20% in 1969 to over 80% in 1986 in the number of defendants represented on legal aid
in indictable offences in the magistrates’ courts.
There was also a soaring divorce rate, rising from 4 in 1,000 marriages in 1968, to 9 in 1,000 three
years later, and just under 13 in 1,000 in 1986. Legal aid was not available for the divorce itself from
1977 onwards, but the number of ancillary applications relating to maintenance and children
continued to rise, as did the number of women seeking protection from domestic violence.
Eligibility for legal aid originally included 80% of the population. In 1973 the figure was 40%, but by
1979 it had increased to 79%. It retained this level in the early 1980s before falling during the rest of
that decade.
The introduction of the Green Form scheme had originally been advocated by the Law Society for the
purposes of the social welfare law work pioneered by law centres, but in fact over 50% of the Green
Form bills in 1985-86 related to personal injury, crime and family matters. There was a growth in the
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Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
number of Green Forms in social welfare law from 27,000 (1975-76) to 172,000 (1985-86), but as a
percentage of the total number of all green form bills the increase in social welfare law advice
increased from only 11% to 17%.
The numbers of law centres steadily increased, first in London, and then in the provinces as well. The
Law Society hoped to control them by setting conditions on the waiver of professional rules on
advertising and sharing fees. In its report for 1973-74 it attacked law centres for stirring up political
and quasi-political confrontations. Lord Elwyn-Jones, the Lord Chancellor, then brokered an
accommodation whereby law centres could not compete with private practices in traditional areas
such as adult crime, matrimonial work, personal injury, probate and conveyancing. The Law Society
would then grant the necessary permissions. In 1979 the Law Society told the Royal Commission on
Legal Services that law centres were not a threat: indeed, they generated work for private practices.
During the 1970s, in spite of their steady growth, there were danger signals for law centres over their
financial viability, and in 1975 Central Government funding was made available for eight law centres
which were in financial difficulties. So far as the advice sector was concerned, CABx were established
during the Second World War, but they were then neglected. In the 1970s, however, they increasingly
found favour with local authorities, and their numbers doubled from 473 in 1966 to 869 20 years
later. The volume of inquiries more than quadrupled (from 1.3 million to 6.8 million). Several
hundred, independent advice centres were also set up and there was a gradual development of local
authority-funded specialist advice services, some provided by the local authority and some voluntary,
mainly for housing, social security and debt.
There were a few small experiments in the employment of lawyers in the advice sector. A combined
CAB and law centre was established in Paddington in 1973, and another in Hackney in
1976. Community lawyers (who gave advice and also trained legal advisers) were employed by CABx
in North Kensington, Lewisham and Waltham Forest. By 1977 ten CABx employed lawyers, and the
National Association of Citizens’ Advice Bureaux (NACAB) resolved to develop more posts. They
developed the idea of “resource lawyers” who would assist the overwhelmingly lay workforce of the
bureaux.
The Royal Commission on Legal Services (1976-79) recommended no great changes. It appeared to
be almost hostile to law centres and salaried lawyers’ services. It considered that the time had come
to move from a period of experiment to one of consolidation. It was in favour of continuity, the
orderly development of services, adequate resources, and proper administrative and financial
control. Law Centres should be transposed into more manageable and better managed citizens’ law
centres.
The Commission also adopted a conservative line in relation to CABx. It said the division of function
between the CAB service’s paralegal work and the use of professional lawyers was now on a sensible
and practical basis, and it should stay that way. CABx should not build up teams of lawyers to give
legal advice to individuals.
When the Conservative Government came to power in 1979, it continued the existing funding support
for the eight law centres, but said that as a general rule law centres should be funded by local
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Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
authorities in future. Until 1982 the Department of the Environment had funded many new law
centres and other advice centres through its Urban Aid programme. After 1982 local government was
increasingly the major funder of agencies giving advice in the social welfare law field. Conservative
local authorities, however, were largely reluctant to fund law centres. As a result, financially secure
law centres were increasingly to be found in Labour areas throughout the 1980s and 1990s. Law
centres were never a large enough force to dominate the mainstream of publicly funded
services. They survived in relatively small numbers on the periphery of things, and in general attracted
very low levels of local government funding.
Local authorities tended to be more greatly impressed by the claims of advice agencies, whose
numbers and funding increased massively. Under Ken Livingstone the GLC produced a positive flood
of funding for advice agencies providing advice in general and welfare benefits work. In the 1970s
there had been periods when a degree of rivalry between law centres and the advice sector was
apparent, but in the following decade it looked as if the two sectors had embarked on different
courses.
From the 1980s onwards the rising cost to the taxpayer of the legal aid budget became increasingly a
matter of political concern. By 1986, total payments under all forms of legal aid were £419 million,
and the net cost to the Exchequer (when client contributions and other costs recovered had been
taken into account) was £342 million. The cost of criminal legal aid was now well over 50% of the total
budget. The share of criminal legal aid in the magistrates’ courts had doubled since 1969-70. It was
now 25% of all legal aid costs. In February 1986, there was the first major cut to
entitlements. Dependents’ additions were slashed by 17%.
In 1986 the Cabinet Office’s Efficiency Scrutiny of Legal Aid laid the ground for the transfer of legal aid
administration from the Law Society to a new Legal Aid Board [LAB]. This was a technical and overdue
recognition of the proper roles of government and the professions, but it was also a defining moment,
and it saw the beginning of a new era. In December 1988 Steve Orchard, who had spent his whole
working life in the service of the courts, was appointed the first chief executive of the LAB, a post he
held7 for the next 15 years.
7
He became chief executive of the Legal Services Commission when it replaced the Legal Aid Board in 2000.
10
Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
There was also a disproportionate increase in immigration/ nationality and welfare benefit matters
because of:
Cuts in Eligibility
Lord Mackay (who was Lord Chancellor between 1987 and 1997) made cuts in eligibility and decided
to move towards standard fees. As a result, by the mid-1990s the increase in the total number of
cases was more or less equivalent to the increase in total cost. Criminal legal aid was more or less
protected.
