Author Archives: Admin2

Petition for Inquiry into Medical Evidence in our courts

Link to: Inquiry into Medical Evidence petition

FAIR has put together a paper version of the petition calling for a Public Inquiry into the medical evidence used in our courts and administrative tribunals. It is the same as the one we have asked you to sign online.

The Ontario Legislature ONLY accepts ORIGINAL petitions, on paper, with ‘hand signed’ signatures. There are strict rules for petitions so NDP MPP Jagmeet Singh’s office has generously agreed to receive the paper petition in his office and present it at Queen’s Park.

If you or a loved one were injured in an auto accident, at work or elsewhere wouldn’t you want an honest, unbiased and qualified medical opinion/report of your injuries? That’s just not happening in Ontario for injured and disabled individuals who make a claim for benefits through their private or public insurers. What if it was your fault that something happens to someone else? You’d want them to have the best chance at recovery wouldn’t you?

Please print, sign and circulate the petition because quality and qualified medical evidence shouldn’t be something we need – it should be something we already have because there is no real justice without it.

Make a copy and mail the ORIGINAL copies to: MPP Jagmeet Singh, Room 172 Main Legislative Building, Queen’s Park 111 Wellesley St. Toronto, ON M7A 1A5

Thanks for being part of the collective voice needed for change!

Other On-line petition: https://www.change.org/p/the-legislative-assembly-of-ontario-support-a-public-inquiry-into-medical-evidence-in-ontario-s-courts-and-tribunals (these signatures are also important to make our point elsewhere and it gives those on-line the power and opportunity to use their voice)

Ontario Auto Insurance – is No-Fault coverage really worth it anymore?

TORONTO, June 1, 2016 / – Today is Auto Insurance Awareness Day and it is the day that Ontario drivers lose $1 million in auto insurance coverage.

Ontario’s wealthy insurance companies continue to see high profit levels while drivers, who pay the highest premiums in Canada, continue to see their coverage eroded to the lowest level in 25 years.

“It isn’t just Ontario’s most injured auto accident survivors that are being asked to pay the price for higher insurer profits” says Rhona DesRoches, Chair of FAIR, “the length of time that an injured person can collect from their insurer has a much shorter time frame and this will affect the public supports systems we have in the province.”

Insurers will be reducing the duration limit of medical and rehabilitation benefits from 10 years to 5 years for all claimants (except children) and stripping millions out of coverage.

“For those that are not working, such as students at the time of an accident, the cuts are really going to hurt if you are seriously injured” says DesRoches. “These individuals will now only receive $185.00 a week for 2 years instead of $320 a week over a lifetime if they suffer a complete inability to carry on a normal life. This represents hundreds of thousands of dollars those victims won’t be able to access and these costs will be passed on to the unsuspecting taxpayer.”

Ontario’s social nets and healthcare coverage are already under significant stress with the number of individuals dependent on Ontario Disability Support Program (ODSP) considerably higher since the last round of auto insurance cuts in 2010.

The Minister of Finance’s recent report on the healthcare costs of treating accident victims revealed that taxpayers are paying the lion’s share of victim’s medical costs with a shortfall in 2013/14 of almost a quarter of a billion dollars that year.

“We have to ask ourselves, do we already have publicly funded auto insurance when the taxpayer is already subsidizing so much of the costs?” asked DesRoches.

The Ontario government recently stripped away the Charter right of victims to access our civil courts to hold their insurer accountable by setting up a new hearings system to handle the tens of thousands of unpaid claims each year. So far this year there has been over 18,000 claims filed by victims who have been denied the benefits they’ve paid for.

Auto insurance in Ontario is changing and resources for victims will have to come from the taxpayers in the future. Ontario needs to make a plan and commit to deciding whether No-Fault insurance is still working for consumers.

HSPRN Report, “Cost of Public Health Services for Ontario Residents Injured as a Result of a Motor Vehicle Accident”

‘FAIR – supporting auto accident victims through advocacy and education’

SOURCE: FAIR Association of Victims for Accident Insurance Reform. For further information: fairautoinsurance@gmail.com

Have you made your optional benefits decision yet?

Have you made your optional benefits decision yet

Are Your Ontario Motor Vehicle Injury Benefits in Order?

Thankfully most drivers and passengers who are in motor vehicle collisions do not sustain serious injuries. Yet it is a depressing fact that every year more than 10,000 of them do in Ontario alone.

