March 2001

 



Home page


Press
Notices


Consultation


How to
contact us


Biographical
details



 

Chapter Four - A more user-friendly system

4.1 It is important to remember that tribunals exist to serve the users, not the other way round. They need to be accessible by the variety of users they are intended to help. In order to make the tribunal experience a positive one for users they need advice and support at all stages of the appeal process. This chapter outlines the range of information and practical help we consider should be available from original decision-makers, from tribunals and from independent advisers. Actively seeking the views of user groups as to what information and facilities are required, tribunals should try to do all they can to make themselves understandable, unthreatening and useful to users. Information and facilities, such as telephone helplines and clerking services, should be geared to meeting the needs of different types of users and provide them with everything they require to give them the best chance of preparing and presenting their own case. This chapter also suggests what help by way of independent advice and representation should be made available. We make recommendations on information, advice, representation, user groups, cost regimes and clerking services.

Information for the user

4.2 One of the most prominent messages in the responses to the Consultation Paper was the need for better information for users. We have seen the efforts which most tribunals have made over recent years to improve what they do in this area. There are many excellent examples of clearly written (often Crystal-marked), attractively designed publications, forming part of a sensibly thought out series for different cases and circumstances. Some, like the video prepared by the Special Educational Needs Tribunal (SENT) for those who have appealed to it, are outstandingly useful.

4.3 The effective communication of information about how to start a case, prepare it for submission to the tribunal and present it at a hearing is not an optional extra of good service to users. It is fundamental to the reason why tribunals exist separately from the ordinary courts. [22] With very few exceptions the aim should be that tribunals’ distinctive procedures and approach should enable users to prepare and present their cases themselves. [23] We received the clearest possible indications from what we saw and from the responses to the Consultation Document that this aim was not being met, and that users were increasingly turning to lawyers or others for help. Overall, that is a serious failure in the system, which should be corrected urgently. It is imperative that all tribunal users should have easy access to clear and timely information suitable for their individual needs. We recommend the adoption of a consistent, monitored, field-tested approach to producing and communicating information throughout the Tribunals System to enable users to participate effectively. [24]

4.4 The various suggestions we make for developing a more user-friendly system will all require some additional investment. Without that investment, we can only see an increasing inability to meet users’ needs, and an increasing need for legal advice if ECHR requirements are to be met. [25]

The approach

4.5 Material prepared by government decision-makers of all kinds, and by the tribunals, should meet the following aims:

(a) Information should be carefully graduated starting with a clear decision and reasons and a simple explanation of what to do if dissatisfied. Further material should be supplied in one or more instalments as deemed relevant or if requested by the claimant. The contents of instalments of material will probably increase in factual and legal difficulty. [26]

(b) Information should be available in a range of media and formats. Although much of it will have to be available in printed form, a graduated approach probably lends itself most effectively to presentation by means of IT and the Internet. [26]

(c) It should take account of special needs, by making printed text available in Braille and large text, and on tape. Where possible, translations should be provided in the minority languages most commonly found. Our Australian experience suggests that IT and the Internet are particularly helpful here. [27]

(d) Material should be carefully and professionally designed by experts, in order to make it accessible to the widest possible audience. Wherever possible, formats for information and standard decisions should be field-tested by a valid sample of users, and the results of the tests expertly analysed. [27]

(e) The approach should be as consistent as possible throughout all tribunals, and to a common standard, on which the Council on Tribunals should be consulted. [28]

4.6 The object of the exercise will be to reassure users about what it will be like to appear before a tribunal. If there is an opportunity before the day of the hearing to view a video of mock tribunal proceedings, that will often provide the most effective way of explaining how it is to be conducted.

Information from decision-makers

4.7 Decision-makers in all areas of government, central and local, should always be striving for clearer decisions, and better presentation of the material supporting their submissions. The feasibility should be examined of specifying in regulations, rules of procedure or codes of practice the particular documents and other information in their possession which decision-makers should be responsible for supplying to potential and actual appellants. [29]

4.8 Basic information should be provided initially on what the appellant’s statutory entitlement is, what has been decided in the case, and for what reason and whether or not there is a right of appeal, to which tribunal or court, by what date and on what grounds. [30] Information should also be provided by decision-makers about any process of internal review, about whether they have power to review their own decisions, and about other ways in which the same dispute might be resolved (not only seeking Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR), but the possibility of a complaint to an ombudsman or claim for compensation for maladministration). [31]

