Moved by Lord Wolfson of Tredegar That the Grand Committee do
consider the Early Legal Advice Pilot Scheme Order 2022. Relevant
document: 29th Report from the Secondary Legislation Scrutiny
Committee The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Ministry of
Justice (Lord Wolfson of Tredegar) (Con) My Lords, I beg to move
this statutory instrument, which establishes the early legal advice
pilot scheme that will be conducted in Middlesbrough and Manchester
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Moved by
of Tredegar
That the Grand Committee do consider the Early Legal Advice Pilot
Scheme Order 2022.
Relevant document: 29th Report from the Secondary Legislation
Scrutiny Committee
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Ministry of Justice
( of Tredegar) (Con)
My Lords, I beg to move this statutory instrument, which
establishes the early legal advice pilot scheme that will be
conducted in Middlesbrough and Manchester for a time-limited
period. The instrument amends part 1 of Schedule 1 to the Legal
Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012,
colloquially known as LASPO, to bring civil legal services for
certain housing debt and welfare benefit matters in scope of
legal aid for the purposes of the pilot scheme. It makes
consequential amendments to secondary legislation for the
purposes of that pilot scheme. The draft order is made using the
powers conferred by LASPO itself.
The instrument lays the necessary foundations to put the pilot
scheme into operation and signifies a crucial step in delivering
a key commitment made in the Ministry of Justice’s legal support
action plan, which we published in 2019. Through the pilot
scheme, we will test the impact of early legal advice on the
resolution of legal problems. We will also seek to quantify the
benefits to individuals, their support networks, the Government
and, ultimately, the taxpayer.
Civil legal aid is available to an individual if their issue is
listed in Part 1 of Schedule 1 to LASPO. Legal aid may also be
available on an exceptional basis where there would be a breach,
or the risk of a breach, of the individual’s rights under the
European Convention on Human Rights or any retained enforceable
EU rights. This is known as exceptional case funding, or ECF.
Eligibility for legal aid, for both in-scope matters and ECF, is
subject to a statutory means and merits assessment. The means
test sets out that, if an individual’s capital or disposable
income is above a certain threshold, they are generally not
eligible for legal aid. There are different merits tests
depending on the type of case but, generally, the merits test
provides for a cost-benefit test and a “prospects of success”
test. If those tests are not met, again, funding would not be
granted. Under the current arrangements, legal aid for social
welfare law matters such as debt, housing and welfare benefits is
limited to the most urgent and important circumstances, for
example if an individual is at risk of losing their home through
eviction or repossession. This is so that legal aid is targeted
at those who need it most.
However, during the post-implementation review of LASPO, we heard
from respondents that the reforms in that Act, which came into
effect in 2013, might have caused increased financial costs to
individuals, their support networks and the Government. Those
respondents explained that individuals experiencing social
welfare legal problems, especially related to housing, were now
unable to resolve their problems at an early opportunity. This
meant that they were now likely to experience problem-clustering
and problem escalation, each of which can lead to costly
intervention. Frequently cited examples included increased use of
court services for possession proceedings; greater reliance on
welfare benefit and on temporary and permanent accommodation
services; and increased use of health services for stress and
anxiety.
Although we have some anecdotal evidence to support the view that
early legal advice could produce benefits to individuals and to
local and central government, there is limited empirical
evidence. In particular, there is limited evidence in relation to
the financial impact of early intervention through the legal aid
scheme. I am sure we can all agree that the argument that early
intervention can result in cost savings feels intuitively
correct. However, in order to make robust arguments for funding
for early legal advice and ensure that we provide value for money
for the taxpayers who will fund it, we need an argument based on
actual evidence. We are therefore bringing these matters into
scope and using the pilot scheme as an opportunity to gather
robust, quantitative evidence that can demonstrate whether early
legal advice can lead to early problem resolution, thus bringing
savings to the public purse.
The pilot will be in two specific areas—Manchester and
Middlesbrough—and will be time limited, from 1 April 2022 to 31
March 2024. Individuals will be eligible if they live, or
habitually reside, in the area of Manchester City Council or
Middlesbrough City Council. They must be selected to participate
by a person appointed by the Lord Chancellor, who will publish
guidance explaining who the person will be—they might be an
independent evaluator—and how they must select participants.
Participants will receive a maximum of three hours of advice and
assistance for housing, debt and welfare benefit matters.
We have worked closely with legal aid providers and other
government departments to devise the pilot scheme and finalise
the terms of this amendment. The amendment to Part 1 of Schedule
1 to LASPO in this instrument brings these matters into scope for
legal aid, subject to some exclusions outlined in the order; for
example, participants cannot receive advocacy or representation
services. This reflects the intentions of the pilot because it is
all about advice before court proceedings are initiated.
