Subject: Family court in crisis - article in
Toronto Star
FYI
This is an issue I have been trying to raise awareness
of. Both the Provincial and Federal governments have to address this
issue urgently. It is too late for my family but I hope the system improves for
the sake of other families. Families and children are in crisis because of
this, leading to immeasurable future consequences.
Thanks to Frank Klees (MPP Newmarket/Aurora)
someone is talking about it.
Rehana
Sumar
http://www.thestar.com/News/Ontario/article/283909
JUSTICE DELAYED
The Sumar
family once believed in justice in
That was before middle daughter
Siddika went to family court in
"We naively thought if we did
everything according to the law, we'd get justice in a timely manner, but we
were wrong," says Rehana Sumar, of her sister's
still-unresolved case. "We've lost three years of our lives and we don't
expect to recover. We endure."
The biggest problem is a lack of
family court judges in
While legal experts blame the
federal government for not keeping up with judicial appointments and failing to
recognize the need for even more judges in rapidly growing areas, others say
the province must take some responsibility for difficulties in areas under its
jurisdiction, such as the office that ensures court orders are carried out.
Conservative MPP Frank Klees
(Newmarket-Aurora) says Queen's Park isn't doing an efficient job of
administering the courts.
"It's clear to me it simply
is not a priority for either government," he says. "I have seen
nothing from the provincial government except the refrain; `It's all the feds'
fault.'"
Rehana Sumar throws up her hands: "I don't care whose responsibility it
is. We just want somebody to fix the problem."
Since 2004, the Sumar family has
gone to court in
Meanwhile, ka-ching, ka-ching, legal costs kept mounting at $175 to
$250 an hour, the norm in York Region. (In
Rehana, who runs a homeless shelter in York Region, calculates each missed
court date cost her family an average of $5,000: $4,000 for her lawyer ($250 x
16 hours for the court and preparation days), and $1,000 for his assistant
($200 x 5 hours.) Multiply that by 11, and $55,000 is directly attributable to
the shortage of judges.
"The whole point of the
justice system is they can make the decisions for you," says Rehana. "But they aren't judging."
Ontario Attorney General Chris
Bentley acknowledges
He said the problem appeared to be
solved in 2004 when the former Liberal federal government agreed to a 12-judge
increase, but it was defeated before that happened.
"The present (Conservative)
government has never put resources into judicial areas," says
Federal Justice Minister Rob
Nicholson was unavailable for an interview. In an email to the Star, his spokesperson cited the recent
introduction of legislation to appoint 20 judges across Canada as an example of
the "leadership" the government is taking to address concerns about
First Nations' claims and backlogs within superior trial courts.
An official added it's
"premature" to speculate on where the judges are going, but
Part of the problem is
About 60 per cent of the province – including the sprawling judicial area of Central East, which includes York Region – has a unified family court, with
all judges appointed by
There are two issues with the
judge shortage: filling the existing complement of Superior Court judges (there
are nine vacancies); and increasing it to keep up with a population that is
exploding, particularly in regions like York, with its municipalities of
Newmarket, Richmond Hill, Vaughan, King, Aurora and Markham, among others.
These municipalities are all in
Central East, where the 2.3 million population almost mirrors
Municipalities are straining. When
the unified family court opened in
It's not uncommon for a
The court "has now reached a
crisis in which it is so overwhelmed it is not able to meet the demands,"
Van Hoogenhuize wrote, calling the delays and
adjournments "a vicious circle." He concluded: "It is not
reasonable to expect that any amount of tinkering will relieve the existing
situation. ... It is vital that the federal and provincial governments give
these issues their highest priority."
Last January, Heather Smith, chief
justice of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice, said more family court judges
are "desperately needed" if children at risk and families were going
to receive "timely access to justice." She, too, appealed for 12
additional appointments.
Heather McGee, former president of
the Ontario Bar Association, calls federal inaction in appointing more judges
"inconsistent with Stephen Harper's law-and-order agenda."
"Family law doesn't get the
consideration it deserves," says Clive Algie,
president of the York Regional Law Association. "It's not sexy and
high-profile like criminal law or big money like development and contract
issues."
As a result, he said
"important issues of custody, access and child support are being delayed
for months because of a lack of courtrooms and judges ... litigants are being
bled to death financially ... Families must have access to the courts. Judges
must be appointed."
The unified family courts,
introduced in 1977 in
Instead, in Central East, judges
are driving hours a day and still can't hear all the cases. Says McGee:
"For us, it's not a lawyers' issue. We can't get our clients into
court."
In 2005, the Carleton Law
Association blew the whistle on the "crisis" in the unified family court
system in the
Moreover, for the first time since
Confederation, Kenora – a district the size of
Meanwhile, interminable delays hit
people when they are most vulnerable, emotionally and financially, trying to
take back their lives and deal with custody issues, child support and, often,
the time-consuming conflicting version of events.
In Newmarket Court last Wednesday – a rare good day with three
family court judges on hand – Judge Sherrill Rogers
heard a couple argue, through their lawyers, for 30 minutes about the husband
throwing a coffee cup at the wall, or at his wife, when he found her in bed
with another man in the matrimonial home.
As difficult as life has been for
the Sumars, they've been able to pay their court
costs. (Of their total bills, roughly $190,000 are legal costs, with the rest
divided among accountants, investigators, mediators and other expenses.) Architect
father Mohamed and mother Shirin, Rehana,
38, and Sukaina, 40, all chipped in to help Siddika,
39.
Many families can't pay for
lawyers, and Legal Aid is strapped. In 1995, the federal government cut off
family and poverty legal aid totalling $18 million
annually.
Sharon Villani,
a mother of two teenage boys who has been going to court in Newmarket for two
years following the breakup of her marriage, had to let her lawyer go this
fall.
Although she struggled with two
jobs to pay $20,000, Villani has reached her limit
and is struggling to be her own lawyer.
"I spent so much money and it
still isn't settled," she says. "Do I keep going or do I walk away?
That's the question I've been asking myself the whole time. Is it even worth
it?"