Manitoba aims to speed up family court, reduce emotional toll: chief justice
WINNIPEG — Manitoba is aiming to speed up family court so that divorces, child custody disputes and other matters don’t drag on for years.
Chief Justice Glenn Joyal of Manitoba Court of Queen’s Bench says coming changes are aimed at reducing not only the demands on court time, but also the toll taken on people involved.
“If you have a matter lingering in the Court of Queen’s Bench … for a period of three to four years, without even a trial date yet being set, you can almost assume and count on that delay as having significant implications for both the financial costs to the litigant and the emotional costs to the litigant,” Joyal said in an interview this week.
“Parties … ask, ‘How long is this going to last? How much more do I have to pay? At what point can we get closure?’ Well, if you can’t, as a system, answer those questions, there’s something foundationally deficient about what you’re offering as a judicial service.”

