P.E.I. court system most efficient in Canada
Terrence McEachern | CBC News | Posted: August 12, 2016 9:25 PM | Last Updated: August 12, 2016
Senator says delays in other provinces result in cases getting thrown out
P.E.I.'s court system has some delays, but those delays are nowhere near the delays experienced in other provinces, according to an interim report released Friday by the Canadian Senate Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs.
And as such, P.E.I. has set the standard as the most efficient court system in Canada, said Newfoundland and Labrador Senator George Baker.
Most efficient
Baker, the committee's vice-chair, explained it usually takes P.E.I. courts between five and seven months to have a criminal matter heard. At the other extreme is Quebec, where some matters have taken up to two years to simply get a trial date, he said.
Unreasonable delays
In other provinces, unreasonable delays have resulted in cases being thrown out of court, he said.
"You have examples like that on a daily basis … right throughout Canada. Fortunately, the province of Prince Edward Island stands out in that it does not have these cases. And, it is simply because the judges and everybody in the courtroom, including the police [and lawyers], are ever conscious of this delay problem," he said.
Baker noted that the Supreme Court of Canada recently set timelines on how long cases should take. Cases in P.E.I. courts that do take a long time usually involve "exceptional circumstances," he said.
Moving forward, Baker said the committee will be taking a closer look at P.E.I.'s court system as an example of how delays should be handled for the final report in March.
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