Jamaica Gleaner

Online search portal to access laws coming

- Nickoy Wilson/Gleaner Writer nickoy.wilson@gleanerjm.com

THE MINISTRY of Justice is hoping to create a searchable online platform through which Jamaica’s laws can be easily accessed by the public.

“So currently, if you need to find the laws of Jamaica, they are provided online on the Minstry of Justice website, and you can also seek to look at the Parliament website. What we need to do is to enhance that and to carry it further so that what we want to have, for example, is a searchable database,” said Maurice Bailey, director of legal reform in the Ministry of Justice.

He added, “If you’re interested in a topic such as bail – and that’s just the average person – you should be able to type in the word ‘bail’ and all the act and regulation­s that relate to bail will be presented to you. At this point, that function is not something we really have. You can search by the title of the legislatio­n, but that’s about the size of it.”

He said that there is no set timeline for the creation of the database as the idea is in its preliminar­y stage.

Bailey was speaking to The Gleaner during a law consolidat­ion training session held by the Ministry

‘If you’re interested in a topic such as bail – and that’s just the average person – you should be able to type in the word ‘bail’ and all the act and regulation­s that relate to bail will be presented to you.’

of Justice in collaborat­ion with the Anguilla-based Regional Law Revision Centre Incorporat­ed at the ministry’s St Andrew offices.

Consolidat­ion of laws is the process of combining the legislativ­e provisions on a single topic into one coherent enactment.

Yanive Nelson, director of the Law Revision Secretaria­t in the justice ministry, said consolidat­ing Jamaica’s laws will help not only the persons in the legal fraternity to better keep track of changes in the law, but also the public.

“For an active citizen, they may not have that appreciati­on, especially if they are not trained in the law. They may not have an awareness. If someone hands them an act, when was that act passed? They may not know what the law actually says unless they are to determine the amendments,” he said.

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