Obiter Dicta Issue 11 - February 24, 2014 | Page 9

page 9 ATJ working groups release final reports JESSE COHEN Contributor Eight years ago, our Chief Justice, the Right Honourable Beverly McLachlin, called on Canadians to improve access to justice in Canada, or continue the slow but unacceptable march towards legal inequality – for as she has so rightly repeated in her ensuing campaign, “there is no justice without access to justice.” Two years later, in 2008, Justice McLachlin made access to justice a national priority, the Action Committee on Access to Justice in Civil and Family Matters was formed under the leadership of Justice Thomas A. Cromwell. Composed of a crosssection of Canada’s foremost leaders in civil and family justice as well as public representatives, the Action Committee was tasked with developing consensus priorities for national and local reform. Over time, four distinct themes, which became four working groups, emerged in the Committee: court process simplification; legal services; prevention, triage, and referral; and family justice. This past year, the Action Committee and each of the working groups released their final reports. Drawing these reports together, the Action Committee released its final report “A Roadmap for Change” in October. The final rep ܝY[