Posted on 12/12/2003 4:06:24 PM PST by ccmay
Premier Bob Carr has a blunt message for the hundreds of Sydney lawyers out of work because of his Government's law reforms: "Get retrained and start another job."
He was unmoved by the report that the entire 14th floor of Wardell Chambers in Martin Place, employing 23 barristers and support staff, will close its doors on December 31.
Offering no apology for the jobs shake-out in law practices following his legislative assault on "the culture of litigation", Mr Carr said: "The fact is there will be fewer jobs for lawyers, but with their education they are well placed to go into retraining.
"In this modern day and age a lot of workers have had to be retrained.
"Lawyers are not a protected species, and their habits of over-litigation were adding to the cost of doing business in NSW.
"We couldn't have allowed it to go on."
Mr Carr claimed that while excessive litigation had lined the pockets of lawyers, it had resulted in the closure of community events, the wrecking of the workers' compensation system and could have put thousands of people out of work.
Over the past 18 months the Carr Government has introduced a series of major reforms on public liability to reduce the financial impact on insurance companies and to slow down the escalating rate of premiums.
The Civil Liability (Personal Responsibility) Act and its amendments introduced caps and thresholds on compensation and shifted the balance towards greater personal responsibility to avoid long and expensive court cases.
The result has been a sharp drop in casework for solicitors and barristers specialising in personal injury cases.
"We reformed it," Mr Carr said. "But I make no apologies for cleaning up this culture of over-litigation, of reining it in.
"Everyone was suing everyone and trying to get a pot of money at the end of the rainbow.
"And it was just bankrupting Australia, so we cleaned it up.
"Now workers are getting more out of the workers' comp system and they are going to continue to get more," he said. "But it does mean less going to lawyers. I know where I prefer it to go."
NSW Bar Association president Ian Harrison, SC, said last week that a quarter to a third of all barristers would disappear or have their practices adversely affected within the next six to 18 months.
The Wardell Chambers floor closure is linked directly to the winding up of the NSW Workers Compensation Court this month and restrictions on injury claims under the Government's reforms.
NSW Law Society president Robert Benjamin said 30 to 40 per cent of the state's 18,000 solicitors were involved in personal injury and compensation work and would be hit by the Carr Government's law changes.
The main thing is to break the vicious cycle of incest between the Democratic Party scum and the trial lawyer scum.
The Democrats pass nebulous laws with generous penalties, to invite lawsuits and bankrupt entire industries. The lawyer scum makes millions. Then the lawyer filth donate big buck$$$ to elect more Democrat pond scum to office.
Destroy the perverted Democratic Party filth, and you destroy the greedy trial-lawyer filth, and vice versa. What's not to like?
-ccm
So we simply keep electing Republicans until both democrats and the lawyers cease to exist?
What the world really needs is more scientists and engineers and physicians and architects and small-business owners. Lawyers are typically smart enough to do any of these jobs. By choosing to engage in destructive, corrosive legal plundering instead of an honest profession, they are destroying civil society. Let them find honest constructive work, or starve to death for all I care.
-ccm
We don't need their jobs outsourced, the problem is that these groups ARE THE GOVERNMENT and business faces high cost because of lawyers and bureaucrats.
The TV heads are just rooting for them and thus helping them deceive voters.
Well... I am NOT sorry to tell you that I disagree with your comment.
I want them RUINED. I want them DESTROYED. I want them CRUSHED !!! ;-))
.
Well, we elect a filibuster-proof majority in the Senate, a solid majority in the House, hang on to the White House, and win an overwhelming majority in the governors' chairs and legislatures of the states.
Then we pack the courts to the brim with reactionary strict-constructionists, from city traffic court to the Supreme Court.
We get rid of elected judges (who are whores for the trial bar) and replace them with appointed judges that are subject to retention elections every four years.
Then we ram tort reform through like a steam roller. Loser-pays, caps on damages, no pain & suuffering or contingency fees or punitive damages or class action suits, the whole ball of wax. Really stick it to the lawyers and bankrupt them by the millions.
Will some people who suffer real harm find it harder to collect? Yes. Tough $h!t. That's the price to be paid to save society from the filthy wreckers and buccaneers.
I'd rather save Little League and diving boards and obstetrical care for my wife, than have the the right to try to hit the jackpot for millions of dollars when I spill hot coffee on my own stupid lap.
We must make the legal profession such a miserable, poverty stricken, disreputable field that no sensible person would wish to enter it. Sort of like it is in Japan, where most families would prefer their son to be a brothel owner rather than a lawyer.
-ccm
And funny.
And true.
I just got out of a legal problem that is could have settled myself but the opposing lawyer would not talk to me until I hired a lawyer, they take care of each other.
Lawyers are proof that homosexual relations beget children.
I agree, that is the single biggest step, along with caps on damages. Moreover, I would make the lawyer pay 33% (plus expenses) out of his own bulging pocket. He shares in the potential jackpot, it's only fair that he shares in the risk too.
-ccm
Limits must be imposed.
I have nothing against average people getting their day in court to seek compensation for real harm that was caused by the fault of others.
But that's not what this is about.
The result has been a sharp drop in casework for solicitors and barristers specialising in personal injury cases.
We like electing them in Texas. We elect Republicans.
And we also recently passed tort reform with caps. Appointment and retention works almost as well.
-- Alexander Fraser Tyler (later Lord Alexander Fraser Woodhouslee), in "The Decline and Fall of the Athenian Republic," published 1776.
Mr. Tyler, meet California.
Just reading this gave me goosebumps. Talk about priescent!
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