- Legal Services Ombudsman
In
England and Wales , the Legal Services Ombudsman is a statutory office that investigates allegations about the improper, ineffective or inefficient way that complaints aboutlawyer s are handled by their respective self-regulating professional bodies. The Ombudsman is appointed by, and is answerable to, theLord Chancellor andMinister of Justice . [Courts and Legal Services Act 1990 , ss.21-26/ Sch.3]The Ombudsman started work on 2 January 1991, and in its first decade undertook 10,531 investigations:
*9,456 complaints aboutsolicitor s;
*1,036 complaints aboutbarrister s; and
*39 complaints aboutlicensed conveyancer s.Around 60% of the firms of solicitors in England and Wales and around 8% of practising barristers were subject of a complaint to the Ombudsman in that time. [ cite web | title=Annual Report 2000-2001: Reflecting Progress | url=http://www.olso.org/publications/AnnualReports/files/AR2001-english.pdf | publisher=Legal Services Ombudsman | year=2001 | accessdate=2008-03-08 ]
As of 2008 , the Ombudsman isZahida Manzoor .Powers
The Ombudsman can: [
Courts and Legal Services Act 1990 , s.23]
*Recommend that the professional body re-investigate a complaint;
*Order the re-inestigation;
*Formally criticise the professional body;
*Award compensation for distress or inconvenience. There is also a power to re-investigate the original complaint but this is only used in exceptional circumstances.Reform
When the
Legal Services Act 2007 fully comes into force, the Ombudsman will be abolished and replaced with anOffice for Legal Complaints to supervise complaints handling. [Legal Services Act 2007 , ss.114-159/ Sch.15]References
External links
* cite web | title=Office of the Legal Services Ombudsman | accessdate=2008-03-08 | url=http://www.olso.org/default.asp
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.