It covers, therefore, civil legal services relating to advice and
assistance in relation to housing, debt and welfare benefits for
a maximum of three hours. Participants can receive advice and
assistance irrespective of whether their matters fall into one or
all of those categories. They will receive holistic advice on all
those categories as far as needed. The maximum time for advice is
fixed at three hours, but there is no means or merits test. The
only criteria are the geographical requirements and that they are
included in the pilot scheme by the person appointed by the Lord
Chancellor.
1.30pm
I should also point out to the Committee that there are some
technical amendments to other instruments. It amends the
regulations on financial resources, merits criteria and
remuneration. The financial resources and merits criteria
regulations set out the means and merits tests, and they are
amended, as I explained, to enable participants to meet the means
and merits tests. The amendments to the remuneration regulations
introduce a new fee for the legal providers undertaking work as
part of the scheme. They will be asked to provide information and
data for the purposes of assessing the pilot in addition to the
information they normally provide to the legal aid scheme, as any
legal provider would do. Because they are being asked to do more,
we will pay them an extra 25% uplift to reflect that extra burden
of providing information for the pilot.
The essential point is that this will enable us, we hope, to have
an evidence base to allow us to determine whether a service as
set out in the pilot would provide meaningful benefit to
individuals and local and central government. We think this is
the best way to proceed so we can obtain that evidence, and I
commend the instrument to the Committee.
(LD)
An evidence base? The clue to these proceedings was in the
Minister saying that they are looking for savings to the public
purse. I think the Treasury is definitely behind this.
When I was a humble solicitor in the 1960s, I used to fill in a
green form for people to give them advice. In 1973, a simple
green form scheme was introduced and in 1994 the noble and
learned Lord, , then Lord
Chancellor, described it as
“an important means of access to legal advice for people on low
incomes. In 1993/94, over 1,600,000 people received help from the
… scheme.”—[Official Report, 3/11/1994; col. WA 73.]
I fail to see why we now need a highly expensive two-year study
to find out whether there is a need for such advice. It is
obvious. It was in 2013 that the coalition Government, I am
afraid, reformed the scope of civil legal aid in the LASPO Act,
including, as the memorandum tells us,
“the removal of funding for early legal advice and support for
most social welfare law.”
Some reform that was.
As for research, the Explanatory Memorandum states in paragraph
7.3:
“While research by organisations such as Citizens Advice,
Shelter, the Law Society and the Equality and Human Rights
Commission was persuasive in suggesting a link between early
legal advice and downstream benefits, officials in the department
concluded that their findings did not robustly quantify the
financial savings for government, nor did they account for the
costs of individuals whose problems would not be resolved with
early legal advice”.
So there has been considerable research by NGOs, all pointing the
same way.
The Government produced their review in 2019, and it has been
knocking about for three years before anything was done under it.
There will now be a two-year pilot scheme, very limited to 1,600
individuals in Manchester and Middlesbrough. Some five years will
elapse from the review that the Government themselves carried
out.
The Government describe the pilot scheme in this way:
“the Ministry of Justice is commissioning a process, impact, and
value for money evaluation to support the effective delivery of
the project, and the generation of robust impact evidence. An
initial phase ahead of pilot delivery will be an in-depth
feasibility study to fully assess and recommend a robust,
practical research pilot and evaluation design”.
It is
“the gold-standard approach to assessing impact, highly novel in
the Access to Justice policy area.”
These very helpful answers were provided to the Secondary
Legislation Scrutiny Committee, whose questioning of the Ministry
of Justice was admirable and full and produced a lot of
information that I need not go into. But there we are:
gold-plated research, which means that people whose needs were
seen in 2019 will have a five-year wait before anything happens,
and we do not even know whether it will happen then because it
will depend on the evaluation of the gold-plated people of the
project.
We currently face a great rise in deprivation that will happen to
people in this country. The situation as we know it is dire and
will get worse, with price rises and additional taxes. Now is the
time for the people in this category—the people I used to advise
in those far-off days when we did not live in a very rich area—to
be given support, not in 2024 and thereafter. This is a
disgrace.
(Lab)
My Lords, the noble Lord, Lord Thomas, has given us an historical
context for what we are receiving through this statutory
instrument. We of course support it, because it goes some way to
ameliorating the position we have had since the massive cuts in
2013 with LASPO. The noble Lord has made the broader points, with
which I agree.
I want to focus on two particular questions, one of which was
asked by my honourable friend when this matter was debated in
the House of Commons. He contacted the Greater Manchester Law
Centre and the Law Society there, the only two welfare benefit
and legal aid providers in Manchester city and the only two debt
legal aid providers in Middlesbrough, one of which also advises
on welfare benefit law. He made the point in the House of Commons
that the scheme will undoubtedly create an increase in demand.
There was scepticism, from that limited number of providers,
whether the three-hour limit is enough in itself and whether the
pay is enough for those three hours. How, given that there is
very likely to be an increase in demand, will the ministry
respond?
The Minister used a couple of phrases that I thought were
appropriate when he talked about the problem of the clustering of
cases around a multitude of different contexts—housing, welfare
and the like—and about the problem of escalation. From different
parts of our working lives outside this House, we all know that
both of those things are right and true, both in the housing
context and the criminal justice context as a whole—something I
know from my work in magistrates’ courts.
