Table 15-2
Approved legal aid applications, staff and private lawyers by type of civil matter — Family

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Approved legal aid applications, staff and private lawyers by type of civil matter — Family
Table summary
"This table displays legal aid applications approved by legal aid plans for family civil matters. The row headers provide information by province/territory and fiscal year. The column headers provide information on the number of applications and percent of total approved applications assigned to each of staff lawyers and private lawyers."
  Total Staff lawyers Private lawyers
  number percent number percent
Newfoundland and Labrador  
2007/2008 1,443 1,412 98 31 2
2008/2009 1,502 1,487 99 15 1
2009/2010 1,644 1,618 98 26 2
2010/2011 1,601 1,555 97 46 3
2011/2012 1,547 1,523 98 24 2
Prince Edward Island  
2007/2008 189 136 72 53 28
2008/2009 .. .. ..
2009/2010 .. .. ..
2010/2011 276 198 72 78 28
2011/2012 249 192 77 57 23
Nova Scotia  
2007/2008 4,771 3,161 66 1,610 34
2008/2009 5,183 3,135 60 2,048 40
2009/2010 4,992 3,491 70 1,501 30
2010/2011 4,946 3,311 67 1,635 33
2011/2012 5,305 3,759 71 1,546 29
New Brunswick 1  
2007/2008 268 71 26 197 74
2008/2009 233 57 24 176 76
2009/2010 .. .. ..
2010/2011 1,901 998 52 903 48
2011/2012 1,995 1,031 52 964 48
Quebec  
2007/2008 72,823 39,037 54 33,786 46
2008/2009 73,749 39,248 53 34,501 47
2009/2010 75,358 39,523 52 35,835 48
2010/2011 74,448 38,944 52 35,504 48
2011/2012 74,182 38,547 52 35,635 48
Ontario 2  
2007/2008 26,749 1,150 4 25,599 96
2008/2009 31,751 1,644 5 30,107 95
2009/2010 28,261 773 3 27,488 97
2010/2011 25,062 449 2 24,613 98
2011/2012 21,720 314 1 21,406 99
Manitoba 3  
2007/2008 5,690 3,420 60 2,270 40
2008/2009 5,627 3,286 58 2,341 42
2009/2010 6,110 4,023 66 2,087 34
2010/2011 5,469 3,776 69 1,693 31
2011/2012 5,920 3,734 63 2,186 37
Saskatchewan 4  
2007/2008 3,627 3,359 93 268 7
2008/2009 3,448 r 3,231 r 94 r 217 r
2009/2010 3,299 r 3,155 r 96 144 4
2010/2011 3,677 r 3,507 r 95 170 5
2011/2012 3,502 3,336 95 166 5
Alberta 5  
2007/2008 6,956 1,585 23 5,371 77
2008/2009 8,508 1,996 23 6,512 77
2009/2010 7,975 1,766 22 6,209 78
2010/2011 6,154 1,814 29 4,340 71
2011/2012 7,651 2,091 27 5,560 73
British Columbia  
2007/2008 7,238 386 5 6,852 95
2008/2009 7,434 360 5 7,074 95
2009/2010 6,168 105 2 6,063 98
2010/2011 6,082 29 0 6,053 100
2011/2012 6,175 40 1 6,135 99
Yukon 6  
2007/2008 274 260 95 14 5
2008/2009 267 261 98 6 2
2009/2010 201 194 97 7 3
2010/2011 211 207 98 4 2
2011/2012 184 184 100 0 0
Northwest Territories 7  
2007/2008 418 287 69 131 31
2008/2009 291 252 87 39 13
2009/2010 .. .. ..
2010/2011 .. .. ..
2011/2012 670 670 100 0 0
Nunavut 7 , 8  
2007/2008 .. .. ..
2008/2009 215 114 53 101 47
2009/2010 102 102 100 ..
2010/2011 .. .. ..
2011/2012 113 113 100 ..
Total  
2007/2008 130,446 54,264 42 76,182 58
2008/2009 138,208 r 55,071 r 40 83,137 60
2009/2010 134,110 r 54,750 r 41 79,360 59
2010/2011 129,827 r 54,788 r 42 75,039 58
2011/2012 129,213 55,534 43 73,679 57
Effective April 20, 2009, intake services for family legal aid were expanded when eligibility screening for services formerly captured under the Domestic Legal Aid program was transferred to New Brunswick Legal Aid Services Commission from the Department of Justice and Consumer Affairs.
Ontario has 77 legal aid clinics that are independent, non-profit organizations funded by the legal aid plan. Staff lawyers and community legal workers at these clinics provide legal aid services primarily in “other” civil matters, particularly in the area of poverty law which includes, social assistance/income maintenance, landlord and tenant, workers’ compensation, criminal injuries compensation, and refugee and immigration matters. The figures in Table 16 represent summary legal advice services provided by these clinics. Summary legal advice services provided by the legal aid plan are included in duty counsel services (Table 21).
In 2009/2010, Manitoba began to include the number of applications that were used to generate secondary or tertiary certificates in the total number of legal aid applications reported. This led to an increase in the count for total and approved legal aid applications and accounts for the increase in approved applications assigned to staff and private lawyers.
In 2008/2009, all youth matters became eligible for legal aid under an agreement between the Saskatchewan Legal Aid Commission and the Ministry of Justice’s Court Services Branch. This led to an increase in the count for total and approved legal aid applications. Figures for Saskatchewan were re-stated for the reference periods 2008/2009 to 2010/2011, inclusive, based on the number of letters of denial issued to clients by the Saskatchewan Legal Aid Commission. The number of applications excludes applications received during 2011/2012 but deemed “discontinued” for administrative purposes as at March 31, 2012, because the client ceased contact with the Saskatchewan Legal Aid Commission before obtaining legal aid services from a lawyer.
The increase, between 2010/2011 and 2011/2012, in the number of applications approved and assigned to staff lawyers is primarily due to a change in Legal Aid Alberta's service delivery model to provide early resolution to lower-level criminal offences. These offences would have been assigned to private lawyers prior to 2011/2012.
No distinction is made between summary and full service applications in Yukon. All applications are counted as full service applications. Data for Yukon include duty counsel counts.
Presumed eligibility counts are not included in the data for the Northwest Territories or Nunavut. Territorial offences are included with criminal matters.
In 2009/2010, the capacity for statistical reporting in Nunavut was limited due to issues with information tracking systems. As a result, the number of approved applications may be underreported and is not comparable to previous years and information is only available for civil matters approved to staff lawyers.
Note(s):
For more details on legal aid concepts and terminology please refer to the glossary.
Source(s):
Statistics Canada, Canadian Centre for Justice Statistics, Legal Aid Survey 3308.
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