4.9 Ideally, decision-makers should give a complete list of all the relevant material supporting their decisions. [32] But it would be difficult, expensive, and perhaps even impracticable to provide it all in traditional written form. Initially, decision-makers should concentrate on improving the quality of the notification of their decisions. But once well-designed IT, including suitable websites, is in place, it should be possible by that means to give a complete account of the relevant material. [33]

4.10 It is axiomatic that Government departments must give decisions that are both clear and comprehensible. That has a critical effect on how departments are seen by users, how much confidence the users have in the decision and how the users respond. The efforts of the Department of Social Security to improve their performance and achieve clear, focussed and relevant decision notifications, which resulted from direct ministerial interest and responsibility, are particularly to be commended. This shows the importance of ministers in other departments taking the lead in lifting the quality and relevance both of decisions notified and of information provided to users, a function we would encourage. [34]

4.11 Local government should determine how best they can meet the requirements we have outlined.

Information from tribunals

4.12 Users should be given the information they will need on the following topics: [35]

Jurisdictional issues

Jurisdiction and remedies, and their limits. Possible alternatives to a tribunal appeal, including reference to organisations providing ADR, whose own procedures should direct to the Tribunals Service any cases relevant to a tribunal that are wrongly sent to them. What appellants will have to prove. What the relevant Government department or public authority can be expected, or required, to provide. What sort of evidence is needed, and how it should be presented.

Procedural issues

Timetables and pre-hearing procedures. The procedure at the hearing and what to do if dissatisfied with the outcome of a hearing. What standard of service to expect and what to do if it is not received.

Facilities

The place of hearing, and how to get there and whether travel expenses will be reimbursed. What facilities are available, such as library or photocopying services or interpreter service, and how to get access to them.

Decisions

The nature of the decision to be expected, and when it is likely to be given. Any further rights of appeal, and the procedure for exercising them.

4.13 An integrated tribunal administration creates scope for supplementing published material with information personal to an enquirer. A tribunal telephone help-line should be available, with e-mail back-up. [36] All tribunal offices should aim to provide designated user service points. [37] Greater emphasis on the pre-hearing stages of some cases may mean that face-to-face support is required as well as communication by the telephone, IT, video conferencing and so on. Personalised information should supplement more general information provided by interactive computer programmes at the tribunal’s premises as well as other premises easily accessible to potential appellants, such as local authority premises and government offices which are generally open to the public. [38]

4.14 The provision of information that is clear and intelligible to users is of fundamental importance. We recommend that responsibility for information and communication be entrusted to a minister in the Lord Chancellor’s Department (LCD). [39] We contemplate that the minister would be likely to need the assistance of a design team, as well as of user groups (see paragraphs 4.29 4.32) and the Council on Tribunals. [40]

Independent help and advice

Preparation

4.15 Tribunals can only give general procedural advice. Many users will need additional support if they are to participate fully in their cases. We are much impressed by the way in which users are helped to prepare cases in ways that assist tribunals, and weak cases are gently weeded out, by much of the expert (often non-lawyer) advice we have seen. The Community Legal Service (CLS) is clearly intended to make access to such support a reality in many areas. The Government’s commitment to focussing advice on areas of greatest need is of course to be welcomed. Social welfare and special educational needs are two areas which deserve priority.

4.16 The time limits for making an appeal vary considerably between tribunals. It is important that appellants should be able to get timely advice. [41] In relation to war pension appeals, for example, the provision of funding to enable some users to travel to meet their representative prior to the hearing would sometimes enable cases to be withdrawn from hearing in consequence of advice then given. If withdrawal does not occur until the day of hearing it is too late to fill the gap in the list, and the tribunal’s and the other party’s time is to that extent wasted. But if the withdrawal of a case is notified beforehand, another case can be listed for hearing in its place. We are confident that this would happen often enough to save at least the costs of travel.

4.17 It is important to keep tribunals accessible and user-friendly, so that most users can understand the process and prepare their cases themselves. But they may need appropriate help at various stages. The main elements are likely to be:

(a) Legal and factual advice on the merits of the case, and how to put it to the tribunal, including advice on whether to proceed at all, or whether to seek some alternative remedy.