Under the cuts to civil legal advice eligibility, the contributory levels of qualification were totally
removed, and the scheme was reduced to bedrock eligibility at income support rates.
Civil legal aid eligibility was also in the firing line. This table shows the percentage of households
eligible for civil legal aid on income grounds:
1979-80 77%
1992-93 53%
1993-94 48%
1994-95 47%
Legal aid became increasingly available only to those whose income was at the lowest levels, together
with those who had to pay contributions at higher rates for longer periods. By 1996-97 7.5% of all
those who were offered legal aid were liable for contributions at an annual rate of more than £500.
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Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
The LAB also dispensed about £2 million to agencies which did not employ lawyers, as part of a pilot
project. Although law centres received £2.1 million out of £2.4 million in 1990-1, five years later they
received a much smaller share (£3.7 million out of £8.2 million) of the money paid to all not for profit
[nfp] organisations. Law centres gave high priority to serving ethnic minority communities, but they
were dwarfed by the number of advice agencies.
In 1995-96 900 organisations were members of the Federation of Independent Advice Centres. Within
the CAB service there were over 700 separate bureaux (and over 1,000 outlets). CABx dealt with 6.5
million problems brought to them by 3.5 million people. The strength of the advice sector here meant
that we had no network of centrally funded law centres as in Ontario and Australia. The national
Government grant to NACAB was £12 million. In contrast the LAB grant to the Law Centres Federation
was £67,000.
In order to improve the quality of provision, the LAB created a system of legal aid franchises in which
a firm’s performance would be measured by agreed quality levels in return for receiving benefits in
the way the LAB treated them. In its 1991-92 report, it set out three major areas in which quality
could be measured. Adequate performance was required, as gauged by visits which included a
measurement of performance in three separate areas:
This approach went some way towards developing a credible system for assessing the quality of legal
aid firms’ advice that was previously absent. The LAB revisited the practice of peer review and found
it prohibitively expensive.
In July 1996 Lord Mackay’s White Paper9 broadly confirmed the plans he had outlined the previous
year.
As at April 1997, 1,740 offices (out of 12,000 who were paid for legal aid work) had a franchise in at
least one area of work. The LAB said its target was 2,500. They conducted two pilot programmes in
the use of nfp agencies. The first, which provided grants to law centres etc. to explore various
alternative methods of delivering services, did not produce any practical long term results. The
second, however, which examined whether advice agencies could deliver legal advice, as
recommended by the Cabinet Office’s 1986 Efficiency Scrutiny, was claimed to be great
8
Legal Aid – Targeting Need, Cm 2854 (1995).
9
Striking the Balance, Cm 3305 (1996).
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By Sir Henry Brooke
success. However, more than a third of the people interviewed by the 42 pilot agencies were ineligible
for legal aid, and the agencies undertook relatively low level advice. Only a few did more than this.
This third period in the history of legal aid ended with the election of the Labour Government in 1997.
In cash terms, the Legal Services Commission’s net expenditure on criminal legal aid and civil legal aid
(in all its forms) in the last five years of this Fourth Period is shown in the following tables:12
Criminal Defence Service Crown Court & higher courts representation Total
2000-1 £450 million £422 million £872 m
2001-2 £508 million £474 million £982 m
2002-3 £526 million £569 million £1,095 m
2003-4 £523 million £645 million £1,178 m
2004-5 £509 million £682 million £1,191 m
A graph on page 26 of Sir Ian Magee’s Review of Legal Aid Delivery and Governance (2010) shows the
steep decrease in civil non-family legal aid expenditure following the removal of much civil legal aid
representation from scope that was effected by Schedule 2 of the Access to Justice Act 1999. The
graph shows a decrease in cash terms from about £400 million in 1996-97 to about £200 million in
2004-05. 13
10
Hazel Genn. (2008) Judging Civil Justice, p 41.
11
DCA. (2005) A Fairer Deal for Legal Aid, Cm 6591, Figure 5.
12
The figures are derived from the tables that appear in successive Annual Reports of the Legal Services
Commission from 2000-01 onwards.
13
On the other hand, expenditure on legal aid in immigration work is shown to increase from a negligible level
in 1996-97 to about £200 million in 2004-05 before starting to fall off again.
13
Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
Expenditure on all forms of family legal aid, on the other hand, remained fairly steady in cash terms
at about £400 million throughout this fourth period.
The period also saw the rise and fall of the first determined attempt to match the provision of advice
in social welfare law [SWL] with the identified need for it in different parts of the country.
Throughout this period the Legal Services Research Centre, which was founded by the Legal Aid Board
in 1996, was doing valuable work in studying the phenomenon of “problem clusters” and identifying
the needs of people for legal advice at grass roots level.
The Legal Services Commission was also running an admirable scheme of sponsoring the training of
lawyers in legal aid firms and in some of the law centres, so that there would be a cadre of newly
trained legal aid lawyers to provide continuity of provision in the future.
Both the Research Centre and the training scheme were axed when the Coalition Government came
to power in 2010.
Immediately after taking office he invited Sir Peter Middleton to advise him on aspects of the way
forward, both in relation to legal aid services and also in relation to Lord Woolf’s proposals for the
reform of the civil justice system. In relation to legal aid Sir Peter Middleton’s report contained a
proposal that all legal aid money claims should be replaced by Conditional Fee Agreements
[CFAs].14 There would be fixed price contracts for blocks of work in relation to all civil and criminal
work, and the means test would be tightened.
Lord Irvine announced these proposals in a speech at the Law Society’s conference in Cardiff in
October 1997 which coincided with the publication of this report. Most civil cases would be taken out
of the legal aid scheme. They should be funded through CFAs. Family cases would stay within the
scheme. Lord Irvine defended this change by saying:
“Excluding claims for money or damages from legal aid will put those on low
incomes, middle incomes and high incomes on an equal footing”.
