Sunday, February 8, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. Tribunal Paves Way For Cyber Solutions To Small Claims Disputes

The Canadian Press, 20 Mar, 2017 12:10 PM
    VICTORIA — B.C. residents will soon be able to sidestep a physical courtroom and fight many small claims disputes online.
     
    Starting June 1, the Ministry of Justice says the Civil Resolution Tribunal will begin accepting small claims cases involving amounts of $5,000 or less.
     
    The tribunal is Canada’s first online mechanism for resolving homeowner association and small claim disputes, but is currently restricted to property issues valued at under than $5,000.
     
    Once it begins accepting cases, use of the online tribunal will be mandatory for most disputes up to the $5,000 value.
     
    The Justice Ministry has also increased the limit of a small claim case to $35,000 in an effort to free the justice system to resolve other matters.
     
    The ministry says in a release that the new tribunal is the first-ever on-line panel integrated directly into the public justice system, offering tips that may immediately resolve some issues, while providing advice or expert decisions if a dispute reaches an impasse.
     
    "The expansion of the Civil Resolution Tribunal into small claims under $5,000 and the increase in small claims court jurisdiction to $35,000 will make it easier for British Columbians to resolve their legal disputes more affordably, and with less complexity," says Attorney General and Minister of Justice Suzanne Anton. 
     
    The changes are a giant step forward for access to justice, she says.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Montreal Woman Manpreet Kooner Denied Entry To United States Told She Needed Visa

    Montreal Woman Manpreet Kooner Denied Entry To United States Told She Needed Visa
    Manpreet Kooner says she was turned away at a crossing along the Quebec-Vermont border on Sunday and informed she needed a valid visa.

    Montreal Woman Manpreet Kooner Denied Entry To United States Told She Needed Visa

    Khizr Khan Cancels Toronto Talk After Travel Privileges 'Being Reviewed': Organizer

    Khizr Khan Cancels Toronto Talk After Travel Privileges 'Being Reviewed': Organizer
    The organizer of a luncheon featuring a speech by the father of an American Muslim soldier killed in Iraq said Monday that the event was cancelled because the man's "travel privileges are being reviewed."

    Khizr Khan Cancels Toronto Talk After Travel Privileges 'Being Reviewed': Organizer

    2 Charged After RCMP Seize Steroids, Gun In Raids In Owen Sound, Ont., Area

    2 Charged After RCMP Seize Steroids, Gun In Raids In Owen Sound, Ont., Area
    The Mounties say search warrants were executed late last week at a home in Sauble Beach, Ont., and a business in Owen Sound, Ont.

    2 Charged After RCMP Seize Steroids, Gun In Raids In Owen Sound, Ont., Area

    New Trump Travel Ban Puts Renewed Pressure On Trudeau To Speak Out

    New Trump Travel Ban Puts Renewed Pressure On Trudeau To Speak Out
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is still skirting demands to speak out against the U.S. government's newly revised ban on immigration from specific countries.

    New Trump Travel Ban Puts Renewed Pressure On Trudeau To Speak Out

    Alleged Victim Says Bertrand Charest Kissed Her On The Lips When She Was 16

    Alleged Victim Says Bertrand Charest Kissed Her On The Lips When She Was 16
    Another alleged victim of ex-national ski coach Bertrand Charest has taken the stand at his sex-assault trial.

    Alleged Victim Says Bertrand Charest Kissed Her On The Lips When She Was 16

    Proposed Class Action Against B.C. Says Foreign-Buyers' Tax Unconstitutional

    Proposed Class Action Against B.C. Says Foreign-Buyers' Tax Unconstitutional
    VANCOUVER — A proposed class-action lawsuit says British Columbia's 15-per-cent tax on foreign nationals who buy homes in the Vancouver area is unfairly prejudiced against people from Asia, who have historically faced discrimination in the province.

    Proposed Class Action Against B.C. Says Foreign-Buyers' Tax Unconstitutional