NATIONAL LEGAL PROFESSION REFORM

Joint Media Release

Prime Minister

Attorney-General

30 April 2009

Today, the Council of Australian Governments (COAG) has agreed on a plan to achieve national regulation of the Australian legal profession.

COAG has agreed that:

The specialist taskforce will begin work immediately and will be supported by a dedicated Secretariat within the Attorney-General’s Department.

The Taskforce will comprise the following members:

The Commonwealth will also seek a further nomination to ensure that small jurisdictions are appropriately represented.

The Consultative Group will be chaired by the Hon Michael Lavarch, Professor of Law at Queensland University of Technology, and will include members from each State and Territory representing peak legal, business and consumer groups.

The Attorney-General will today write to the States and Territories as well as other interest groups inviting nominations for the Consultative Group.

This Consultative Group will play an important role in identifying issues, providing advice and developing recommendations on this important reform agenda.

The regulation of the legal profession in Australia remains overly complex and inconsistent, with up to 55 different regulators across the country.

As a result, different practices apply in different jurisdictions, including for example costs disclosure and billing, admissions and practicing certificates and complaints handling and professional discipline.

Australian lawyers and consumers no longer operate in just one State or Territory.

To deliver a seamless national economy we can no longer justify such disparate regulation for just one profession.

National regulation of the legal profession will benefit consumers, lawyers and firms alike:

The Commonwealth looks forward to working cooperatively with the States and Territories, and the legal profession on this important reform agenda.