
·
Personal Injury Scheme
Launched
·
Next Mediation Training
Course
·
Core Fun
“It's easy to find an
excuse not to mediate. It's far harder to volunteer to go into an alien
environment and try a new approach. But the benefits are there for those that
are willing.”
Core Mediation launched
its Personal Injury Mediation Scheme at a Breakfast Seminar in March. The Scheme provides a cost effective,
time efficient and streamlined system to deal with damages claims up to £50,000.
The service will use mediators with experience of personal injury.
“Increasingly, insurers
and personal injury lawyers want to use mediation to benefit from the real
savings it can bring in time and costs. The scheme provides an opportunity to
resolve claims at the earliest possible date, at a low cost and enabling people
with claims to put the matter behind them without the anxieties and
uncertainties of going to court.”
Details of the scheme
are available by clicking here. Contact Pamela Lyall to
discuss.
Seminar Bullet
Points:
·
Mediation awareness is
increasing and there is a growing number of enquiries
concerning personal injury work.
·
As most personal injury
cases are capable of negotiation, they are also suitable for mediation.
Mediation is not a panacea and the majority of personal injury cases (97%)
settle in any event. Mediation can however achieve an earlier and more effective
settlement.
·
Cases involving
disputes on liability, causation and quantum may be most suitable as these are
often difficult to resolve in face to face negotiations.
·
Mediation offers an
opportunity to be more creative and enables settlement to be achieved on a
principled basis, rather than a 50:50 or other compromise.
·
Mediation can be
attractive to insurers in offering a cost effective solution.
·
The best time to
mediate will vary depending on the type and value of the case.
·
A seriously injured
pursuer may benefit from staged mediation to help manage the
case.
·
Employer liability
cases, often involving issues about returning to work and retraining, may be
especially appropriate for mediation.
·
Disputes among
defenders (eg about allocation of liability or damages) may be usefully
mediated, enabling co-ordination of approach.
A comment following a
recent successful Core mediation in a personal injury
case:
“The case that we mediated had been
outstanding for 7 years ... At the outset the parties were about £250,000 apart.
This was not a straight forward case. Traditional methods of negotiation had
failed. The next stop was the court room. We agreed to try something different -
mediation. It worked! But why?
All parties were happy
with the terms agreed and parted on good terms - no acrimony, no bad feeling, no
loser. It's the first time as an Insurer that I have been able to personally
wish the claimant well following settlement and that type of personal
interaction can only reflect well on our business. The result was a genuine feel
good factor for me personally and, I believe, for all
involved.”
(Tony Newman, Claims
Controller, Allianz Cornhill)
Core
Coaching’s highly rated Mediation Skills Training and Mediator Assessment Course
will next take place in two modules: from 6 to 9 September 2005 and from
12 to 14 October 2005.
The first module is a
full course in itself for those who wish to understand how to manage differences
and disputes in a variety of settings, from the workplace to litigation to
commerce, with special emphasis on the role of the
mediator.
The second, optional,
assessment module leads to the Core
Certificate of Competence in basic mediation skills.
In our most recent
course, we welcomed participants from the worlds of patents, business, banking
and human resources, together with members of the Scottish and English bars and
a number of senior solicitors from north and south of the border. Their comments so far have been
encouraging:
“Thank you for an
amazing Mediation Course, I found it to be a life changing and informing
experience. The course design, content and style of delivery was first class. I
think your Core Team are very impressive, in their kind and professional
manner.”
“I have little snap
shot moments of different challenges and experiences from which I have learnt a
great deal and will remember for a long time to come”.
The course will once
again be led by our team of outstanding coaches from throughout the
Please click here to read the Course Prospectus and here for an online registration form. For further information,
contact Lynne
Davies.
·
Panel Update and
Continuing Growth
All of our panel of
mediators have been involved in mediations in recent months. In addition to John
Sturrock and
By mid May, the number
of mediations conducted in 2005 by Core will equal the total for the whole of
2004, a clear indication of the rapid expansion both of mediation in
We
are delighted that we now have available to mediate in appropriate cases the
experienced solicitor, Lesley Gray,
medical professionals Dr Robert
Hendry and Dr
We are especially
pleased to announce that the internationally recognised mediation practitioner,
Miryana Nesic, is joining the Core
team as a consultant.
Our panel engage in
regular CPD. The latest event is a Master Class with leading mediator and CEO of
the New York-based CPR Institute for Conflict Prevention and Dispute Resolution,
Tom Stipanowich. Tom’s involvement
with Core is a real honour for us.