Astounding – applications for hearings at FSCO up to March 31 2016

FSCO Mediation filed in Feb/March (compared to earlier figures that incl Jan 2016)   10,961 application (+ 2742 in Jan)

FSCO Arbitration filed in Feb/March (compared to earlier figures that incl Jan 2016)   4,206 applications (+737 in Jan)

FSCO Total med/arb from Jan to March 31 2016 = 18,646

FSCO Total open files cases pending to March 31 2016 = 26,623

Med-Arb-Timelines 2007-Mar 2016

Copy of Med-Arb-Timelines 2007-Jan 2016

AABS Statistics

Automobile Accident Benefits Service – Statistics
  April 2016 May 1 – May 12, 2016
# of Applications received 137 112
# of Case Conferences scheduled 0 29
# of Case Conferences conducted 0 0
# of Hearings conducted 0 0

 

Support a PUBLIC INQUIRY into the medical evidence in Ontario’s Courts and Tribunals and sign our petition!

Our goal is to get 1000 signatures and we need your support. You can read more and sign the petition: http://ow.ly/96mQ300dG5h

Recognition of bias of Ontario IME provider in our courts

http://canlii.ca/t/gpqm3

Positions of the Parties

[4]                    The plaintiff’s position is two-fold. Firstly, the plaintiff submits that the defendant is not entitled to an independent medical examination by a psychiatrist as the plaintiff was never treated by a psychiatrist and because there is insufficient evidence of why an assessment by a psychiatrist is warranted. The plaintiff asks that the motion be dismissed. Secondly, the plaintiff submits that Dr. Monte Bail, the psychiatrist chosen by the defendants, has demonstrated such clear and definitive defense bias in many previous cases that the court should decline to make any order allowing any independent medical examination by Dr. Monte Bail in particular.

[5]                    The defendants’ position is that they can decide what speciality of medical doctor they wish to have examine the plaintiff. The defendants submit that to properly defend the claim, they need to provide opinion evidence as to the plaintiff’s depression and mental healthrelated injuries from a psychiatrist and that they can select any qualified psychiatrist of their choice.  Dr. Monte Bail is the psychiatrist of choice selected by Mr. Todd McCarthy, trial counsel for the defendants, in spite of objections raised by the plaintiff as to previous findings that Dr. Bail was not credible and failed to honour his written undertaking to the court in Rule 4.1.01.  The defendants ask that the motion be granted.  A tentative date for the examination by Dr. Bail has been booked for May 30, 2016.

[26]               While it is unnecessary for me to decide the second issue of the relief requested by the plaintiffnamely, whether to not allow Dr. Monte Bail to conduct a defense psychiatric examination due to his failure to adhere to the principles of fairness, objectiveness and impartiality and his defense biasI make the following observations and comments by way of obiter dicta. I find the plaintiff’s argument on this issue compelling.  Rule 4.1.01 makes it clear that an expert’s duty to the court prevails over any obligation owed by the expert to a party. The Supreme Court of Canada has held that an expert witness who is unable or unwilling to comply is not qualified to give expert opinion evidence and should not be permitted to do so. (See White Burgess Langille Inman v. Abbott and Haliburton Co.2015 SCC 23 (CanLII), [2015] 2 S.C.R. 182).

[27]               When an expert and that expert’s report is notably partisan, acts as judge and jury, advocates for the insurer rather than being impartial, is not credible, and fails to honour the undertaking to the court to be fair, objective, and non-partisan, it directly affects a party’s right to a fair trial.

[28]               Kane J. in Bruff-Murphy v. Gunawardena2016 ONSC 7 (CanLII)held that Dr. Bail was not a credible witness and that he failed to honour his obligation and written undertaking to be fair, objective and non-partisan pursuant to Rule 4.1.01 (see paras. 53-125). He did not meet the requirements under Rule 53.03. Justice Kane found that Dr. Bail’s report and testimony was not of a psychiatric nature but was presented under the guise of expert medical testimony and the common initial presumption that a member of the medical profession will be objective and tell the truth.  He further held that the purpose of Rule 4.1.01 is to prohibit and prevent such testimony in the guise of an expert, and that “Dr. Bail undertook and thereby promised to not do what he did in front of this jury.” Importantly, Justice Kane held that, “I will not qualify witnesses as experts in the future whose reports present an approach similar to that of Dr. Bail in this case.”

[29]               Additional critical findings in relation to Dr. Bail can be found in Gordon v. Greig (2007), 46 C.C.L.T. (3d) 212 (Ont. S.C.J.), at paras. 43-48;Sidhu v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co., 2014 CarswellOnt 18595 (F.S.C.OArb.), at para. 68; Sohi v. ING Insurance Co. of Canada, 2004 CarswellOnt 3236 (F.S.C.O. Arb.), at paras. 35-41; Gabremichael v. Zurich Insurance Co., 1999 CarswellOnt 4480 (F.S.C.O. Arb.), at para. 132; and Rocca v. AXA Insurance (Canada), 1999 CarswellOnt 5506 (F.S.C.O. Arb.), at para. 66.

