Times Colonist

Don’t wait for Godot, let Eby seize moment

- LAWRIE McFARLANE

B.C. Attorney General David Eby recently advised us that “the decision about [restarting] criminal jury trials is entirely in the hands of the chief justice of the [B.C.] Supreme Court and the judiciary.”

There is not a shred of support for that statement in our country’s constituti­on, or our provincial statute book, as we shall see.

Eby was fretting that because jury trials have been placed on hold due to the COVID-19 outbreak, a backlog has arisen that may take years to work through.

But Canada’s Supreme Court has imposed a time limit of 18 months to complete a trial in provincial court, and 30 months in superior court.

If those deadlines are not met, the accused may be set free. There are numerous instances of this happening across the country. Even accused murderers have been let go.

Now there is indeed some latitude if circumstan­ces are exceptiona­l, as they clearly are here. Neverthele­ss, the question remains, what happens if the delays drag on too long?

Eby wants to leave the handling of this delicate matter to B.C.’s judiciary. Yet on purely practical grounds, that makes no sense.

Our courts are one of the most under-managed systems in the public sector.

Long before COVID struck, wait times were brutal. The reason? Our courts are uncomforta­ble with the procedural discipline required to impose management.

A number of retired B.C. judges have said as much in reports that detail nearly unbelievab­le disregard for basic courtroom order. And these reports were written long before the COVID outbreak, or complaints about understaff­ing.

Part of the cause rests in the nature of legal training. Lawyers (and hence judges) are taught that every case is unique, that each must be treated as an incident unto itself.

You see this in the kind of decisions our appeal courts sometimes bring down. Every word uttered by the trial judge is pored over and dissected. Every courtroom decision is secondgues­sed, in findings that can run to hundreds of pages.

Fair enough. If you’re an accused person, you want that kind of attention to detail and precedent.

But managing is all about simplifyin­g — about finding points of general consensus and embracing them. This our judiciary has repeatedly failed to do.

In the words of the Supreme Court when it imposed the latest in a series of (missed) deadlines: “The system has lost its way.”

So waiting for B.C.’s chief justice to manage through the COVID mess is like waiting for Godot. Either it won’t happen, or we won’t like the outcome when it does.

But there is a broader issue. Eby is quite wrong to say the decision to restart trials lies beyond his hands. It does not. It lies with him.

Here is what the Constituti­on Act says: “The Exclusive powers of provincial legislatur­es include … the Administra­tion of Justice … including the Constituti­on, Maintenanc­e, and Organizati­on of Provincial Courts, both of Civil and of Criminal Jurisdicti­on …”

Here is how the federal justice department interprets that provision: “The provinces administer justice in their jurisdicti­ons. This includes organizing and maintainin­g the civil and criminal provincial courts...”

And here is what B.C.’s Attorney General Act says: “The Attorney General … must superinten­d all matters connected with the administra­tion of justice in British Columbia that are not within the jurisdicti­on of the government of Canada.”

Which part of administer­ing, organizing and superinten­ding does Eby dispute? If the English language means anything, he is in charge, not the chief justice.

I’m being hard on the man. He’s a smart guy merely following years of precedent.

Our attorneys general understand that in any confrontat­ion between a politician and a judge, the public will reflexivel­y side with the latter. If the judiciary wants to run the show, and it most certainly does, better to aim for a quiet life and let it.

But this time around, there is an opportunit­y to regain control of a system that is far beyond self-help. If the COVID crisis has taught us anything, it is that actions which would previously have been political suicide, are now in the realm of the doable.

So let Eby seize the moment, and play the role our constituti­onal framework gives him.

 ?? BUSINESS IN VANCOUVER ?? The decision to restart criminal trials is in the hands of B.C. Attorney General David Eby, Lawrie McFarlane writes.
BUSINESS IN VANCOUVER The decision to restart criminal trials is in the hands of B.C. Attorney General David Eby, Lawrie McFarlane writes.
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