·
Without commitment
mediation consultation
If parties or
solicitors wish to explore mediation as an option, Core Mediation offers a
without commitment initial meeting to discuss the suitability of mediation. This
offers a risk-free opportunity for those with questions to explore the options
at no cost. Most who do so find that the added value of the process makes it a
constructive and effective way to deal with differences and disputes.
Contact John
Sturrock or Pamela Lyall to
discuss.
·
Draft Mediation
Clause
We are often asked for
suggestions for an appropriate clause for contracts where parties wish to make
reference to mediation as a dispute resolution process.
Click here for our suggested
wording.
"Refusal by a legally
aided party to enter into Mediation will be a relevant consideration for the
Board both at the stage of deciding whether or not it is reasonable to grant the
party legal aid and in deciding, once granted, if it is reasonable for legal aid
to continue in place. Objections can be sent in by the opponent in this respect
either prior to the application being determined or any time during the
existence of the proceedings/legal aid certificate.
Regulation 30(a) of The
Civil Legal Aid ( Scotland) Regulations should be noted in
this respect - this states that the Board can cease to make legal aid available
to an assisted person if it is no longer satisfied that it is reasonable in the
particular circumstances of the case that that person should continue to receive
legal aid.
The Board however would
not terminate legal aid on this basis without asking the assisted party why they
did not take up an offer to Mediate.
If the assisted party
can provide a reasoned explanation as to why they have refused to take up an
offer of Mediation then Legal Aid would not be terminated. All will therefore
depend on the individual facts and circumstances of each individual case."
For more information
please contact Liz
Cuschieri or Catriona
Whyte at the Scottish Legal
Aid Board.
·
NHS
Scotland CLO Mediation Pilot Project
In conjunction with the
Scottish Executive, the NHS in Scotland Central Legal Office has launched a 3
year project to assess the use of mediation as a mechanism for resolving
clinical negligence disputes. Where experience and research shows that people in
such cases often need an explanation, reassurance, and acknowledgement of pain
and anger, in addition to (or even instead of) compensation, the availability of
a private process in which these can be addressed quickly is welcome. This also
offers medical professionals a means to have difficult issues dealt with
expeditiously and non-confrontationally.
To read John Sturrock’s
article on the value of mediation in resolving conflict within the NHS (Holyrood Magazine's Health Supplement,
December 2004) click here and on using
negotiation to find creative solutions to disputes (Legal and Medical, December 2004),
click here.
·
English Court of Appeal
Decision
Burchell
v Bullard [2005] EWCA Civ 358
Refusing
to mediate on grounds that the matter is too complex for mediation is "plain
nonsense", according to Lord Justice Ward. A small building dispute is par excellence the kind of dispute which
lends itself to ADR. The defendants could not rely on their own obstinacy to
assert that mediation had no reasonable prospect of success. Last year’s case of
Halsey was referred to:
“Halsey
has made plain not only the high rate of a successful outcome being achieved by
mediation but also its established importance as a track to a just result
running parallel with that of the court system. Both have a proper part to play
in the administration of justice. The court has given its stamp of approval to
mediation and it is now the legal profession which must become fully aware of
and acknowledge its value. The profession can no longer with impunity shrug
aside reasonable requests to mediate.”
“The
court is entitled to take an unreasonable refusal into account, even when it
occurs before the start of formal proceedings.”
To
read the whole judgment, please click here.
·
John
Sturrock says that the mediator's job is to bridge the communications gap. And
Mediation actually has a remarkably successful
record.
Click
here
to read the article "Finding effective solutions to disputes", Business &
Finance Magazine, March 2005.
·
John
Sturrock explains, in an interview with The Firm
Magazine, that even though Scotland has been slower to accept mediation than
England, the momentum is gathering and acceptance of its benefits has never been
greater.
Click
here
to read the full interview “Its Good to Talk”, The Firm Magazine, March
2005.
·
Click
here to
read the article “Personal Injury Claims to be Fast-tracked by New Service”, The Firm Magazine, April
2005.
We are delighted to
announce the appointment of Steve McCann as Business Support Administrator.
In June, Steve will replace
Also joining the Core
team is
For some fun and an
interactive mediation experience in which to try out your mediation expertise,
click here.
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Our
opportunity is to transform the culture of conflict from coercion and
confrontation to consensus and cooperation