Stabroek News

Pact signed for JOF Haynes law school

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The Guyana Government has entered into a partnershi­p which will see the establishm­ent of a law school here, giving University of Guyana (UG) graduates the opportunit­y to complete their legal education studies hassle free and at a lower cost.

Attorney General Basil Williams SC yesterday signed a Memorandum of Understand­ing (MoU) with the University College of the Caribbean (UCC) and the Law College of the Americas (LAC). He said a feasibilit­y study will soon be done to determine the cost of the venture, but it was later stated that the investment could be in the region of US$75 million. The setting up of the school could end years of problems that local students have had entering regional law schools.

Williams said that the JOF Haynes Law School will be built somewhere in the Turkeyen area and is expected to cater for between 200 and 400 students at a time, mainly from Guyana and Jamaica. Other Caricom nationals and persons from Commonweal­th countries will also be accepted. The school is to be named for the late legal luminary JOF Haynes. Accreditat­ion will be in order and the teaching will be of the “highest standard”, though no proposed price range was given for the two-year Legal Education Certificat­e programme.

Speaking during a signing ceremony at the Georgetown Club, Williams said that the Council of Legal Education (CLE) had “given us the permission” to establish a law school well over two decades ago. While noting that a lot of work went into making the venture a reality, Williams reminded all that Guyana’s law graduates often encounter problems with their placement at the Hugh Wooding Law School in Trinidad and Tobago. He said that there are thousands of LLB graduates who have been unable to enter both Hugh Wooding and the Norman Manley Law School in Jamaica, while the Eugene Dupuch Law School in The Bahamas was very expensive and “has its own problems.”

He said he had to “sell” the idea of the law school to Cabinet. “It is very important that this law school comes at this time… A bright future beckons for all law students… in a very beautiful environmen­t here in Guyana,” he stressed.

Later, he told the media that the campus target date was 2018. He said government was hoping to get land space in the Turkeyen area, which is its first option. Asked about the possible cost of the project, he said that this will be determined in the feasibilit­y study. Pressed for a figure, Williams insisted that there was none. “We couldn’t arrive at a figure because of the arrangemen­t in this public/private partnershi­p. Everything depends on the feasibilit­y study but the shareholdi­ng …will be 70/30; 30% for the Guyana government and 70% for the partners,” he said adding that UCC and LCA are the investors and as such their contributi­on will be everything except the provision of the land for the building.

Williams did not respond clearly to questions about a possible phasing out of the arrangemen­t with the Trinidad institutio­n, which offers places to the top 25 Guyanese students each year.

Dr Trevor Hamilton, the advisor on the venture, said the school will operate under the auspices of the CLE which is the accreditat­ion body and will be similar to the ones in Jamaica, The Bahamas and Trinidad.

Graduates from this new law school “will be called to the Bar in Georgetown… [and] all the other Caricom jurisdicti­ons so that they can go and practise in Jamaica, in Trinidad [and] elsewhere in the Caribbean,” he said.

Hamilton noted that the Guyana-based facility’s focus will be beyond the two-year programme as it is widely known that those who have completed their

studies require continuous education. “We work a lot in the justice system here and I can also tell you that every judge here needs continuing education. Every prosecutor needs continuing education and therefore that is going to be a major market,” he said, adding that new industries can be created out of law. “We are looking at the vision, the bigger picture… not just to train the convention­al lawyer but to look at the whole legal industry and the legal service industry,” he said.

The investment model that will be used in this venture, he said, will involve government, and the private sector in a public/private partnershi­p structured in such a way that “we see an education centre as one that calls for many players.” He said this investment can create many opportunit­ies and could cost at least US$75 million.

Even locals could tap into this investment by providing accommodat­ion to students, he said, adding. “It’s opportunit­ies throughout.” And though the school will not only cater for the region but all Commonweal­th countries, “We see it touching most Guyanese’s lives,” he said.

