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Wednesday 19 February 2014

NO RESPECT FROM HMCTS



From time to time my reader might have got the impression that my enthusiasm for this job is on the wane.  Being an astute individual he would be correct.  One of my moans has been the attitude of HMCTS towards us.  This badly managed organisation  considers us  as unpaid employees rather than appointees who are often out of pocket in offering ourselves to what used to be a very worthwhile voluntary position.  An example of this attitude is demonstrated by the fact that if we cancel a sitting it is logged into the system of statistics employed by HMCTS and presumably collated with other information held on us as  individuals.  But if said organisation cancels one (or more)  of our sittings that incident is  not logged.  That information came to me directly from those responsible i.e. the bench support team.  At a recent sitting a relatively new colleague, quite absorbed by a trial on which she had recently sat, told me that when she asked the self same personnel at the bench support office  to be rota`d to sit on the sentencing bench for that offender’s  next appearance she was told quite bluntly that it would be that team which would decide whether or not she could sit and not the J.P.  This decision is extremely disturbing.  In fact it is a bloody disgrace.  I told my colleague that J.P.s have the same authority and powers as a District Judge and at least two of them in the past and our current bench chairman have confirmed to me that within normal parameters of bench composition every effort should be made by a bench support team to accommodate such a request and that the response of the individual concerned was quite inappropriate.  Another example of the instructions which apparently have infected the manner in which admin staff have been told to regard us happened about three  months ago. 

As a chairman, like all my colleagues, I expect about 25%-30% of my rota`d sittings to be as a winger but when I offer “extras” I offer to sit only as a chairman.  One day, however,  having noted in my diary an extra sitting, I received an e mail the day prior informing me that that particular extra sitting would be as a winger.  I told the bench support team person that in that case I declined to sit whereupon she said to me, “I must remind of the rule  that you cannot choose not to sit as a winger if that`s where you are allocated.”  I told her I didn`t need reminding of any rule and that if I offer an extra sitting as a chairman only and that allocation is changed by her team then I am under no obligation to fulfill that sitting; it was a voluntarily offered additional sitting to assist the court.  That was the end of the matter but it seems that conversations like those  could only have happened because instructions have been sent by HMCTS on how relationships with J.P.s must be handled. 

Legal advisors are already in acceptance of an employer which treats them as numbers to be deployed at the whim of that employer and whose status as lawyers has now no significance whatsoever.  They are a workforce whose moral has shrunk to zero.  Increasingly my colleagues are coming to the realisation that they too are held in similar disrespect by HMCTS.

4 comments:

  1. 'moral'? did you mean morals or morale or ,come to think of it, both?

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  2. I couldn't agree more with the overall position you take here. I have long felt that HMCTS, under the "employed civil servant" model have sought to treat we Justices as staff. I find it offensive that I am dictated to by our Clerk to the Justices as though my role was in his gift. I have mentioned before to colleagues that the very job title "Clerk to the Justices" should betray to the office holder, their relative position in relation to the actual Justices - but it doesn't. Frustration mounts. I have seen colleagues, who were appointed after me, lose all patience with being treated like errant schoolchildren or employees on the end of a chain of line managers - upwards of 25 that I know of, have jacked-in the whole thing as not being worth their time.

    The sad thing is that too many of our colleagues acquiesce so completely that HMCTS ride rough-shod over all of us and will continue to do so.

    At some point, unless the Judicial office holders - i.e. US - actually begin to put our collective foot down and demand the respect due to our (frankly, ancient) office, then we only have ourselves to blame for the fact of our continued demise.

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  3. It is pretty rough when one is treated with disrespect by an organisation that no one seems to respect.

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