The situation is exacerbated by tense labour relations with a host of different legal actors and the Quebec government, with legal aid lawyers recently launching half-day strikes; private sector lawyers who take on legal aid mandates now refusing to take on cases dealing with sexual and intimate partner violence; and court clerks launching walkouts that may metamorphose into a strike.
“The situation is at a minimum very troubling,” remarked Catherine Claveau, head of the Quebec bar. “The system has reached its limits. At the moment, there are very real risks of breakdowns or disruptions of services that could cause significant harm to citizens and generate a great deal of insecurity towards judicial institutions.”
Catherine Claveau, head of the Quebec bar
“It’s very, very worrisome, very worrisome, because it's not going to get better,” said Chief Justice Fournier, who along with the chief justices of the Court of Quebec and the Quebec Court of Appeal wrote a letter to the Quebec government last year entreating it to boost the salaries of their judicial assistants. “To be satisfied with justice that is delivered in 12, 15 or 18 months is not ideal. In my opinion, justice should be rendered almost in real time. It will take major investments to modernize, but modernizing in terms of access and in terms of speed of execution.”
The situation is dire, due to an alarming dearth of bailiffs, court clerks, court stenographers, judicial assistants, special constables and translators that has rippled throughout the Quebec justice system, in both large urban centres and rural regions alike. Court clerks, who earn on average between $35,000 and $45,000, are leaving in droves, enticed by higher remuneration offered by Quebec municipalities and the private sector, where they can earn between $15,000 and $20,000 more, noted Christian Daigle, president of the Syndicat de la fonction publique et parapublique du Québec (SFPQ), the union that represents court clerks. The union has received a mandate from court clerks, whose collective bargaining agreement ran out two years ago, to go on strike for up to 10 days, three of which have already been used after negotiations with the Quebec government have reached an impasse.
Chistian Daigle, president of SFPQ union
Unless the provincial government improves its remuneration package, the situation will likely worsen. A recent poll taken by the union revealed that up to 42 per cent of court clerks are thinking or are actively looking for a new job. As it stands, some 40-odd court clerks quit last year, and at least 10 so far who work in greater Montreal courthouses have left for greener pastures, according to unofficial SFPQ figures. To pick up the slack, many court clerks who specialize in civil or family law matters have been compelled to work in criminal law proceedings after taking an “accelerated 101 criminal course” because of the landmark Jordan ruling, said Daigle. “So they prefer to sacrifice the time limits at the civil level to ensure that the criminal level can be maintained or be kept to a reasonable time limit,” added Daigle.
There is also a crying need for more judicial assistants, according to legal observers. At present, 20 per cent of Quebec judges do not have judicial assistants, and many judicial assistants end up having to divvy their time and work for two judges rather than just one as is supposed to be the case, pointed out Chief Justice Fournier. “There are new judges who have been appointed for whom it has taken almost a year or more to get an assistant,” said Chief Justice Fournier, who also bemoans the lack of court stenographers, particularly English-speaking ones. “At all levels the system is not equipped to cope with contemporary demand.”
The repercussions are being felt across the justice system. It now takes an average of 593 days in Quebec to get a small claims hearing, and in some places the figure reaches more than 1,000, compared to 223 days in 2018. At the Montreal Palais de Justice, five courtrooms were closed recently because of a lack of court clerks, which in turn led to delays in sexual assault and murder cases. “There are long delays in criminal law,” observed Claveau. “In small claims in some districts, they are staggering (and) in family and youth cases too which has led to many people to lose confidence, becoming discouraged with regard to justice, and have given up on asserting their rights.”
By all appearances, the situation is likely going to get worse as legal aid lawyers are upping the ante. Permanent full-time legal aid lawyers who work for the Commission des services juridiques (CSJ), the provincial agency that oversees the legal aid system, will be going on strike for two days next week after negotiations with the Quebec government have stalled. They are seeking remuneration on par with Crown prosecutors, something that has been the case for the past three decades. “We’re aware of their demands, and we’re holding discussions with the Treasury Board,” said Richard La Charité, the CSJ’s secretary, who pleads that the organization’s hands are tied. “When we negotiate, we basically receive our mandate from the minister (of justice), but also from the Treasury Board Secretariat.”
Marie-Pier Boulet, BMD Avocats
The independent group, created following an agreement reached between the Barreau du Québec and the Quebec government in October 2020, published a report last year that recommended sweeping reforms to Quebec’s administration of the legal aid system to simplify the process to seek legal aid and alleviate the administrative encumbrances faced by private sector lawyers who take on legal aid mandates. But above all, defence lawyers are counting on the report to endorse sizable increases in legal aid fees, said Élizabeth Ménard, a Montreal criminal lawyer and head of the Montreal Criminal Defence Lawyers Association (AADM). “It’s been at least 20 years since the legal aid tariffs have been increased, and what we want is a complete reform of the tariff grid or the billing system of legal aid,” said Ménard.
Even La Charité acknowledges that it is in the best interests of the legal aid system for lawyers to be fairly paid. “For us, it is important that both lawyers, whether permanent or private practice, are basically paid an appealing fee for the legal aid system to work,” said La Charité.