(b) Expert evidence required as part of a legal case, for example medical evidence in social security disability benefit cases, or psychiatric assessments in mental health.

(c) Expert professional advice instead of legal assistance, such as from accountants in tax cases, and from valuers or surveyors in property cases.

(d) Additional support for those with particular requirements or disabilities, such as foreign language interpreters and signers.

4.18 The current CLS system provides money for advice and assistance, short of representation, and known as "legal help". It includes legal advice on the legal merits of the case, form-filling and the preparation of written submissions. Legal help can be provided under the contract scheme administered by the Legal Services Commission (LSC) by solicitors or advice agencies who meet the quality standards. In theory, legal help should be available for most tribunals. It is important to ensure that financial eligibility testing is suitable for the Tribunals System [42] and, whilst we do not at all suggest recipients of state benefits should have automatic entitlement to public funding for tribunals, we do think that in assessing income for the purpose of determining whether public funding should be available, there should be consistency in the treatment of state benefits and consistency in the treatment of tax credits across the Tribunals System. [43] We note that the LCD has recently announced changes to the CLS scheme which will bring a potential further five million people into the scope of the current CLS legal help scheme; this will be helpful. Investment at the preparation stage could bring savings in money, time and tribunal resources. The CLS contract scheme should be extended to key advice organisations. [44] User groups and tribunal staff should therefore be consulted about which organisations merit public funding. [45] But public funding is not the total answer to ensuring that appellants are provided with the best advice and help. It is important that advice services and experts who help or represent appellants should have sufficient, up-to-date knowledge in the legal and procedural requirements and the specific subject-matter.

4.19 We endorse the framework of the CLS as capable of providing the mix of legal, specialist and general advice which tribunal users will require. At this stage it is unclear whether the framework would in fact include a sufficient range of sources, with an adequate national spread to meet the needs of users. There may be some areas, such as war pensions, where too few potential users meet financial eligibility criteria to enable viable CLS contracts to be developed, but where users and the tribunal would benefit if such support were available.

4.20 In consultation with the LCD and LSC, the Council on Tribunals — discussed more extensively in Chapter Seven — has a role to play in seeing how effectively the CLS meets the needs of tribunal users, and in helping to identify areas where additional funding might be required. The LCD should consider whether the CLS’s financial constraints should be adjusted so that it can fulfil the requirements of tribunal work. A small expansion of the time limits for non-means tested legal help might, for example, be an effective way of providing initial advice. Some general adjustment to the financial eligibility means-testing may also be required. [46]

Representation

4.21 There has been evidence since research carried out in the mid-1980s by Professor Hazel Genn,16 that under the current tribunal regime appellants benefit significantly from representation. We are convinced, however, that representation not only often adds unnecessarily to cost, formality and delay, but it also works against the objective of making tribunals directly and easily accessible to the full range of potential users. We accept that that objective is challenging and will not always be achievable. But measures in this report are designed to achieve it for most people in most cases and, therefore, should radically reduce the need for representation whilst meeting human rights requirements. A combination of good quality information and advice, effective procedures and well conducted hearings, and competent and well-trained tribunal members should go a very long way to helping the vast majority of appellants to understand and put their cases properly themselves. It is of fundamental importance to regard a Tribunals System as participatory and to do all that can providently be done to make it so and enable it to remain so.

4.22 Some appellants will not be able to present their cases adequately themselves even with our full recommendations in place, because the factual or legal complexity of some cases make representation indispensable, and physical or mental incapacities of some users make it difficult for them to represent themselves adequately. Pro bono advice is not widely available, and cannot be general; but it deserves every encouragement. [47] The need for representation in particular cases accords with responses to our consultation. The CLS system already recognises this where appeals have particularly serious outcomes or are purely matters of law in a complex field, in tribunals such as the Mental Health Review Tribunals (MHRT), Immigration Adjudicators, the Immigration Appeals Tribunal, and the Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT). We recommend that the remit of the CLS should be extended to include representation in more tribunals. But this should be done on an exceptional basis by reference to specific cases, or classes of cases, rather than to particular tribunals. [48]