14
In February 1998 Lord Irvine announced that clinical negligence cases would now still remain in scope for
legal aid. This represented a change in his original proposals.
14
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By Sir Henry Brooke
He claimed that the extension of CFAs would result in £69 million being available for social welfare
law cases in 1999-00 and £100 million in the following year.
“the refocusing of the legal aid scheme as a tool to help poor people solve social
welfare problems by gaining access to the justice system”.
He said that there were many existing information and advice services – the CABx, the law centres,
the advice centres and mediation bodies:
“We intend to co-ordinate these services under a coherent scheme which will
provide a service to the whole public which is both easy to access and easy to
understand”.
He added:
“The CLS is the first attempt ever by government to deliver legal services in a joined-
up way. It will provide a framework for comprehensive local networks of good
quality legal advice services supported by co-ordinated funding, and based on the
needs of local people”.
The CLS was therefore a strategy to make the local area the focus for delivery of poverty services,
delivering it through a partnership of the legal profession, the advice sector, local authorities and the
LSC. The strategy was very ambitious. Professor Alan Paterson has said that getting the potential
partners to come together would involve a huge commitment of staff and resources from the LSC, and
it would only work if there was something in it for everyone. What Steve Orchard was trying to do
was to shift resources to Community Legal Services and SWL, and this meant that someone had to
give up resources. In principle redistributing resources made sense once it had been accepted, as
most commentators then did, that resources for legal aid were finite.
Thirteen regional committees were established in 1997-98, to co-ordinate local planning of civil law
services. Each had six members (four from outside the LSC). They were asked to draw up plans for
discrete geographical areas and bid zones (which usually followed unitary local authority
boundaries). They used statistical data (including figures for means-tested benefits) to draw up plans
for the provision of civil law services in their area. They also prioritised the needs for new
services.15 There was rational planning for the first time, but this turned out to be a short-lived
phenomenon.
In 1998 the total legal aid bill was roughly £1.6 billion net.
In its 1998 White Paper “Modernising Justice” the Government said that the CLS would mean that
every community had access to a comprehensive network of legal service providers of consistently
good quality, so that people with actual or potential legal problems would be able to find the
15
For example, the West Midlands Legal Services Committee found a high level of need for all areas of law in
Birmingham, but a low level in rural South Staffordshire.
15
Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
information and help they needed. The White Paper gave as the first objective of the new system that
it should
“direct the available resources to where they are most needed, to reflect defined
priorities”.
The subsequent Access to Justice Bill reflected these ideas. Under Schedule 2 of what became the
Access of Justice Act 1999, personal injury negligence cases (excluding clinical negligence),
conveyancing, boundary disputes, the making of wills, matters of trust law, defamation and malicious
falsehood, matters of company or partnership law or other matters arising out of business, advocacy
in proceedings other than those listed as exceptions in that schedule, and many types of proceedings
in magistrates’ courts were no longer in scope.
The CLS was to include a core of specialist quality-marked firms and organisations which overlapped
with a much wider group of non-specialist services, also quality-marked as information and advice
providers.
Self-help information
Assisted information
General help
General help and caseworks
Specialist help
Quality marks were also established for websites, telephone services and mediation services. A
website called “Justask” was established to provide information on legal matters and to signpost
members of the public to providers.16
The Access to Justice Act 1999 was to be implemented in April 2000. In a consultation paper published
in May 199917 the Government said:
“Many people received effective legal help, but if you live in an area with few or no
convenient advice centres, or do not know where to go for help, you can end up
having to work very hard to find support, travelling a long distance or receiving no
support at all.”
The paper described a sprawling advice sector comprising private practice lawyers, independent
advice centres, CABx and law centres:
“This effort is on a scale without rival anywhere in the world and a great tribute to
the community spirit of our people. It involves nearly 6,000 professional staff and
some 30,000 volunteers working in over 3,000 centres, dealing with over 10 million
16
A CLS Directory also provided information on local solicitors, legal advice and information services in England
and Wales.
17
Lord Chancellor’s Department. (1999) The Community Legal Service: A Consultation Paper.
16
Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
inquiries each year. Total public funding is difficult to estimate accurately, but
probably £250 million a year. On the face of it, this provision should be adequate
to meet priority need.”18
“Despite the fact that nearly 2,000 separate agencies are involved, a person may
be unable to find the right kind of help for his or her particular problem within a
reasonable distance of home because:
As a result, funding does not consistently follow need and those running
agencies find that far too much of their time is spent dealing with various
separate funders who each have their own criteria for funding;
There is no common data base of providers on which people can draw, nor
any standard quality accreditation system on which they can rely;
In this paper the Government floated the idea of CLS partnerships in every bid zone in order to develop
better local networks and to plan legal services.
The Government’s plans, therefore, included a determined attempt to engage the third sector. 19 The
functions of the new Legal Services Commission included assessing local needs for legal services and,
once priorities had been determined in the light of directions given by the Lord Chancellor, to match
funding to the identified needs.20 The meeting of need would be done by different agencies using
different means and methodologies, by the LSC centrally,21 by each of its Regional Committees, and
by the new partnerships that would be set up all over the country to bring together funders and
providers of legal services at local level.22 The setting of a predetermined budget meant, by definition,
that there had to be rationing to ensure that the budget was not overspent.
18
The authors of the Justice Gap commented at p 63: “As the paper went on to demonstrate, this provision
might have been testimony to great commitment but it was a chaotic way to provide a public service.”
19
The number of nfp organisations holding franchises grew from the initial 42 pilots to over 400 franchises by
2002-03.
20
See the Consultation Paper on the Community Legal Service, fn 17 above, p 34.
21
The LSC had started to develop statistical needs assessment models.
22
Funders included the relevant office of the LSC, local authorities and other bodies, and providers (who might
make the necessary provision individually or in partnership with others) included solicitors, CABx, advice
agencies, law centres and housing centres.