[30]               The recent changes to the Rules to require experts to undertake to the court to be fair, objective, and non-partisan has done little if anything to curb the use of certain favoured biased “hired guns” by the parties. The consequences of an expert signing the undertaking and failing to honour their obligation in their expert report or evidence is simply the rebuke of the court.  This does nothing to prevent that same expert from being further retained and repeating the process over again in other trials as long as trial counsel are willing to retain them.

[31]               Rule 33.02 provides that the court shall name the health practitioner by whom the independent medical examination is to be conducted. It could be argued that the court, in the exercise of its discretion, should therefore consider and determine in appropriate cases whether or not the proposed named health practitioner is biased in favour of a party on the balance of probabilities and therefore fails to qualify as an expert under Rule 4.1.01. The court’s discretion would therefore include the discretion not to name a particular health practitioner if that health practicioner fails to meet the criteria set out inRule 4.1.01 on the basis of bias. While it would be uncommon to find an expert biased and impartial, such an expert so found should not be allowed to have any role in the court process.

[32]               Considering the highly intrusive nature of these independent medical assessments, and the serious issue of ensuring a fair trial, the plaintiff’s argument to deny the right to have an expert that has been found to be biased conduct the assessment in the first place is worthy of consideration in appropriate circumstances considering the potential for a miscarriage of justice that can be caused by such an expert biased in favour of one party, particularly in front of a jury.

Conclusion

[33]               As the defendants have failed to establish that they are entitled to an independent medical examination to be conducted by a psychiatrist, the motion is dismissed. Costs of the motion are reserved.

[34]               If counsel are unable to agree on costs, I will receive brief written submissions on or before May 31, 2016. Thereafter, I will determine the issue of costs based on the materials filed.

Also see: http://www.fairassociation.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/Bail-Monte-Psychiatrist.pdf

Better you know than not – regarding your privacy

The RCMP has had key to ‘unlock’ BlackBerry messages since as early as 2010, report says
A report by Vice News on Thursday, citing court documents, details how the Royal Canadian Mounted Police obtained a key to unlock messages sent between BlackBerry phones as early as 2010. The situation stands in stark contrast to the clash that erupted between Apple Inc. and the U.S. government earlier this year when the U.S. tech firm refused to redesign its software to let the FBI bypass encryption on an iPhone used by a shooter in the San Bernardino attacks.

http://business.financialpost.com/fp-tech-desk/personal-tech/the-rcmp-has-had-key-to-unlock-blackberry-devices-since-as-early-as-2010-report-says

How Short URLs Could Reveal Your Home Address and Get You Hacked

It turns out that the simplicity and convenience of short links has an unintended consequence. If the seemingly random strings of characters, or token, after the domain name (the “1f9lqAP” in bit.ly/1f9lqAP, for example) is too short, then someone with enough computing power can guess random strings and potentially stumble upon something you might have wanted to keep private.

http://motherboard.vice.com/read/how-short-urls-could-reveal-your-home-address-and-get-you-hacked?trk_source=recommended

Your Cell Phone GPS is Tracking Your Every Move

As you move around, and use your phone for various different purposes, you are creating a record of your usage and your location. This is captured in what is referred to as a “Call Detail Record” and would be received from the service provider in response to a subpoena. As your phone attaches and reattaches to different cell towers, it becomes possible to see in which direction your phone is traveling.

http://www.lawtechnologytoday.org/2016/03/cell-phone-gps-tracking-every-move/

Canada Social Report Social Assistance Summaries, Ontario, 2015 Published March 2016

In 2014-15

894,954 individuals were dependent on Ontario Works and Ontario Disability Support Program

http://www.canadasocialreport.ca/SocialAssistanceSummaries/ON.pdf

Could Ontario auto insurance really drop 15% starting next year?

The price of auto insurance in Ontario is the notoriously thorny issue that drove hundreds of tow truck drivers to converge on Queen’s Park yesterday in a protest aimed at efforts to regulate their industry.

http://www.insurancebusiness.ca/news/could-ontario-auto-insurance-really-drop-15-starting-next-year-205425.aspx

The Problem With Experts

Litigation and arbitration are teeming with experts these days.

There are technical experts to explain what happened. Others to say whose fault it was. And another bunch to quantify the damages.

Almost every sizable case has at least one expert on the witness list. Well, never just one. Each side must have their own expert. And, of course, they never agree.                     http://www.slaw.ca/2016/04/07/the-problem-with-experts/