4.23 To identify cases in which representation should be provided and which merit public funding, specific criteria should be developed to take account of tribunal work. No public funding should be considered unless a case has a reasonable prospect of success. The test of reasonableness should be included in the LSC’s Funding Code, which is put before Parliament. [49] Given that prospect of success, help with representation should be provided where it is required because applicants’ personal circumstances (such as inadequate knowledge of English, or mental or physical disability) or the complexity of the case in fact or law, make it unreasonable to expect them to present the case themselves. The overall aim should not be to supplant the expectation that users will argue their own cases, but to help those users who are subject to particular disadvantages or difficulties to play a full part. State assistance should be directed to helping users to understand their case and its merits; to take a view about whether to proceed with an appeal; and if so, to find out how to prepare for a hearing. [50]

4.24 The delivery of public funding should be through existing mechanisms such as central and local government grants to bodies which give advice, by means of the current CLS system, which covers England and Wales, and by means of the comparable schemes in Scotland and Northern Ireland. [51] There are obvious advantages in using a ready-made system, because it has a developing expertise, a greater likelihood of consistent application across the country and before different tribunals, and a better control of limited finance. It could be argued that the relevant tribunal itself would be best placed to assess the features of the case. But it would be invidious for the tribunal to have to determine cases in which it had already concluded that one party had reasonable prospects of success, and there would also be an unavoidable risk of inconsistency. The LSC could consult tribunal Presidents about the types or aspects of cases in their own jurisdiction which were likely to cause most difficulty, or to merit state funding.

4.25 The LSC should set tribunal-specific criteria, under direction by the Lord Chancellor where appropriate, against which applications for public funding would be tested. [52] It would be necessary to ensure that they, and also the Public Interest Advisory Panel and the Funding Review Committee, have expert as well as legal members capable of advising specifically about funding for tribunals. [53] More importantly, it would be necessary for the Lord Chancellor to issue directions to bring tribunals within the scope of the CLS, and to set the relevant criteria.

4.26 To further this approach, we recommend pilot studies in specific tribunals. [54] By way of example, the written procedure of the Social Security Commissioners may make theirs a suitable jurisdiction in which to explore the provision of help in the preparation of cases.

4.27 The Lord Chancellor is also responsible for the public funding scheme in Northern Ireland. We suggest that he should consider our recommendations in relation to that scheme and that Scottish Ministers may wish to do so insofar as they have relevance to the scheme in Scotland.

4.28 Two of the most comprehensive and helpful responses to our Consultation Paper came from the Bar Council and the Law Society. Not surprisingly they advocated the provision of more legal advice and representation for tribunal users. Unfortunately for the lawyers, as the title of this report declares, its focus has been upon enabling users to prepare and present their own cases without legal advice or representation. This approach has therefore prevented us from paying to the responses that regard which their quality deserved.

User groups

4.29 We consulted a range of organisations that give advice to and represent individuals and organisations. There is a large network of national and locally based advice and support groups who have a valuable role to play in any Tribunals System. Respondents to our consultation expressed the view that there should be a clear demarcation between the help and advice given by tribunal staff, which should be confined to explaining tribunal procedures and requirements, and that given by advisers and representatives, who should advise on the merits of the case and its presentation. The user group representatives who attended one of our seminars stressed the importance of individual case-specific advice coming from good and suitably qualified legal or, where appropriate, expert advisers. They acknowledged that independent advisers should be more robust in giving advice about weak cases.

4.30 There was support for formalised ongoing consultation with the various groups that advise and represent those who use tribunals. We were told that there is a large national forum of user groups with an interest in the activities of the Appeals Service, which periodically meets them to advise them of new and proposed developments. It was suggested that there should be more such forums and that they should be constituted and managed in a way which would facilitate exchanges of information and ideas across the groups and between the groups and the tribunals. We support the idea of user groups. It would be a useful mechanism to identify practical problems, to get feedback on the users’ perspective, to test out drafts of new documentation and to act as a quality feedback mechanism. The group structure should meet two needs — to provide a forum for discussion on particular matters in specific tribunals or Divisions and to enable those running the Tribunals System to discuss with user representatives issues relevant to the System as a whole. [55] Those running the Tribunals System should have the benefit of a strategic view across all tribunals in order to share best practice and help achieve consistency and cross-fertilisation of ideas for improvements.