17
Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
Under his new statutory powers the Lord Chancellor23 started by designating two categories of
priority. In “top priority” cases the CLS had to ensure that all cases were funded. Initially only certain
proceedings under the Children Act and civil proceedings in which the life or liberty of the subject
were at stake belonged to this category.
Priority was then given to housing cases and other “social welfare” cases that enabled people to avoid
or climb out of social exclusion, domestic violence cases, cases concerning the welfare of children and
cases alleging serious wrongdoing, breach of human rights or abuse of position or power by a public
body or public servant (such as a police officer).
It was estimated at that time that the Government’s decision to withdraw legal aid from the cases that
would no longer be in scope would save about £35 million.24
The Government floated the idea of extending legal aid to Employment Tribunals. This was opposed
by employers, and in due course dropped.
The Access to Justice Act 1999 imposed a hard cap on overall expenditure on legal aid.25 The Treasury
was determined not to allow legal aid expenditure to exceed the approved budget.
It would now be compulsory to hold a specialist quality mark in order to apply for a block contract. The
new legal help scheme (which replaced the Green Form scheme) drastically reduced the number of
firms offering legal aid. Block contracts were contracts to carry out fixed amounts of legal aid
work. When the new system came into force, about 5,500 contracts were awarded to firms and
organisations which possessed franchises,26 including 50 of the 52 law centres. CABx mainly received
contracts in welfare benefits and debt. The contracts contained an entitlement to a fixed number of
“matter starts”, which could not be exceeded without the explicit approval of the LSC. 27 In October
1999 legal aid was also extended to representation in immigration appeal tribunals.28
By 2002 the whole legal aid system was approaching crisis due to the hard cap on expenditure.
In April and September 2002 there were small increases in eligibility. In April about 150,000 people
(1.7% of the population) were brought into eligibility. In September, the income cap was raised from
23
In an interview he gave in 2008, five years after his retirement, Steve Orchard said that Lord Irvine had really
been engaged with legal aid. Competitive tendering in legal services had been a New Labour innovation.
24
P.Pleasence. (1999) Testing the Code, Fig. 53, p 36. The savings were calculated at £41 million (of which £36
million was ascribed to personal injury cases after taking into account a deduction of £5 million being
deducted from this sum on account of retained contributions and receipts from the statutory charge).
25
It also established a Criminal Defence Service, which included provision for salaried defenders.
26
Previously about 10,000 firms had been involved in civil and family legal aid cases to a greater or lesser
extent.
27
Most contracted nfp organisations were provided with cash to pay for posts to undertake 1,100 hours of
work per full-time caseworker.
28
Immigration advice was always administered centrally by the LSC. Because of the great increase in the
number of asylum-seekers during this period, immigration advice and assistance cases nearly doubled (from
87,363 to 155,865) between 1997-8 and 2002-03.
18
Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
£2,034 to £2,250 per month for civil and family work (700,000 people). In reality, the Community
Legal Service produced no extra funds for civil legal aid.
In June 2003 Steve Orchard said that the biggest cost driver was criminal legal aid, driven by
Government policy.29
In 2000 the Government Spending Review permitted some modest growth (in cash terms) in the
overall legal aid budget:
In the event, by 2003-04 there was an overspend of about £190 million, with the main increases being
attributed to magistrates’ court cases, very high cost criminal cases and immigration cases. This
overspend fuelled the Government’s desire to find some even more dramatic way to contain legal aid
expenditure. A Fundamental Legal Aid Review, initiated by the new Department for Constitutional
Affairs in 2004, produced conclusions the following year that were never formally published, although
their findings were said to be reflected in the Government paper A Fairer Deal for Legal Aid (2005).
The key function of the CLS was the attempt to establish partnerships between local stakeholders and
providers charged with:
The first two aims always made sense, but the CLS would not work because it was too labour-intensive
for the LSC and because local authorities were not prepared to cede power over funding.31 It was never
likely that the better resourced areas of the country would be willing to transfer their resources to
poorer areas, or that the funders of one form of over-supply would be willing to fund an under-supply
controlled by another agency.
This all soon ran out of steam, not least because of the lack of resources.
29
By 2003 the legal aid budget was getting out of control in criminal work, and to a lesser extent, in
immigration.
30
By 2002 over 200 Community Legal Services Partnerships were in place, and the LSC was employing more
than 100 staff at a cost of £4 million to administer them.
31
Professor Michel Zander had predicted that this would happen. See Michael Zander. (2000) The State of
Justice, pp 12-13.
19
Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
A Matrix Research and Consultancy Report (2004) found there had been a number of fundamental
weaknesses, not least a lack of clarity about the service’s aims.32 It was also vulnerable to policy
changes within government, and to the increasing cash demands of the Criminal Defence Service. The
report was particularly damning on CLS Partnerships. It said that their role was unclear and that any
initial enthusiasm there had been was petering out due to lack of resources. A fundamental problem
was the very uneven spread of social welfare law services.33 There were dramatically variable levels
of spending on SWL across the country.34 Those councils who spent most would lose most if the
expenditure was spread equally.
The report said that there was a leadership vacuum, and an absence of any overall accountability for
the CLS, with no clear dedicated leader driving the changes forward. It was hard to object to the
ambition behind the creation of the CLS Partnerships [CLSPs], but it was easy to foresee that a lack of
common interest – both between funders and providers and between providers themselves – would
mean that the initiative would prove a frustrating endeavour. Contracts for family, welfare benefits,
housing, debt, employment and consumer law were reducing in number, which demonstrated that
LSC funding was not being refocused by directing it towards social exclusion.35
A research study for the Advice Services Alliance, which was published in 2004, found that the CLSPs
were dying on their feet. Most of the 20 respondents thought that they had done nothing to meet the
needs they identified, and that they had failed to make any difference. As a consequence, although
the LSC claimed 99% coverage of the country by 2003, they were being deserted by solicitors in private
practice and by community groups. The only funders were the LSC and local authorities.36
In short, CLSPs did not achieve what they had set out to achieve. There was a lack of cash to develop
services,37 and they were an easy target for savings when the financial crisis hit. The Treasury took the
view that expenditure on SWL was discretionary, and that it could be axed to offset the increase in
the cost of the CDS. Soon after Sir Michael Bichard became chairman of the LSC in April 2005, a
decision was taken to wind up the regional planning committees on the grounds that they were “of
no benefit to providers or clients”.
