Calgary judges volunteer time to alleviate backlog in family law cases - Action News
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Calgary judges volunteer time to alleviate backlog in family law cases

Six Calgary judges have volunteered their time to help alleviate a massive backlog in the courts for cases involving family matters, CBC News has learned.

A week of special family court applications will be heard in June

Exterior image of the Calgary Court Centre.
The Alberta Crown Prosecution Service has stayed a charge against Justice John Shaw. (Meghan Grant/CBC)

Six Calgary judges have volunteered their time to help alleviate a massive backlog in the courts for cases involving family matters.

Starting in June, seniorCourt of Queen's Bench judges have committed to work aweekabove and beyond their regular court schedulesto accommodate five half-day family court applications, according to Michelle Somers, executive legal officer to the chief justice.

The sixare supernumerary judges, meaning they are senior judges working part-time, saidCourt of Queen's Bench JusticeCharleneAnderson.

Andersonisco-chair of the court's family lawsteeringcommittee, tasked with looking at ways to improve court access on family law matters.

Anderson said Calgary families dealing with custody cases are waiting about one year to have an afternoon before a justice.

While Anderson said she was pleased with the judges' offer, she noted it's just a temporary fix.

"We have vacancies in Alberta.We need those filled. We need the new positions that the government has promised us, we need those filled," she said.

"The supernumeraries were very conscious of the fact that they didn't want this to be something we could rely on, but rather it wasan urgent sort of stop gap measure that they were prepared to give us this time in orderto address some of the concerns that we were all expressing," Anderson said.

The judges volunteered their time for special applications involving:

  • child custody and access
  • child and spousal support
  • mobility (when one parent wants to move with kids)

For half-day applications, the judges read materials related to the case in the morning and sit in the afternoon.

Alberta's judge shortage has been describedbyCourt of Queen's Bench Chief Justice Neil Wittmann as a "crisis" in the past.

The volunteer commitmentcomes as Alberta deals withwidespread shortages in the justice system despite four new judicial appointments last month.

The federal government is also attempting to alleviate Alberta's backlogs with the creation of 12 new positions on the court announced in latestfederal budget.