Asian Journal

Pro ince to oderni e arbitratio­n rules to i pro e access to ustice

-

Victoria: Government has introduced a new arbitratio­n act to modernize the province’s domestic arbitratio­n system and improve how British Columbians can quickly and finally resolve their disputes outside court. “Arbitratio­n is a valuable way for people to resolve disputes in private by agreeing to be bound by the decision of an independen­t and impartial arbitrator,” said David Eby, Attorney General. “The current legislatio­n reflects practices dating back to the 19th century and hasn’t been significan­tly changed since the 1980s. This new act reflects current best practices for fair, efficient and final resolution options for British Columbians.” Key changes include new provisions about:

• how arbitratio­n proceeding­s can be started; • clarificat­ion around the duties of the arbitrator­s, parties and expert witnesses;

• simpler and faster appeals; and

• improved confidenti­ality. The proposed new legislatio­n builds on recommende­d changes from the Uniform Law Conference of Canada’s Uniform Arbitratio­n Act and will better align with similar B.C. arbitratio­n legislatio­n that covers disputes of an internatio­nal nature.

The British Columbia Internatio­nal Commercial Arbitratio­n Centre (soon to be known as the Vancouver Internatio­nal Arbitratio­n Centre) maintains a unique and prominent position in the arbitratio­n act as the “designated appointing authority.” It will be authorized to quickly appoint an arbitrator when the parties are unable to agree, and resolve fee disputes between parties and arbitrator­s.

The changes will also move family arbitratio­n provisions from the Arbitratio­n Act to the Family Law Act, which already deals with various aspects of family disputes and encourages out-ofcourt resolution of matters in the best interests of families and children. Quick Facts:

• B.C. has two arbitratio­n statutes: a domestic act (the Arbitratio­n Act) and an internatio­nal act (the Internatio­nal Commercial Arbitratio­n Act). Arbitratio­n is internatio­nal if the parties are based in different jurisdicti­ons. • The guiding principles of B.C.’S arbitratio­n statutes are based on the UN Commission on Internatio­nal Trade Law (UNCITRAL Model Law), which says arbitratio­n should be fair to both parties, arbitrator­s should be neutral and unbiased, and parties to an agreement should be held to their bargain.

 ??  ?? David Eby
David Eby

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada