Access to Legal Aid

Legal aid in BC was drastically cut in 2002; this funding has not been restored. The financial eligibility thresholds have also not increased in BC for many years, making it so that even those who are living below the poverty line are not financially eligible for legal aid. Without access to legal representation for low-income people, our legal system is manifestly unfair and cannot provide justice.

BCPIAC’s goal is to continually push for a legal system that ensures that those who cannot afford legal representation are able to get it. In 2005 in the Canadian Bar Association case and in 2009 in the P.D. case, BC PIAC was involved with other groups in bringing a constitutional challenge to the current scope of legal aid coverage. In neither case were we able to get past a preliminary stage of the argument.

We plan to continue to fight to expand the circumstances to where there is a constitutional right to state-funded counsel, including in family law cases involving custody and immigration cases involving potential deportation.

We also believe that the way that legal aid is administered should be fair and transparent. A key part of access to justice is to ensure that our legal aid systems are designed to be easily accessible to the most vulnerable people in our communities.

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Access to Welfare