DIVORCE LAW REFORM - GOVERNMENT PROPOSES TO REPEAL PART II OF THE
FAMILY LAW ACT 1996
16 Jan 2001 12:00 AM
Part II does not meet Government objectives of saving marriages or
helping divorcing couples to resolve problems with a minimum of
acrimony
The Government intends to ask Parliament to repeal Part II of the
Family Law Act 1996, the Lord Chancellor, Lord Irvine, announced
today. The provisions of Part II of the Act in relation to divorce
have not been implemented. Compulsory information meetings, intended
to help couples either to save their marriages or to end them with
minimum distress and acrimony, are central to Part II. Different
types of information meetings have been tested in pilot schemes for
two years. But the research concludes that none of the six models of
meeting was good enough for the implementation of Part II on a
nationwide basis, the Lord Chancellor said.
The information meetings pilot schemes were launched in June 1997.
Six models of information meeting were piloted. The programme was
completed in June 1999 , when the Lord Chancellor confirmed that
preliminary results of the pilot schemes were disappointing. The
Final Evaluation Report was presented to the Lord Chancellor by the
Newcastle Centre for Family Studies in September 2000. The Lord
Chancellor expressed his gratitude to Professor Janet Walker and the
research team at Newcastle University for the very detailed and
informative report which they had produced.
The research showed that, although those attending valued the
provision of information, the information meetings were not effective
in helping most people to save their marriages, as these meetings
came too late. The evidence showed that the meeting tended to incline
those who were uncertain about their marriage towards divorce. They
were too inflexible to provide people with information tailored to
their personal needs. In addition, in the great majority of cases,
only the person petitioning for divorce attended the meeting, but
marriage counselling, conciliatory divorce and mediation depend for
their success on the willing involvement of both parties.
The Lord Chancellor said that his concerns did not only relate to
information meetings. The complex procedures in Part II would be
likely to lead to significant delay and uncertainty in resolving
arrangements for the future. The Government was concerned that this
delay would not be in the best interests of either couples or their
children.
''The Act''s complexity is likely to cause a great deal of uncertainty
over the divorce process which will be unhelpful for families at what
is always a difficult and emotional time.''
The Lord Chancellor indicated that he does not believe Part II will
fulfil the principles of Part I, which focus on saving saveable
marriages, and where marriages do break down, bringing them to an end
with the minimum distress to the parties and children affected. He
emphasised the Government''s commitment to achieving these principles.
Lord Irvine said,
''The Government is committed to supporting marriage and to supporting
families when relationships fail, especially when there are children
involved. But this very comprehensive research, together with other
recent valuable research in the field, has shown that Part II of the
Family Law Act is not the best way of achieving those aims. The
Government is not therefore satisfied that it would be right to
proceed with the implementation of Part II and proposes to ask
Parliament to repeal it once a suitable legislative opportunity
occurs''
The Government will build on the evidence provided by research to
consider how best to provide families experiencing relationship
difficulties, in particular those with children, with the information
and support that they want at the time that they need it.
Lord Irvine said
''The Government has taken forward a wide range of measures over the
past three years to help families, including establishing the new
Children''s Fund and the Children and Family Courts Advisory and
Support Service, improving maternity and parental leave arrangements,
and increasing funding for marriage and relationship support to a
total of #5 million per annum by 2002-2003''.
Notes to editors
1. The Family Law Act received Royal Assent on 4 July 1996. Parts
I, and IV (relating to domestic violence) are now in force. Part
III (which amended the Legal Aid Act 1988 in relation to the
provision of state-funded mediation) has been incorporated in the
Funding Code for the Community Legal Service following repeal of
the 1988 Act by the Access to Justice Act 1999. Part II of the Act
would change the arrangements for divorce. As well as requiring
married couples to attend information meetings, a system of
divorce as a process over time would replace current arrangements.
The decision regarding Part II does not affect section 22 relating
to the funding of marriage support services, which is in force and
will remain so.
2. Members of the public may obtain a copy of the 96 page summary
of the Final Evaluation Report and the 5 page Key Findings from
the Research from Peter Fell, Family Policy Division, Lord
Chancellor''s Department (tel. 020 7210 1249), or on the LCD
website: http://www.open.gov.uk/lcd (see ''What''s New''). Members of
the press may obtain copies from the LCD press office (tel. 020
7210 8512/13); the 3 volumes of the full report will be available
on the LCD website.
3. Other relevant research studies are ''Paths to Justice'' by
Professor Hazel Genn; ''Monitoring Publicly Funded Family
Mediation'' by Professor Gwynn Davis; and ''Family Lawyers'' by John
Eekelaar, Mavis Maclean and Sarah Beinart.