32
The report referred to an “ideological hole in the centre”.
33
Ibid.
34
A table on page 68 of the Justice Gap showed “five top spenders” who had been spending between 235%
and 373% of what the LSC had calculated they should be spending on SWL, and “bottom five spenders” who
were spending between 23% and 35% of what had been calculated as appropriate. Four London boroughs
(Camden, Hackney & City, Tower Hamlets and Ealing) were in the first category, and two (Kingston and Bexley)
were in the second, which also included Surrey and the East Riding of Yorkshire.
35
In contrast, contracts for public law, community care, actions against the police, education, immigration,
clinical negligence and mental health were all increasing.
36
CAB research found that CABx were active participants in partnerships, but only 16% of respondents felt that
their efforts were justified.
37
No resources were allocated for new expenditure once gaps in provision had been identified, apart from
what was available from a £5 million Partnership Innovation Budget, which provided seed funding for
innovative ventures.
20
Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
In its December 1998 White Paper the Government reported that the cost of criminal legal aid was
“rising at an alarming rate”: a 44% increase in the five years between 1992-93 (£507 million) and 1997-
98 (£733 million). Very high cost criminal cases were identified as presenting a particular challenge:
in 1996-97 42% of legal aid spending in the Crown Court (almost £16 million) was being spent on 1%
of the cases. A new Criminal Defence Service would be established, provided by private firms under
contracts with fixed prices for different categories of work. Separate contracts would be negotiated
on an individual basis for cases where the trial was estimated to last for 25 days or more.
The LSC asked firms if they wanted to become part of the new CDS by applying for advice and
assistance contracts, including police station and magistrates’ court work, which were to come into
force in April 2001. Quality marks were now compulsory. There had previously been 3,500 firms
engaged in criminal defence cases, and just over 500 small suppliers dropped out now.
In February 2001, there was the first pay rise for 8 years, and after other concessions had been
achieved the Law Society eventually recommended that firms should sign the new contracts.
Crown Court and higher court criminal cases were brought into the legal aid budget with effect from
April 2003. In 2000-01 they cost £422 million. This had risen to £695.5 million by 2005-06 (almost one
third of the total budget).40 Very High Cost Cases (VHCC) represented 1% of the total caseload but
they swallowed up 50% of the Crown Court budget. Lord Falconer, who became Lord Chancellor in
June 2003, blamed the Bar much later for using every part of the system to get as much money as
possible. He said that fees were still too high and cases were lasting too long. The Government,
however, seemed to some observers to be blind to other pressures on the criminal budget.
This table41 shows a more detailed breakdown of the way in which expenditure on criminal legal aid
(measured in £ millions) increased between 2000-01 and 2006-07:
38
New Labour’s 1997 manifesto contained no reference to criminal legal aid or to a criminal defence service.
39
In the event, for a variety of reasons, the public defender service turned out to be more costly at that time
than the engagement of solicitors in private practice.
40
The Blair Government introduced a torrent of new criminal justice legislation during these years. Indeed,
the Judicial Studies Board had to arrange a special training programme for the whole of the criminal judiciary
in advance of the Criminal Justice Act 2003 coming into force, and the complexities of this legislation
encountered constant criticism in the higher courts.
41
The figures are taken from the Table on p 147 of The Justice Gap.
21
Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
The tables show that, broadly speaking, total expenditure during this Fifth Period was kept within the
Treasury-imposed cap of £2.1 billion. This was not adjusted for the incidence of inflation, and because
there were always pressures42 which would have meant a steady increase in costs unless remedial
action was taken on a continuing basis, the history of these years is one in which the efforts of both
42
Research on cost drivers in criminal defence work showed that decisions taken beyond the remit and direct
influence of the LSC and defence lawyers had a significant impact on criminal legal aid expenditure and
accounted for a significant proportion of the increase in expenditure over the previous decade. These factors
included the greater use of imprisonment and the fact that the number of arrests was creeping up. See LSRC,
Ed Cape and Richard Moorhead (2007) Demand induced supply? Identifying cost drivers in criminal defence
work. A report to the Legal Services Commission.
22
Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
the LSC and its sponsoring department were dominated by the need to find different kinds of cost-
cutting devices.
Some savings were achieved by killing off the LSC’s local planning structures in 2005-6. During that
period, it consolidated power into a Central London bureaucracy. As a result, it was easier for it to
disengage from suppliers’ interests and to pursue a strategy of becoming a procurement agency rather
than the administrator of the legal aid system. The two chief executives, Clare Dodgson (2003-0643)
and Carolyn Regan (2006-10) were both very experienced managers, but neither had had Steve
Orchard’s long experience within the courts before taking on the job, and it has been suggested that
they did not attract the trust of the legal profession in the way their predecessor had.
The LSC would now take a more centralist role in controlling how advice was provided and by whom
it should be provided. Crispin Passmore (a former manager of a law centre) was appointed the first
director of the Community Legal Service.
1986 63%
1998 52%
1999 51%
2000 50%
2001 46%
2005 41%
2007 29%
The increase in average earnings was faster than the rate of inflation. There were also demographic
changes relating to the age and partnership status of the population, the introduction of working tax
credits and child tax credits, and reforms to civil legal aid. The reduction in eligibility was not due to a
reduction in passported benefits.
43
Clare Dodgson was away on long-term sick leave for her last 12 months at the Commission.
23
Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
As more solicitors in private practice abandoned legal aid work, between 2002 and 2008 there was a
very marked shift in the proportion of legal help and social welfare law (SWL) advice that was provided
by not for profit providers (nfps). In 2002 the LSC had been set a target of providing £20 million of
contracted work through nfps. In 2007-8 the equivalent figure was more than £80 million: 31% of
annual legal help expenditure, and 67% of provision of SWL advice. However, although the LSC would
have liked to see more providers being able to offer the full range of SWL services, in 2006 only six
legal aid providers in England and Wales delivered services in all five SWL categories. No law centre
had that degree of coverage, and only half the 470 CABx undertook specialist legal advice at all.
By the end of 2008 legal aid had no local dimension to the planning of services and the LSC did not
indulge in any consultation with the public over their expectations. This had been possible when the
regional planning committees and Community Legal Service Partnerships existed, when firms and nfp
agencies had had forums in which their views could be expressed.
In 2007-08 250,877 members of the public were helped by the Community Legal Advice helpline.44
As at 31 March 2010 the LSC held 2,390 civil and 1,697 criminal contracts with legal aid providers. This
table shows the breakdown, and the number of offices involved:
44
The first 15 minutes are provided non-means tested by a generalist adviser.
24
Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
In 2009-10 the LSC delivered 1.43 million acts of assistance through the Community Legal Service and
1.17 million Legal Help acts of assistance via face-to-face and telephone advice.45
A paper47 published by the Department of Constitutional Affairs (DCA) in August 2005 set out to
address the issue of coordinating services more effectively, so that they would be better able to
address the clusters of problems which clients faced. In other words, the public needed coordinated
advice, ideally a one-stop shop to avoid them being passed from pillar to post and get lost in the
system.
The DCA’s proposed solution included the issuing of joint tenders with local authorities for social
welfare and family law services: Community Legal Advice Centres (CLACs). The concept of “problem
clusters”48 drew on a Legal Services Research Centre paper “Causes of Action”,49 of which an updated
version had been republished (following a second survey) by the time the LSC published its policy
proposals in March 2006. 50 Because the problems they were addressing are remarkably similar to
those that still exist (and are now better understood) today, it is worth setting out the problems and
the proposed solution.
45
The statistics in the last two paragraphs are taken from the Legal Services Commission’s Annual Report and
Accounts, 2009-10.
46
Community Legal Advice Centres and Community Legal Advice Networks.
47
DCA, A Fairer Deal for Legal Aid (Cm 659, 2005).
48
There were three principal and distinct problem clusters: Family (domestic violence, divorce, relationship
and family problems); Homelessness (rented housing, homelessness, benefits); and Economic (money and
debt, consumer employment problems).
49
Legal Services Commission. Pascoe Pleasance et al (2004) Causes of action, civil law and social justice. The
final report of the first LSRC survey of justiciable problems.
50
Legal Services Commission. (2006) Making Legal Rights a Reality.
25
Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
The LSC’s new strategy advocated a new approach to the way in which civil legal and advice services
were funded, purchased and delivered. They had a vision of services which were:
The creation of CLACs and CLANs was one of the main proposals in the new strategy. A CLAC would:
provide free, independent, face-to-face legal advice services to tackle civil justice issues at the
earliest opportunity;
take strategic action to solve the causes of common problems and play a role in educating
people about their legal rights;
target those with the greatest need for legal advice services, including those who did not get
help from current services;
be jointly funded by the LSC and the local authority; and
be a single legal entity.
In contrast, a Community Legal Advice Network (CLAN) would cover a larger geographical area with a
less dense population than a CLAC. It was envisaged that CLANs would deliver outreach into
community centres, GP surgeries or schools; provide services in locally important languages; and
reduce, where possible, the need for clients to travel.
CLACs were most likely to be in urban areas – local authority areas with more than 50,000 benefits
claimants. These were likely to be high on the Index of Multiple Deprivation and contain a
Neighbourhood Renewal area or Communities First area.
Leicester and Gateshead would be the first two centres to be commissioned. The LSC’s initial analysis
in March 2006 suggested that England and Wales could be covered by up to 75 CLACs and 36 CLANs,
although this would depend on local factors, including the view of the local authority.51
In brief, the LSC was seeking to establish “jointly funded, face-to-face legal and advice services to
specialise in social welfare law and to combine disparate services in a one-stop shop.” There was to
be a move from private practice to the not for profit (nfp) sector. As part of New Labour’s attack on
51
And in Wales the Welsh Assembly Government.
26
Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
social exclusion, the LSC wanted CLACs to provide multiple services under one roof to tackle the
difficulties faced by those with multiple and cluster problems.
Crispin Passmore said that the LSC would expect a 3-year commitment to funding before going into
partnership with a local authority to form a CLAC. It was for a local authority to decide how much it
wanted to fund advice.
The role of local authority funding within a CLAC, however, was not defined.52 It was expected to
cover generalist advice service, specialist services for ineligible clients, and services that were out of
scope (notably tribunal presentation). There were no identifiable minimum standards. The
specifications for the first five CLACs revealed considerable variation.
As to the history, a CLAC was established in Gateshead in May 2007. CLACs at Leicester, Derby and
Portsmouth followed a year later, with a CLAC being opened in Hull in October 2008. 53 The first CLAN
was established in the East Riding of Yorkshire in March 2010, and a new CLAC, in Barking &
Dagenham, followed shortly afterwards. That was all.
Although the LSC had been conducting active discussions with local authorities to establish six more
CLACs and four more CLANS in 2010,54 these details show that in the end only one more CLAC and one
CLAN was ever established. The big constraint on their roll-out lay in local authorities’ unwillingness
to fund legal services. In 2007 local authorities provided £66 million (46%) of funding for CABx, and
the LSC provided £30 million (20%). They had different aims. An adequate tender specification was
never successfully devised.
Critics said that the project seemed to be compromised by a crude and divisive tendering process with
little respect for the providers. The trouble was that once again the LSC lacked the political clout to
force local government to share its vision or funding for local advice by pooling resources with the LSC
for holistic advice and assistance provision. In addition, the problems of replacing 5,000 traditional
firms with up to 50 large-scale providers proved insurmountable.
