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ICO takes 17 months to reach Whitehall JR decision
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Call for reform of cumbersome rules on email service | News
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By Michael Cross2021-04-09T09:19:00+01:00
The blanket ban on solicitors making unsolicited approaches to clients could act as a barrier to access to justice, according to a solicitor campaigning for a relaxation of the rule. Tobias Haynes, a dispute resolution specialist at Midlands firm Martin Kaye Solicitors, last week opened an online petition for solicitors to be allowed to contact potential clients by email or letter.
Haynes: ‘unnecessary regulatory encroachment’ has impact on access to justice
Haynes said his idea is to return to the situation before 2019, when the code of conduct merely barred unsolicited approaches in person or by phone call.
Landmark court ruling turns client losses back on Sipp provider
By Michael Klimes 1
st April 2021 12:36 pm
The Court of Appeal has overturned a landmark judgment, ruling that a Sipp provider was in fact responsible for their ex-client’s losses.
The judgment marks a watershed over how much responsibility a Sipp provider has to vet unregulated investments.
It also brings to a conclusion several years of legal wrangling between Russell Adams and his old Sipp provider Options UK Personal Pensions LLP.
Options, formerly known as Carey Pensions UK, was fighting to maintain a key judgment it won in May 2020 against its former client Adams.
The Home Office is coming under growing pressure to reveal its submission to the Independent Review of Administrative Law after rejecting the Gazette’s request – made under the Freedom of Information Act – for disclosure.
The department, which had the second highest number of judicial reviews lodged against it of any public body in 2019, confirmed last year that it submitted a response to the review, which is being led by Lord Faulks QC.
Responding to the
Gazette’s FoI request last week, the department said it decided the information was exempt from disclosure under section 36(2)(c) of the act.
The Home Office said there was a ‘strong argument’ that to disclose material under active consideration by the panel, and in due course by the government, would undermine the effective conduct of public affairs.
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