Table 18-3
Refused legal aid applications by reason for refusal, criminal and civil matters — Coverage restrictions

Warning View the most recent version.

Archived Content

Information identified as archived is provided for reference, research or recordkeeping purposes. It is not subject to the Government of Canada Web Standards and has not been altered or updated since it was archived. Please "contact us" to request a format other than those available.

PDF Symbols  Next table  Previous table

Refused legal aid applications by reason for refusal, criminal and civil matters — Coverage restrictions
Table summary
"This table displays legal aid applications refused service by legal aid plans for reason of coverage restrictions. The row headers provide information by province/territory and fiscal year. The column headers provide information on the number and percent of applications refused service by type of matter."
  Total Criminal matters Civil matters
  number percent number percent
Newfoundland and Labrador  
2007/2008 .. 0 ..
2008/2009 .. 0 ..
2009/2010 .. 129 ..
2010/2011 422 105 25 317 75
2011/2012 0 0 0 0 0
Prince Edward Island  
2007/2008 .. . ..
2008/2009 .. . ..
2009/2010 .. . ..
2010/2011 6 . 6 100
2011/2012 5 . 5 100
Nova Scotia  
2007/2008 133 63 47 70 53
2008/2009 158 66 42 92 58
2009/2010 199 55 28 144 72
2010/2011 179 56 31 123 69
2011/2012 201 88 44 113 56
New Brunswick 1  
2007/2008 292 268 92 24 8
2008/2009 312 297 95 15 5
2009/2010 .. .. ..
2010/2011 332 254 77 78 23
2011/2012 303 221 73 82 27
Quebec  
2007/2008 6,362 2,974 47 3,388 53
2008/2009 6,204 2,826 46 3,378 54
2009/2010 6,352 3,078 48 3,274 52
2010/2011 6,164 2,828 46 3,336 54
2011/2012 5,924 2,708 46 3,216 54
Ontario 2  
2007/2008 10,128 . .
2008/2009 9,868 . .
2009/2010 8,469 . .
2010/2011 2,111 . .
2011/2012 4,564 . .
Manitoba 3  
2007/2008 356 139 39 217 61
2008/2009 321 200 62 121 38
2009/2010 446 350 78 96 22
2010/2011 665 437 66 228 34
2011/2012 435 224 51 211 49
Saskatchewan 4  
2007/2008 117 109 93 8 7
2008/2009 .. r .. r … r .. r … r
2009/2010 .. r .. r … r .. r … r
2010/2011 .. r .. r … r .. r … r
2011/2012 913 862 94 51 6
Alberta  
2007/2008 2,402 1,853 77 549 23
2008/2009 2,389 1,821 76 568 24
2009/2010 3,636 2,795 77 841 23
2010/2011 .. .. ..
2011/2012 3,750 2,537 68 1,213 32
British Columbia  
2007/2008 3,824 2,207 58 1,617 42
2008/2009 4,568 2,242 49 2,326 51
2009/2010 6,537 3,440 53 3,097 47
2010/2011 6,192 3,037 49 3,155 51
2011/2012 5,254 2,039 39 3,215 61
Yukon  
2007/2008 10 3 30 7 70
2008/2009 6 1 17 5 83
2009/2010 5 4 80 1 20
2010/2011 14 3 21 11 79
2011/2012 7 1 14 6 86
Northwest Territories  
2007/2008 27 9 33 18 67
2008/2009 28 7 25 21 75
2009/2010 .. .. ..
2010/2011 .. .. ..
2011/2012 23 .. 23 100
Nunavut 5  
2007/2008 .. .. ..
2008/2009 0 0 0 0 0
2009/2010 4 0 0 4 100
2010/2011 .. .. ..
2011/2012 0 0 0 0 0
Total  
2007/2008
2008/2009
2009/2010
2010/2011 … r
2011/2012 21,379
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. In 2011/2012, these clinics accounted for 74% of applications refused for financial ineligibility. The number of refused legal aid applications has declined since 2009/2010 due to the restructuring of Legal Aid Ontario (LAO). The introduction of a LAO’s multi-tiered call centre has resulted in fewer clients making a written application and correspondingly fewer receiving a formal refusal for certificate services. LAO call centre agents assess client eligibility and are able to route clients deemed ineligible for certificate services, to alternative LAO services. Since February 2011, eligibility for certificate services uses a formula based on income and family size and may be applied by LAO call centre agents without the client making a formal application. This has lead to further attrition of clients before the issue of a formal refusal of certificate services.
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.
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.
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 refused applications may be underreported and is not comparable to previous years.
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.
Date modified: