Letter to Attorney General Downey about Civil Rules Changes

                                                                                                   

Kristyn Wong-Tam

MPP TORONTO CENTRE

 

May 28, 2025

The Honourable Doug Downey

Attorney General of Ontario

Ministry of the Attorney General

720 Bay Street, 11th Floor

Toronto, ON

M7A 2S9

 

RE: Request for Extension of Implementation Timelines for Civil Rules Reform

Dear Attorney General Downey,

As you know, on April 1, 2025, Ontario’s Civil Rules Review Working Group made their consultation paper open to public feedback. Their proposed changes have raised serious and consistent concerns from across Ontario's legal community. A sweeping coalition of legal experts are ringing alarm bells that problematic civil rules are being rushed. I am requesting that your Ministry extend the timelines for the proposed civil rules reforms.

The modernization of Ontario's civil rules is welcome. Ontario's civil rules have not faced updates to a similar degree since 1985. The infrequent cadence of these changes is exactly why the Ontario government must get this process right. The proposed changes would have sweeping consequences in Ontario's courts.

The shift between Phase One and Phase Two of this consultation is significant, hasty, and unexplained. For example, Phase One reflected stakeholder feedback and supported maintaining oral discovery. Phase Two called for the elimination of oral discovery — something that I do not believe a single significant stakeholder supports. Phase Two was also critiqued for lacking trauma-informed safeguards. Proposed rules could now force survivors to share sensitive documents with alleged perpetrators. Stakeholders are saying that data and experience from court workers were sidelined in Phase Two. Rushing now could limit access to justice and prevent parties from reaching fair settlements sooner. This could result in more costly avoidable trials — making court backlogs worse. Ontario's legal community has expressed grave concerns and their clear warnings must be heeded for everyone's benefit.

Many legal experts are requesting an extension to save Ontarians time and money in the long run. The proposed implementation date is January 1, 2026. The proposed rules are not yet finalized. After being finalized, new rules must be approved and published. Court workers, judges, and lawyers must then be educated, trained, and ready to operationalize them. January 1, 2026, is an unrealistic timeline given what must still be done. Civil rules changes are too consequential to be rushed.

I echo the calls of legal experts for you and request that the new civil rules be finalized with realistic timeframes and meaningful collaboration with the very stakeholders that are expected to operationalize them. I believe that everyone involved in this process wants Ontario's civil rules modernization to be successful. I know that by listening to legal practitioners, the Ontario government can get this right.

Thank you for your attention to this important matter. I remain committed and available to work with you to ensure that reforms to our justice system increase access to justice for all Ontarians. I look forward to your response.

Warm regards,

Kristyn Wong-Tam

Member of Provincial Parliament for Toronto Centre

Shadow Attorney General

120 Carlton Street, Suite 401 

Toronto, Ontario

M5A 4K2






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