4.31 There may be merit in having groups which include representatives of tribunal members, tribunal administrators, the key professions involved with tribunal work, and organisations representing claimants and complainants. It is important, however, that people who attend such gatherings have experience of the specific tribunals under discussion, whilst at the same time having the knowledge to be able to represent, and the authority to speak on behalf of, their organisation. User group forums of this sort will be really effective only if there is a commitment on both sides to an open dialogue and a willingness to listen to and learn from each other. We attended a meeting of the Appeals Service National Users’ Forum, and were struck by the lack of feedback for the Chief Executive and President. The forum only seemed to enable the Appeals Service to give out information.

4.32 It would be necessary to have clear terms of reference in order to avoid discussion of matters outside the responsibilities of the tribunal, such as po..licy, and to ensure that all types of users were represented by such a forum. Careful consideration should be given to how such consultation would be managed. For example, it may be practical to set up a group for each of the new Divisions we propose in Chapter Six in order to focus discussion or it may be thought necessary to have a group that operates across the whole System. We recommend that our proposed Tribunals Board should take the idea of user groups forward. [56]

Employment advisers

4.33 As we note in Part II, during our visit to the Employment Tribunal (ET), and in responses received to our consultation document, concern was expressed about vulnerable users being badly served by employment advisers. At present, users are offered little protection from unscrupulous advisers. They have no benchmark against which to measure their performance; as likely "one-off" users, they would have no previous experience against which to compare the service provided; they might not be aware of other sources of advice and so not "shop around" for the best service; and the user has no source of redress in the event of dissatisfaction with the service received. A further and serious concern is that such advisers charge on a contingency basis (ie a fixed percentage of any award received).

4.34 We note that the concerns are not new. In 1999, the LCD established a Committee, under the chairmanship of Brian Blackwell CBE, to investigate the activities of non-legally qualified employment advisers acting for reward. Concerns expressed about such advisers by a number of those involved in ETs centred on the quality of advice and service offered, and the level of fees charged.

4.35 The Committee considered the model of statutory regulation introduced for immigration advisers by the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999, under which it will become unlawful for any person to provide United Kingdom immigration advice, unless registered to do so. Members of a designated professional body or European equivalent are exempt under the terms of the scheme. The Immigration Services Commissioner was appointed on 22 May 2000 and the expectation is that he will have a staff of between 50 and 60 to support him. The budget for this regulatory body is anticipated to be in excess of £1 million per annum. This will be met by a grant from the Home Office until such time as the Commissioner believes that the scheme has become self-financing. However, there is little expectation this will happen in the foreseeable future, due to the high proportion of advisers exempted under the scheme. Registration fees range between £1800 per annum for a sole practitioner, to £6000 for a firm employing 20 or more advisers.

4.36 The Blackwell Committee was unable to ascertain a sufficient constituency of employment advisers to suggest that any regulatory body would ever be capable of being self-financing. The taxpayer would therefore have to contribute the bulk of the budget which it was considered would be unattractive to the Government. The Committee also questioned whether the public interest would necessarily be served if employment advisers were driven out of business by high registration fees. They offered an alternative to those who were not members of a union; who were unable to access voluntary agencies; and to whom, for a variety of reasons, solicitors were unattractive.

4.37 In February 2000, therefore, the Committee recommended17 instead a range of measures, including encouraging trade unions to offer their services more proactively and to draw up and promulgate a code of practice for employment advisers, for which the endorsement of the Employment Tribunals Service (ETS) should be sought. Additionally, the chairmen of tribunals should be consulted to consider "naming and shaming" employment advisers who mishandled their clients’ cases; and the charging regimes available to clients in employment disputes should be publicised widely.

4.38 None of the recommendations has been implemented. The Trades Union Congress is in discussion with its member unions about how the first two points might be taken forward: the ETS is understood to be willing to consider any proposals suggested. Department of Trade and Industry officials have consulted the President of the Employment Tribunal on the proposal to "name and shame" employment advisers, which raised questions about how such a scheme might work in practice, given the lack of a regulatory body for such advisers. There are no plans, at present, to publicise charging regimes: difficulties have been envisaged as to enforcement.

