header-logo header-logo

Where are all the magistrates?

20 June 2019
Issue: 7845 / Categories: Legal News , Profession
printer mail-detail
Numbers fall by 10,000 over six-year period

The magistracy is in ‘near crisis’, MPs have warned, with a shortfall in numbers that is ‘as frustrating as it was foreseeable’.

The Justice Committee this week called for a national strategy to recruit and train more magistrates, including extra funds for training, in its report, ‘The role of the magistracy―follow-up’. It said magistrates are struggling with reduced support and feel undervalued, while the court closure programme has created additional challenges.

The report reiterates issues raised in a Justice Committee report in 2016, which identified serious recruitment and training problems and called for the development of a national strategy as a matter of priority.

The number of magistrates―volunteers who sit in panels of three and may sentence offenders to up to six months in prison―has fallen from more than 25,000 in 2012 to about 15,000 in 2018. The report notes that magistrates have a high average age and have to retire at 70, indicating future gaps unless recruitment improves.

The MPs’ report recommends the government make it easier for working people to take time off work to volunteer as magistrates. It suggests the government consider increasing magistrates sentencing powers to up to 12 months, on the grounds that this could reduce crown court congestion and delays in sentencing offenders. Currently, magistrates must refer cases to the crown court if they are likely to incur a sentence longer than six months.

Bob Neill MP, chair of the Justice Committee, said: ‘Morale is not improving, despite the minister’s efforts to reassure us.

‘The shortage of magistrates could have been avoided had the government adopted our initial recommendation on recruitment. The action promised three years ago has failed to materialise, and we again call for an appropriate national strategy.’

The Ministry of Justice offered judges a temporary salary boost earlier this month in a bid to tackle the recruitment crisis. As well as a 2% pay rise across all tiers, High Court judges enrolled in the 2015 pension scheme are to receive a 25% (upped from an earlier offer of 11%) rise, and an extra 15% is being offered on a temporary basis to circuit and upper tribunal judges. 

Issue: 7845 / Categories: Legal News , Profession
printer mail-details

MOVERS & SHAKERS

Quinn Emanuel—James McSweeney

Quinn Emanuel—James McSweeney

London promotion underscores firm’s investment in white collar and investigations

Ward Hadaway—Louise Miller

Ward Hadaway—Louise Miller

Private client team strengthened by partner appointment

NLJ Career Profile: Kate Gaskell, Flex Legal

NLJ Career Profile: Kate Gaskell, Flex Legal

Kate Gaskell, CEO of Flex Legal, reflects on chasing her childhood dreams underscores the importance of welcoming those from all backgrounds into the profession

NEWS
Overcrowded prisons, mental health hospitals and immigration centres are failing to meet international and domestic human rights standards, the National Preventive Mechanism (NPM) has warned
Two speedier and more streamlined qualification routes have been launched for probate and conveyancing professionals
Workplace stress was a contributing factor in almost one in eight cases before the employment tribunal last year, indicating its endemic grip on the UK workplace
In Ward v Rai, the High Court reaffirmed that imprecise points of dispute can and will be struck out. Writing in NLJ this week, Amy Dunkley of Bolt Burdon Kemp reports on the decision and its implications for practitioners
Could the Supreme Court’s ruling in R v Hayes; R v Palombo unintentionally unsettle future complex fraud trials? Maia Cohen-Lask of Corker Binning explores the question in NLJ this week
back-to-top-scroll