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September 2002
They Lay Practitioner
Blues
By Paul Barker
THESE ARE NOT GOOD TIMES for John Mandryk,
an outspoken consultant and paralegal who provides lay advocacy services
for companies and individuals in British Columbia involved in claims
disputes before the Workers' Compensation Board (WCB). He's in deep
trouble with the province's law society, which has once again targeted him
for alleged violation of the Legal Profession Act.
That act prevents anyone but lawyers from
appearing as counsel or representing a client in any matter involving a
provincial statute, including the Workers' Compensation Act.
What it means is that the president of J.
Mandryk Associates Inc. is in the unenviable position of having to hire a
lawyer to defend himself against lawyers. In addition, if the society is
successful with a legal challenge now winding its way through the B.C.
Supreme Court, he'll likely have to find a new line of work. "I could
continue to do what I do without charging a fee, but how long would that
last?" he asks. "The novelty of not eating wears pretty
thin."
This is not the first time the two sides
have sparred. Five years ago, Mandryk says, the society attempted to have
his business "eliminated" from the WCB representation practice,
but after "a lot of jousting" with the board, the society and
the provincial government in power at the time, he was allowed to
continue.
"The [current] law society action
against my small business is not based upon any wrongdoing or complaint
from a client," Mandryk wrote in a document detailing the latest case
against him. "Rather, the only reason given is that our business was
contravening the Legal Profession Act by representing clients in WCB
matters. A lawyer complained to the WCB."
Mandryk, who was a WCB claims adjudicator
for eight years before he left to start his own firm, argues that the WCB
is an administrative tribunal, which uses an inquiry system that is
distinct from the judicial or adversarial system.
"Due to the increasing complexity of
the WCB, informed representation has become a necessary feature for
workers and employers," he says. "Consultants who work in this
area are generally trained through lengthy experience dealing with WCB
matters."
Mandryk contends the current dispute is
nothing more than a ploy by lawyers to protect their own turf, something
that Richard Gibbs, president of the law society, vehemently denies.
"The comment I would pose back to those who say, 'Look, we should be
able to do this stuff because we're educated, trained and experienced,' is
'Fine, but the legislation says you can't do it unless you become a
lawyer'," Gibbs says. He insists the rules are in place so that the
interest of the public is protected.
Mandryk counters that the real solution is
for the WCB and similar administrative tribunals to establish a code of
conduct and performance for all those who appear before them.
Then again, should he lose he might want to
consider shutting down his Cranbrook, B.C. office and moving to Alberta or
New Brunswick instead. The rules pertaining to paralegals aren't as strict
in Alberta, while the legal profession in New Brunswick allows non-lawyers
to represent a company or individual in an administrative -- as opposed to
a judicial -- tribunal.
Paul LeBreton, chair of the Appeals
Tribunal for the Workplace Health, Safety and Compensation Commission in
New Brunswick says there have been occasions when a consultant or lay
representative has appeared on behalf of a claimant. "Some law
societies' definitions of what constitutes the practice of law is,
depending on your perspective, either very narrow or very broad," he
says.
There is confusion across the country in
terms of how one defines a paralegal service and how they should be
regulated, says Darrel Pink, executive director of the Nova Scotia
Barrister Society, which has the same policy on its books as B.C.
One province that has taken a lead role in
this area is Ontario. A framework for regulating paralegal practice, which
is still in the discussion stage, was contained in a report from Peter
Cory, a former justice of the Supreme Court of Canada, released two years
ago.
A key recommendation is that paralegals
should be able to practise in a number of areas including before Ontario's
Workplace Safety and Insurance Appeals Tribunal once a number of
safeguards for the public have been created.
In the meantime, when it comes to
determining the role a paralegal should play in a workers' comp tribunal,
the case of a lay practitioner versus the Law Society of B.C. may end up
setting a precedent. "The action by the law society is mean spirited
and high handed," says Mandryk. "Mean spirited because [it has]
attacked a small business and individuals attempting to provide a valuable
service and earn a living. High handed because [it] knows it has the deep
financial pockets and legal resources to destroy this business."
Paul Barker is a contributing editor of
ohs canada.
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