4.39 Given that concerns similar to those which gave rise to the Blackwell Committee being established remain, we are uneasy that no apparent action has been taken to curb employment advisers’ activities. We would urge the Government to reconsider this issue and suggest that the time might now be appropriate for stringent action to be taken to protect the vulnerable. [57]

Costs and conditional fees

4.40 Since Franks the general rule has been that tribunals should not normally have the power to award the costs of representation. There are exceptions, such as in employment and tax tribunals. Some who responded to our consultation were not in favour of tribunals having general powers to award costs; it could be a significant deterrent to some appellants pursuing what appears to be an arguable case. Some respondents thought it was appropriate for tribunals to have such power in cases where the tribunal process was abused or where one party behaved unreasonably to such an extent that additional expense was incurred for the other party, including the state. Others contended that tribunals should have power to award costs. There was an argument that, where representation was the norm, appellants who succeed in their actions against the state should not have to bear their own costs. No evidence was presented to suggest that the state would seek costs orders. On the arguments put before us we are not persuaded that further extension to tribunals’ costs powers is necessary. [58]

4.41 In the particular case of (ETs) there was significant argument over the extent to which costs should follow the event, particularly as a deterrent to an increasing volume of cases perceived as frivolous or vexatious. This was also seen as an issue in SENT. The DTI intends lifting the ceiling on costs which the Tribunals can currently award and has introduced other measures designed to weed out mischievous, misconceived or non-meritorious cases. As our note on ETs records, we suggest that this issue merits further investigation.

4.42 Costs following the event significantly assists the use of conditional fees. Responses to our consultation did not see conditional fees as being appropriate where eligibility for monetary benefits is at issue in citizen and state cases (such as in the Appeals Service tribunals and the Pensions Appeal Tribunal) and in disputes between parties such as where levels of rent and service charges are being challenged. We agree. We see no merit in widening the scope and application of conditional fees generally. [59]

4.43 The position in ETs is distinctive. Cases before ETs are not included within the definition of "contentious business" to be found in Section 87 of the Solicitors Act 1987, although they are directly comparable to other forms of contentious business. As a result, contingency fees (which offer no protection against the proportion of awards which might be absorbed by "no win, no fee" agreements) are not prohibited, although they are in contentious business before the courts. This appears to be an anomaly. Conversely, since ET disputes are therefore non-contentious, it has been suggested to us that conditional fee agreements can be formed, although there is little sign of them being used. We wish to see the ETs, like all other tribunals, working in a way that enables users to conduct cases without legal advice or representation. It is, however, clear that lawyers are used in a increasing proportion of ET cases, and we would wish to see the most effective ways of securing and paying for them available to users in this important area. In the courts, after-the-event litigation insurance and other funding products have been designed to work in litigation where costs are recoverable, and the absence or limitation of costs may hinder or stultify the market in extending those products to ETs.

4.44 The limit on costs in ETs has recently been significantly increased. That provides an opportunity to study how the availability of costs is affecting the conduct of cases, and in paragraph 23 of our note on the ETs and EAT, we recommend research. That should include investigating the extent to which conditional and contingency fees are being used, and how far either assist access to the tribunal. In principle, we consider that contingency fees should be prohibited, or allowed, if found to be beneficial to users when properly regulated, in the same ways as in other contentious business. [60]

Clerks

4.45 The clerk makes a vital contribution to tribunal work. It is the clerk who welcomes appellants and claimants to the tribunal, shows them such facilities as may be available, and gives an outline of the likely procedure that will be adopted by the chairman. In some tribunal systems, where chairmen are not legally qualified, the clerk may also have an advisory role, similar to the role played by the justices’ clerk. A good clerk sets the tone for the effective running of the tribunal, and for delivering the level of service to the user that we envisage for the Tribunals System.

4.46 While we saw many examples of excellent practice, we are also aware that some tribunals have sought to make financial savings by reducing the availability of clerks. The MHRT has suffered worst in this respect, but we have heard, for example, of tribunal members in other tribunals having to usher the parties into the hearing and look after them in other ways. This is not acceptable practice. Clerks are not an optional extra. Steps should be taken to ensure that tribunals have good quality clerking available. [61] The chairmen and members of tribunals have a hard enough task to do. They should not also be required to look after those who are going to appear before them. Nor is it appropriate for a tribunal member or chairman to talk informally to parties in the waiting room, as clerks often do, because this could easily compromise, or be thought to compromise, the impartiality of the tribunal.


16 Genn, H and Genn, Y, (1989), The Effectiveness of Representation at Tribunals, LCD
17 The investigation of non-legally qualified claims assessors and employment advisers who act for reward: a report by the Blackwell Committee: February 2000: LCD


 Back to the Contents Page