Legal Services Act
CLC hits back at Lord Chief Justice and Law Society opposition to new rights
The Council for Licensed Conveyancers (CLC) has hit back at opposition from the Lord Chief Justice and the Law Society to its application to grant rights to conduct advocacy and litigation. The Legal Services Board is currently considering the CLC’s application, and as one of its statutory consultees, the Lord Chief Justice Lord Judge has expressed his total opposition.
Ombudsman steps up pressure on LSB to sort out reserved legal activities
The Legal Ombudsman is stepping up pressure on the Legal Services Board to sort out the current regulatory regime by commissioning research that will look at consumer confusion caused by reserved and unreserved legal activities and how it could be exacerbated by alternative business structures.
QualitySolicitors goes live in WHSmith with national TV endorsement
QualitySolicitors’ (QS) deal to run ‘Legal Access Points’ (LAPs) within WHSmith stores was launched on Friday with celebrity fanfare and national TV coverage. Britain’s Got Talent judge Amanda Holden unveiled the first of an eventual 500 nationwide LAPs at Westfield shopping centre in west London, before a crowd of onlookers and autograph hunters.
LSB targets conveyancing and corporate work as major review of regulation begins
The regulation of both residential conveyancing and corporate law, as well as general legal advice, is set to be reviewed by the Legal Services Board as it begins a major investigation into the boundaries of regulation and also looks at whether Parliament needs to undertake a “root and branch overhaul of the current system”.
Top Google site offers web users free answer to legal question from solicitor in 60 minutes
A new online service that allows potential clients to ask solicitors a question for free – and get a response within an hour – is set to launch to the profession shortly. The website, www.rightsolicitor.co.uk, already ranks at the top of Google behind only the Law Society for the words ‘solicitor’ and ‘solicitors’.
Publish and be damned: LSB says regulators should inspect firms’ diversity data
Law firms and chambers whose workforces are significantly at odds with the make-up of the wider profession can expect questions from their regulators, the Legal Services Board (LSB) has warned. The LSB today confirmed that it is pressing ahead with controversial plans to make firms and chambers survey and publish the levels of diversity and social mobility in their workforces.
OFR still set for 6 October, while ABSs could yet happen before end of the year
Outcomes-focused regulation will go ahead on 6 October even though it is unlikely that the Solicitors Regulation Authority will be able to start licensing alternative business structures “much before the end of the year”, chief executive Antony Townsend has confirmed.
Mayson strengthens case to expand list of reserved legal activities
There is a strong consumer protection justification for making the whole conveyancing process a reserved legal activity, Professor Stephen Mayson has argued in the final version of his influential report on the case for reservation. He said the “guarantee” of title registration is incomplete.
LSB to press ahead with forcing firms and chambers to publish staff diversity data
The Legal Services Board looks set to force legal practices to gather and publish equality and diversity data, despite concern that the policy could provoke non-compliance and create a false view of the profession because of relcutance to disclose sensitive information such as sexual orientation or religious belief.
“Perfect storm” set to slash number of conveyancing firms, says survey
Competition over fees, reduced work volumes and other worries will result in far fewer firms specialising in conveyancing in the future, a new survey has predicted. The poll of Conveyancing Association members found them anxious about the future, with alternative business structures and reduced lender panels key sources of concern.