The Minister said that there was limited evidence of financial
benefit from early intervention. The noble Lord, Lord Thomas,
expressed extreme scepticism, and I agree with him: there is a
multitude of reports about the benefits of early intervention,
and I have lost track of the number of early-intervention pilots
that I have seen on the criminal justice side that have fallen by
the wayside for various reasons.
I will raise another question, which comes from the Secondary
Legislation Scrutiny Committee report’s appendix 2:
“Further information from the Ministry of Justice on the draft
Early Legal Advice Pilot Scheme Order 2022”.
Question 1c is as follows:
“The wording of the SI indicates that those who are selected but
receive no advice will also be informed that they are part of the
pilot—will that control group also be required to fill in any
evaluation or description of their experience? Otherwise, they
will be just like any other Housing benefit claimant—what marks
them out?”
That is to say, what marks them out as different in the data
collected? The answer is:
“The pilot is seeking to develop robust quantitative impact
evidence, and so how to best collect control or comparison group
evidence is a priority issue to be examined. The specific
criteria and process for identifying and engaging the control or
comparison group is to be determined based on feasibility work to
be undertaken by the independent evaluator.”
I did not read that out very well, but I understand what it
means. My experience on the family court side is that a large
number of people drop out of the system. Advice is made available
and people start accessing it, but then the process becomes
difficult and tiresome and people just stop engaging.
So, arising out of that question and answer, my question to the
Minister is: will there be an evaluation of people who start the
process but do not finish it? That is part of the overall cost,
and it is also a demonstration of the impact or otherwise of
these schemes. As I say, from my experience in a different
context—family law—a very big part of the overall picture is the
people who do not pursue the advice and support that are
available to them because doing so is just too burdensome.
of Tredegar (Con)
My Lords, I am very grateful for the contributions from the noble
Lords, and . I will pick up
a few points in response. On the Treasury being behind it, I say
that this is not a Treasury-driven measure, in the sense that the
sole focus is not the public purse. But we have to recognise that
the Treasury is ultimately behind the legal aid system: it is
funded by the public purse, and we have to make sure that we get
value for money.
One of the things that we are doing here is trying to answer this
question—we all feel this instinctively, perhaps, and, as the
noble Lord, Lord Thomas, said, there are lots of people in the
market, so to speak, who say, “Spend some money now; you’ll save
more money later on”. But we want to have some robust evidence to
see to what extent that is actually the case—and also to see to
which particular groups it applies more and to which it applies
less. We have a very diverse population, and one of the things
that we will be able to do in the pilot is look at people with
different backgrounds and needs and see the extent to which the
early legal advice actually helps. Although I am well aware of
the research by the various NGOs that the noble Lord mentioned,
that is not empirical evidence. We do not have the robust,
quantitative evidence that we will get from the pilot.
I will pick up the points made the noble Lord, Lord Ponsonby, who
asked a few questions around time limits and associated points.
First, on the appropriateness of the fee, I explained the 25%
uplift. To obtain the figure for the underlying fee, we used the
existing non-London hourly rates for housing and family matters;
that generated the baseline fee for the work. We added the 25%
uplift to increase the extra costs. We are confident that that
will mean that we get proper take-up from providers.
1.45pm
As to why the allocation is three hours and not, for example, two
and a half hours or four hours, I will make two points. First, at
the moment, little information is available about the average
time that providers would spend with somebody requiring advice of
this nature. As part of the pilot, we will ask providers to
record the time that they spend. We will also ask them whether
they spend that time during one appointment or over a series of
appointments, because some people might come and say, “This is my
problem”, and the provider might say, “Ah, I can help you on
that, but I need to see a particular document that you haven’t
brought with you. So please make another appointment and come
back”. So they might have an initial half-hour, for example, and
then another two and a half hours later. The pilot will enable us
to gather that evidence. To make this administratively simple,
the way we are doing this is that, even if the provider spends
only two and a half hours, there is a flat fee for three hours
with the 25% uplift. There may be a bit of rough with the smooth,
so to speak, in that we have sought to make it simple because we
want providers to engage and we want proper take-up.
On the other point made by the noble Lord—I say respectfully that
it was a very good point—we will follow up on the experience of
people who are part of the scheme. Specifically on dropouts, it
may be a bit more difficult, but we will attempt to follow up on
the experience of people who dropped out and ask them why they
dropped out. Was it because they did not like the provider, for
example? Was it because they thought their issue was a housing
issue but it turned out that it was a different issue? We are
focused on that; it is an important point.
I hope I have responded to the main points that were made. I am
grateful for the broad support for the instrument, even if it is
on the basis that heaven rejoices over all sinners who repent. At
least there was broad agreement on the principles underlying the
pilot; I therefore commend the instrument to the Committee.
Motion agreed.
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