To resource this arrangement, private practitioners are funded by grants of aid allocated to approved clients, with amounts regulated through a fixed scale of fees. Legal Aid Commissions in each state and territory usually release grant funds to practitioners in stages, initially to cover advice, investigation and negotiation, with funding extended to cover more work, such as going to trial, if cases progress.
Private practitioners are expected to assist legal aid clients at the same standard of quality they would provide to other, fee-paying clients.
But quality legal representation, especially for highly vulnerable people, is complex and time-consuming.
Our research shows private practitioners feel frustrated that government funding does not cover all activities they need to perform and falls short of meeting community need.
Our research
We surveyed private practitioners who had delivered legal aid in the past two years, or who were listed on legal aid panels or preferred supplier lists.
Among the 1,010 who participated, most were self-employed or working in very small practices. A quarter had delivered legal aid for more than 20 years.
Commitment to legal aid is high, reflected in statements such as “everyone deserves good-quality representation”, and
there is an obligation on professionals to assist in providing access to justice.
Overwhelmingly, private practitioners find legal aid satisfying and meaningful. They also value the way it can build expertise for practitioners early in their legal career.
But despite being enjoyable and enriching work, private practitioners say legal aid is becoming more difficult to deliver.
Bearing the brunt of the cost
Legal aid work can be stressful for practitioners, but their greatest challenge by far is funding.
While there is no illusion that legal aid will be lucrative, private practitioners are frustrated with paltry grants that require significant administration and which undervalue their work.
They feel the funding they receive does not recognise the time required in legal aid cases, nor the growing complexity of cases. As legal aid clients increasingly present with unmet health, social and economic needs, cases are more complex, lengthy and costly.
Community need for legal assistance is high. For years, formal reviews have found the sector is chronically underfunded, both in Australia and overseas.
Announcements of additional funding and better indexation have been welcomed, but aren’t enough to fix the shortfall.