I am VERY surprised this did not get posted anywhere (or else my search skills plain suck)
This would have loads of implications for hobbyists & providers alike
Basically they are eliminating the court process for all non-criminal charges
So anything from a speeding ticket to a bylaw infraction would be handled online (which means more money + convictions for the province)
Ontario is looking to replace court process with an "independent expert" decision maker for provincial offenses and allow only online submissions, no direct appearances and no questioning of witnesses or police officers.
Here's how it will change:
Current in-court, paper-based system for minor POA infractions
Option to pay the fine or request a trial in court to dispute the charge.
Paper forms must be completed to dispute charges and the defendant may be required to attend the municipal court office in person to request a trial.
Trial process requires the participation of a justice of the peace, prosecutor, enforcement officer, etc.
Defendant and/or his or her representative must attend the trial in-person.
Ontario’s vision for an online administrative monetary penalty system for minor POA infractions
Option to pay penalty immediately or elect to dispute it through online system.
Information needed to initiate and support dispute is entered online.
Dispute resolution process managed by unbiased expert decision maker.
Convenient 24/7 access to online system that provides information, guidance and access to unbiased expert decision-makers. No need to travel to a courthouse.
Public input is between March 3rd to April 14th.
http://news.ontario.ca/mag/en/2015/...less-expensive-ways-to-challenge-tickets.html
http://www.attorneygeneral.jus.gov.on.ca/english/poa_consultation.asp
This would have loads of implications for hobbyists & providers alike
Basically they are eliminating the court process for all non-criminal charges
So anything from a speeding ticket to a bylaw infraction would be handled online (which means more money + convictions for the province)
Ontario is looking to replace court process with an "independent expert" decision maker for provincial offenses and allow only online submissions, no direct appearances and no questioning of witnesses or police officers.
Here's how it will change:
Current in-court, paper-based system for minor POA infractions
Option to pay the fine or request a trial in court to dispute the charge.
Paper forms must be completed to dispute charges and the defendant may be required to attend the municipal court office in person to request a trial.
Trial process requires the participation of a justice of the peace, prosecutor, enforcement officer, etc.
Defendant and/or his or her representative must attend the trial in-person.
Ontario’s vision for an online administrative monetary penalty system for minor POA infractions
Option to pay penalty immediately or elect to dispute it through online system.
Information needed to initiate and support dispute is entered online.
Dispute resolution process managed by unbiased expert decision maker.
Convenient 24/7 access to online system that provides information, guidance and access to unbiased expert decision-makers. No need to travel to a courthouse.
Public input is between March 3rd to April 14th.
http://news.ontario.ca/mag/en/2015/...less-expensive-ways-to-challenge-tickets.html
http://www.attorneygeneral.jus.gov.on.ca/english/poa_consultation.asp