The
courts....privatised?!!! Corporate justice
Britain:
Courts may be privatised to save Ministry of Justice £1bn
The
courts may be privatised in a justice shake-up that could save the
Ministry of Justice £1 billion a year.
31
May, 2013
The
plans would free the courts from Treasure control, placing court
buildings and thousands of staff in the hands of private companies.
The
system would be funded by extracting larger fees from wealthy
litigants and private sector investment, and by encouraging hedge
funds to invest by an attractive rate of return, according to The
Times.
Fears
that privatisation would erode the independence of the courts would
be allayed by placing the courts under a Royal Charter, as has been
proposed for the regulation of the press.
Earlier
this year Justice Secretary Chris Grayling paved the way for reform
by instructing officials to explore plans and ensure that the Courts
and Tribunal Service provides value for money.
Mr
Grayling, who is thought to be in strongly in favour of the reforms,
will be presented with a paper outlining the options within two
weeks, and the changes could begin this autumn.
The
changes range from transferring the running and maintenance of court
buildings to a private company to more radical proposals such as
transferring the 20,000 courts staff into the private sector.
Judges
and magistrates would not be affected by the plans.
The
former Lord Chancellor, Lord Falconer of Thoroton, opposed the
proposals.
He
told The Times: “I am all in favour of making more money from
commercial court users, and I am also all in favour of those who
commit crime making a bigger contribution to the courts.
“What
I am not in favour of is privatising the courts. The courts should
not be beholden to any private provider because the courts have to be
independent of every interest.
“In
particular I would be strongly against court buildings being placed
in the hands of private providers. We should not have [them]
influencing when courts open and close their doors or judges having
to negotiate with private contractors over whether, for instance, a
court can be open on a Saturday for an emergency injunction.”
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