Yorkshire Post

Justice reform ‘hit by funding gaps’

- CLAIRE WILDE CRIME CORRESPOND­ENT Email: claire.wilde@jpress.co.uk Twitter: @ClaireWIld­eYP

A controvers­ial £1.2bn modernisat­ion of the justice system, which is seeing courts close in favour of ‘virtual justice’, is behind schedule and facing funding gaps, Whitehall’s spending watchdog has warned.

The news comes just two weeks after The Yorkshire Post reported serious concerns from legal figures.

A CONTROVERS­IAL £1.2bn modernisat­ion of the justice system, which is seeing courts close in favour of ‘virtual justice’, is behind schedule and facing funding gaps, Whitehall’s spending watchdog has warned.

The news comes just two weeks after The Yorkshire Post reported serious concerns from legal figures about the progressio­n of the reforms.

In 2016 HM Courts & Tribunals Service (HMCTS) launched a major programme to boost technology and working practices.

But an assessment of the progress of the project found the body faces a “daunting challenge” in delivering the scale of technologi­cal and cultural change necessary.

The report from the National Audit Office (NAO) said: “Given the extent of changes planned, there is a very significan­t risk that, despite the best efforts of HMCTS and other parties, the full ambition of the change portfolio will prove to be undelivera­ble in the time available.”

Yorkshire has lost a third of its court buildings since 2010 under cost-cutting reforms.

By March 2023, HMCTS expects to employ 5,000 fewer fulltime equivalent staff, lower the number of cases held in physical courtrooms by 2.4 million a year and reduce annual spending by £265m.

Currently large parts of the service are still paper-based, or rely on manual data entry, while more than 70 systems are used to process cases across criminal and civil courts and tribunals.

The modernisat­ion programme will see an increase in the use of “virtual hearings” in criminal cases, with judges and magistrate­s dealing with defendants from a police station or prison using a video link.

Accused individual­s will be able to enter pleas online, removing the need for pre-trial hearings, while vulnerable witnesses will be allowed to give prerecorde­d evidence rather than appear in court. In lower-level cases, such as TV licence evasion, the reforms aim to allow the entire process to be completed on the internet. Technology will also be at the forefront of efforts to reduce the number of cases requiring a physical hearing in the civil and family courts and tribunals. But last month, solicitors told

The Yorkshire Post that much of the promised technology was either still in early trial stages or was not reliable. Poor wifi, unreliable video links and even a lack of power sockets were among the problems being reported.

The NAO said that despite the best efforts of HMCTS and other parties to make adjustment­s – including extending the timetable from four to six years and reducing the scope – delivering the reforms successful­ly remains “extremely challengin­g”.

Officials estimate there will be a funding shortfall of £61m in future years, assuming that the Treasury agrees that all previous years’ under-spends can be carried forward. Without this agreement, the gap could be £177m.

Head of the NAO Sir Amyas Morse said: “Modernisin­g the justice system is an ambitious challenge. HMCTS has improved its approach, but overall it is behind where it expected to be and significan­t risks remain.”

HMCTS chief executive Susan Acland-Hood thanked the NAO, saying its recommenda­tions were already helping to strengthen the programme.

She said: “We are confident, therefore, that the current sixyear programme is on track to deliver the benefits promised on completion and, in doing so, help create a better, more straightfo­rward, accessible and efficient justice system for all who use and need it.”

Modernisin­g the justice system is an ambitious challenge. Sir Amyas Morse, head of the National Audit Office.

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