Calgary Herald

People have wrong idea about legal-aid fee: officials

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Alberta Justice officials say an upfront fee for legal-aid clients has safeguards to ensure the poor get access to a lawyer and has been misunderst­ood.

David Peace told a legislatur­e committee Wednesday that Legal Aid Alberta announced last month it would collect the fee of between $25 and $150 “only from clients that could afford to repay, which is not the totality of their client base.”

“There were some mispercept­ions that somehow that would prevent access to legal aid. That wasn’t true, but it concerned our minister,” said Peace, assistant deputy minister in charge of justice services.

Justice Minister Kathleen Ganley put the fee on hold shortly after it was announced.

Peace said the department and Legal Aid Alberta are considerin­g what options are available.

He said Legal Aid Alberta has said the fee is an effort to make scarce budget dollars go further without causing undue hardship.

Managers are to examine every case on its merits to make sure a client can reasonably pay.

“Nobody that was unable to pay was being forced to pay before they could access legal-aid services,” he said.

Philip Bryden, deputy justice minister, added that Legal Aid Alberta has been recovering fees for years. The province issued more than 38,000 certificat­es for legal aid last year and recovered almost $4 million.

“What was different about this particular move was working on client recoveries at an earlier stage in the process,” said Bryden.

Legal Aid Alberta is funded by the province but acts at arm’s length to avoid any conflict of interest.

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