The Hull tender showed how controversial and radical these proposals could be. It was won by an out
of town bid from A4E and a Sheffield law firm. The LSC and Hull County Council would jointly provide
£3.5 million. The Hull CAB was shut out, even though it was one of the largest in the Citizens Advice
network. It might survive, but some people claimed that Leicester Law Centre had been forced to
close after funding cuts because of the CLAC.
There would probably never have been more than a limited number of CLACs, because of the local
authorities’ reluctance to enter into joint funding. In a study he conducted in 2010 Professor Richard
52
For a description of the problems faced by joint commissioning by two funding bodies with different aims,
see Closing the Justice Gap (ed Jon Robins, 2010) pp 36-7.
53
A MoJ study in 2009 found that the first five CLACs then in existence were managing adequately, but had
been costly and time-consuming to set up. (See Ministry of Justice. (2009) Legal Advice and the Local Level.)
54
CLACs at Barking & Dagenham, Cardiff, Manchester, Stockport, Sunderland and Wakefield; and CLANS in the
East Riding of Yorkshire, Gloucestershire and West Sussex.
27
Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
Moorhead found that CLACs and CLANs also ran up against the intransigencies and entrenched
positions of local organisations.55
Other Developments
Because of the Treasury’s insistence that the legal aid budget must be effectively capped, the history
of these years shows a whole series of policy stop-start initiatives in which the LSC was purporting to
continue to prize the quality of the services provided through LSC funding while being constrained by
its parent department to attempt different methods of reducing their cost.
Specialist support
One of the successes of the LSC’s initial range of policies was the specialist support services they
funded, whereby frontline providers could access free advice, support, mentoring and low cost
training in order to help them maintain a high quality standard of services. As late as April 2005 it
issued a statement to the effect that thee services had proved invaluable, and a new three-year
contract was being negotiated.
Later that year, however, providers were told that their new contracts would not be signed, and in
January 2006 that their existing contracts would be terminated because the service no longer fitted
into the LSC’s current priorities, and the money would be better spent in providing services direct to
the public, shorn of this expert back-up assistance.
This change of policy was strongly criticised by the Constitutional Affairs Committee of the House of
Commons two months later, and the High Court made an interim order extending the scheme until
December. The LSC said it would reassess its decision and it withdrew the notices of termination,
acknowledging the damage this episode had caused in its relationship with practitioners.
The LSC used this tendering system, which was in widespread use with public bodies, when it awarded
new civil contracts in 2004. The BVT system takes into account factors other than mere pricing, such
as the quality of a firm’s IT, training, supervision and so on. It regarded BVT as a “tried and tested
method.”
In 2005, however, the LSC proposed a pilot project in London 56 which would involve PCT for criminal
defence services. It claimed that this form of tendering would improve quality as well as saving money,
but in fact 95% of all existing suppliers were accepted onto the panel who were invited to bid. The
only factor that would then be considered would be the price they offered. The LSC said: “No other
factors will be considered at this stage as all suppliers will have passed the quality threshold”. This
55
Professor Richard Moorhead, Process Evaluation of CLACs and CLANs, 2010. This study contains a very full
exposition of the reasons why the experiment failed.
56
Legal Services Commission. (2005) Improving Value for Money for Publicly Funded Criminal Defence Services
in London.
28
Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
proposal encountered such a hostile reception from practitioners57 that it was postponed following
the announcement of a review of legal aid procurement which Lord Carter was invited to carry out.
Preferred Suppliers
In 2004 Clare Dodgson, the new chief executive of the LSC wished to cut down the bureaucratic
burdens on suppliers. The LSC dropped its commitment to non-specialist quality marks. They were
costly to audit, and considered not relevant to core LSC business. The LSC now set the level for
entering the system at “threshold competence”: the lowest level. This was a risk to quality, especially
with the introduction of fixed fees.
During that year there were pilot projects in preferred supplier arrangements, on the basis that they
would be replaced in due course by peer review. Ideally, the LSC wanted responsibility for quality and
accreditation to pass to the Law Society. This would introduce a very welcome reduction in
bureaucracy and an increase in the contracting firms’ autonomy. After a successful pilot the LSC issued
a consultation paper in 2006 in which it proposed that it would contract only with preferred suppliers
by 2009. 58 However, it soon abandoned this idea in the wake of the Carter Review, although in an
announcement on its website it insisted that key elements of the scheme would be incorporated in
other reforms.
Peer Review
In 2005 LSC identified59 Independent Peer Review as the best way to measure the quality of their
providers, and they followed up this proposal by announcing 60 it would introduce an independent
system that had been developed by Professor Avrom Sherr, of the Institute of Advanced Legal
Studies. The Institute would operate the system, train the reviewers and deal with consistency
issues. The LSC’s sole role would be to administer the scheme. This development was welcomed by
practitioners, who had been concerned that the LSC’s previous methods had not addressed questions
of quality directly.
Prior to Lord Carter’s report, senior people within the LSC had decided that the deployment of
competitive tendering for criminal services was the solution to the control of costs. As has been
mentioned already, a planned pilot project for the London area was fiercely opposed. This was when
Lord Falconer appointed Lord Carter to carry out a review.
57
One solicitor said that the fact that his firm was peer reviewed and placed in the top three firms nationally
would count for little against being undercut “by a bloke with a mobile phone working out of the front room”.
58
Legal Services Commission. (2006) Quality Relationships Delivering Quality Outcomes.
59
Legal Services Commission. (2005) Independent Peer Review of Legal Advice and Legal Work.
60
Legal Services Commission. (2005) Independent Peer Review? The Process.
61
See The Justice Gap (Steve Hynes and Jon Robins, 2009), p 52 for a blistering attack on the abandonment of
the preferred supplier arrangements by the LSC Commissioner responsible for the crime portfolio at that time.