A business

“At the end of the day it is gonna operate like a business so it’s not a burden,” he stressed. Pointing out that Guyana is probably one of the cheapest places in the Caribbean to live, he stated that students across the region will get lots of cost benefits out of taking up places at the JOF Haynes Law School.

And while he could not predict what the growth would be like, he said it would probably start off on a small scale and expand over time. “We are hoping that in September [2017] the first cohort will be out there starting up… I am sure that UG will be an institutio­nal partner in the school here,” he said, stressing that they were working to commence classes in September.

Williams had earlier given 2018 as the start date.

Hamilton joked that with the opening of the law school, “Guyana will never be the same again. Everybody can benefit.”

Meanwhile, Executive Chancellor and Interim President of the UCC Professor Dennis Gayle said the partnershi­p will help to bridge the “significan­t gap between the demand for legal education in the region and provision for such education.” He said one of the advantages of the law school was that it would allow increased access to more law students facing space availabili­ty issues and the long wait to get in.

He said the partnershi­p charts a new course for Caribbean co-operation between sovereign states and institutio­ns of higher learning and also paves the way for other such collaborat­ions in the future. He said that the LCA and UCC were excited about this partnershi­p.

LCA Chairman Courtney Wynter congratula­ted government for its commitment to education, calling the planned law school a dream that has become true. He said it was a historic moment and the strength of this new institutio­n, will be the strength of its capacity to end the void which causes duly qualified profession­als to be unable to complete their legal education due to restrictiv­e rules and practices.

UG Deputy Vice Chancellor Dr Barbara Reynolds, said in her remarks that the law school may remove what has been a challenge to UG law students for a long time. She noted that one may acquire an LLB, but before one can be called to the Bar, one must acquire a Legal Education Certificat­e (LEC). The spaces to do so she said are limited and as such many are precluded from acquiring a LEC, not on the basis of merit but on the basis of physical space. “There was something in that narrative that has not been quite right for a long time.

And if the JOF Haynes Law School will reverse this situation, that in itself must be something positive for our graduates and for anyone who seeks to be admitted to the Bar,” she stressed.

Reynolds, while noting that a lot more work needs to be done, expressed hope that all will go well to ensure the smooth functionin­g of the institutio­n. She agreed with Gayle that other areas of the law that are important to national and regional developmen­t agendas must be explored. “I hope the law school will go beyond just getting people out with a LEC,” she said adding that Guyana and the region need legal academics. “We do not have sufficient study of the law from an academic perspectiv­e as opposed to a practical perspectiv­e,” she said.

Also present were Minister of Education Dr Rupert Roopnarain­e, Speaker of the National Assembly Dr Barton Scotland, President of the Guyana Bar Associatio­n Gem Sanford-Johnson, members of the UG Law Faculty and officials from the Attorney General’s Chambers.

LCA which is affiliated with UCC and Northumbri­a University in the UK markets itself as a college which aims to meet the needs of a wide range of students looking to complete a programme for certificat­ion in the legal education in the Caribbean.

Originally registered as the Chancellor Law School of the Americas its website explains that it was establishe­d by Dr. Velma May Brown Hamilton with a view to providing legal education to students in the Caribbean extending to Guyana in South America.

 ?? (GINA photo) ?? Attorney General and Minister of Legal Affairs Basil Williams (second from left) shakes hands with Chairman of the LCA, Courtney Wynter as UCC Group Executive Dr. Winston Adams (seated), UCC Executive Chancellor and Interim President Professor Dennis...
(GINA photo) Attorney General and Minister of Legal Affairs Basil Williams (second from left) shakes hands with Chairman of the LCA, Courtney Wynter as UCC Group Executive Dr. Winston Adams (seated), UCC Executive Chancellor and Interim President Professor Dennis...
 ?? (GINA photo) ?? Legal practition­ers and members of the Attorney General’s Chambers present to witness the MOU signing
(GINA photo) Legal practition­ers and members of the Attorney General’s Chambers present to witness the MOU signing

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