Canadian Lawyer

May 2014

The most widely read magazine for Canadian lawyers

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w w w . C A N A D I A N L a w y e r m a g . c o m M a y 2 0 1 4 3 by gail j. cohen Editor's dEsk Knocking down hurdles Director/Group Publisher: Karen Lorimer karen.lorimer@thomsonreuters.com Editor in Chief: Gail J. Cohen gail.cohen@thomsonreuters.com Staff Writer: Charlotte Santry charlotte.santry@thomsonreuters.com Copy Editor: Mallory Hendry Art Director: Bill Hunter Production Co-ordinator: Catherine Giles catherine.giles@thomsonreuters.com Contributors: Jean Sorensen, donalee Moulton, Geoff Ellwand, Marg. Bruineman, Yamri Taddese, Jennifer Brown, Luis Millán, Kirk Makin, Shannon Kari Canadian Lawyer is published 11 times a year by Thomson Reuters Canada Ltd. All rights reserved. Contents may not be reprinted without written permission. The opinions expressed in articles are not necessarily those of the publisher. Information presented is compiled from sources believed to be accurate, however, the publisher assumes no responsibility for errors or omissions. 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For all circulation inquiries and address changes send a copy of your mailing label or labels along with your request in writing to Canadian Lawyer , One Corporate Plaza, 2075 Kennedy Rd., Toronto, ON. M1T 3V4 Indexed in the Canadian Periodical Index Something's coming, something good, If I can wait! Something's coming, I don't know what it is, But it is Gonna be great! — Stephen Sondheim, West Side Story A s Canadians come out of one of the worst winters in the history of ever, you can smell spring in the air; you can feel a palpable change in attitude as we expose our lily-white skin to a little warmth and sunshine. Like the cro- cuses that push up through the semi-frozen ground to herald the new season, dire economic reality appears to be the fertilizer for change in the legal profession. Not only the financial difficulties being faced by law firms large, medium, and small but also the growing number of unrepresented litigants in the courts and a serious deficit in access to justice across the country are driving the inevitable. I've said this before, but the profession in this country — and the law societies that regulate it — are not exactly on the cutting edge of legal innovation. But it does seem that times are changing. The Nova Scotia Bar- risters' Society released a detailed report last October entitled "Transforming Regulation and Governance in the Public Interest" — a thorough look at all the seeds of change from technology through unbundling, new law firm structures, globalization, the greying bar, growth of in-house counsel, and more. This discussion, of course, included alterna- tive business structures in the practice of law, i.e.: non- lawyer ownership of firms. As writer donalee Moulton reports on page 7, the NSBS is currently look- ing at shifting from a regu- latory system that licenses individual lawyers to one that licenses legal entities. "In spite of much change in how and where lawyers practise and why people need lawyers, our method of regulation has not evolved on pace with the advancement of technology or of government, civil, and commercial interactions," says NSBS President René Gallant. In February, the Law Society of Upper Canada announced it would begin formal consultations on the establishment of ABSs. That coupled with the experimental Legal Practice Program, which launches in Sep- tember, to provide a non-articling route to licensing, and the innovative law degree being offered at Lakehead University are some of the boldest changes to legal education in decades. Other law societies across the country are starting to examine changes to regulation as well but right now, it's almost all talk; but the LPP is a start and the NSBS' Gallant says within six months, there's going to be action in his province. Other jurisdictions have shown that if you change it, they will come. In the United King- dom, where ABSs have been allowed for about two years, there are now more than 300 registered licensees. The road may not be completely with- out bumps, but obviously there is great interest. According to Legal Futures, interest in providing legal ser- vices is coming from many different areas. "A multi-disciplinary business services company, a virtual law firm associated with entrepre- neur James Caan and a fast-growing Man- chester personal injury practice" are some of the recent licensees. There are some innovators in the legal sphere here but not yet enough. It's a case of stimulating creativity in an industry that has coasted for decades but is finally being forced to reinvent itself. But regulatory change is necessary to allow for such innovation for the benefit of the profession and public. That means something as simple — and basic to the entrepreneurial spirit — as giving your law firm a catchy name shouldn't be a major regu- latory hurdle. It still is. There's much to do and some way to go yet but these are exciting times. As Sondheim says: Something's coming, I don't know what it is/But it is/Gonna be great!

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