29
Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
“We had to break the hold of the criminal practitioners and force them to
restructure so that we could get more control over the costs of provision”.
His main policy concerns were the 37% increase in criminal legal aid expenditure since 1997, and the
24% decrease in civil legal aid expenditure (except asylum).
Against this background Lord Carter was invited to review how new models of procurement could be
implemented to deliver enhanced value for money and a sustainable supply for legal aid. He was
asked to produce a plan by early 2006 describing what action the Government would need to take to
enable the legal professions to adapt successfully to new procurement methods.
Lord Carter produced an interim report in February 2006,62 and a final report in July 2006. 63 His main
recommendations were as follows:
Criminal
i. Redrawing the duty solicitor schemes into larger boundaries and introducing block contracts
for police station work;
ii. Fixed fees for police station work;
iii. A graduated fees scheme for magistrates’ court work;
iv. A reform of the fees paid in Crown Court cases;
v. Panels to bid for high cost cases on a Best Value Tendering (BVT) basis;
vi. A spending cut of 20% on Crown Court cases, and a rebalancing of work away from the senior
to the junior Bar.
Civil
He acknowledged that some organisations would have to merge, or to discontinue legal aid work as
the market consolidated.
In preparation for the introduction of BVT the LSC introduced a system of fixed fees for all civil and
criminal legal aid work. Previously most nfp suppliers had received a fixed payment for a block of
work, whereas private providers were paid by the case. Transitional arrangements were put in place
for nfp suppliers.
62
Lord Carter. (February 2006) Procurement of Criminal Defence Services: market-based reform.
63
Lord Carter. (July 2006) Review of legal aid procurement.
30
Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
The first stage consisted in introducing the unified contracts and then the fixed fees. Fixed fees
represented a 9% reduction in pay for police station work, and a 16% reduction in pay or magistrates’
court work. As is described below, 95% of private practice firms eventually signed the new criminal
legal aid contract which came into effect in January 2008.
In 2009 the LSC sought to introduce redesigned civil legal aid contracts. These contained requirements
that successful tenderers for the new social welfare law contracts should be able to provide services
in housing, benefits and debt work, while bidders for new family law contracts were to be given
preference if they were members of two specialist panels (for children and domestic abuse). The
tendering arrangements caused consternation among firms who currently held family law
contracts. The number of family law contracts was reduced by 46% in this tendering round, with good
firms losing out altogether and new, untried firms getting all the cases for which they had bid. Here,
too, the Law Society brought things to a halt when in September 2010 the High Court ruled in their
favour that the legal profession had been given insufficient notice of the new selection criteria. 66
64
The Ministry of Justice was created in May 2007. It took over responsibility for legal aid policy from the
Department of Constitutional Affairs, which was abolished.
65
R (Law Society) v Legal Services Commission [2007] EWHC 1848 (Admin); [2007] EWCA Civ 1264.
66
R (Law Society) v Legal Services Commission [2010] EWHC 2550 (Admin). Moses LJ described the prevailing
anxieties in these terms: “The reduction caused serious and vociferous concern. It was not just a question of
numbers. It was not merely a question of dismay that those who had spent their professional lives for little
reward providing publicly funded services to the deprived, socially disadvantaged and excluded were no longer
to be permitted to do so. The focus of concern was that those who were acknowledged to be highly skilled and
experienced professionals were no longer going to be able to deploy those skills in areas where they were most
needed. That concern was expressed not merely by those who had failed, but by those who had succeeded, and
by those who had come to know, trust and rely upon solicitors practising in a difficult and demanding
jurisdiction, namely clients, minority representative organisations and judges.”
31
Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
So far as Crown Court cases were concerned, the LSC’s plans were frustrated when only 130 of the
advocates who had joined a new specialist criminal panel were willing to agree the new contracts on
offer in March 2008. A compromise was then negotiated. There would be an increase of 5% in fees
for VHCC cases at a cost of £6 million up to July 2009. This would be paid for by reducing the number
of cases in which two counsel could be instructed. There would then be a revised payment scheme
based on graduated fees.
During 2008 the LSC embarked on an effort to introduce BVT into police station and magistrates’ court
work, while at the same time disavowing any ambition to achieve any savings through this move. This,
too, was abandoned the following year, although a pilot scheme in two areas lived on, only to be
wound up shortly before the General Election.
The LSC came under criticism in a National Audit Office (NAO) Report in October 2009 when it was
found that just under £25 million had been paid out in solicitors’ fees to which they were not entitled
(in the following accounting year the equivalent figure was £76.5 million).68
It was against this background, coupled with some uneasy relationships between the LSC and MoJ
officials (bolstered by a concern that the Government was seeking to interfere on political grounds
with the LSC’s discretion in individual cases), that a former Head of HM Courts Service, Sir Ian Magee,
was invited to undertake a review of the operation of the LSC and of its budget. In his report,
published in March 2010, Sir Ian recommended that responsibility for the formulation of legal aid
policy should be vested in MoJ alone, and he also found serious weaknesses in the LSC’s forecasting
and other financial management systems. The Government announced that it would abolish the LSC
67
R (Law Society) v Legal Services Commission [2010) EWHC 1406 (Admin). The history of this saga is described
in a Parliamentary briefing. Accessed September 2017:
http://researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk/documents/SN05213/SN05213.pdf
68
A survey conducted by the NAO at this time revealed tensions in the relationship between the legal
profession and the LSC. 36% of the solicitor respondents perceived the LSC as “unhelpful” and 29% believed
the LSC did not fully understand the legal system.
32
Appendix 6: History of Legal Aid
By Sir Henry Brooke
and transfer the administration of legal aid to a new executive agency of MoJ. Carolyn Regan, the LSC’s
chief executive, resigned on the spot.
The Labour Government’s final action, announced shortly before the General Election, was to cut fees
in Crown Court cases by 4.5%, with a further cut of 13.5% scheduled to follow two years later.
33