As of November 1st, new rules regulating paralegals went into effect in Utah.

According to the new rules, licensed paralegal practitioners (referred to as LPPs) will be allowed to practice law without a lawyer’s supervision in cases involving the following:

Temporary separation, divorce, parentage, cohabitant abuse, civil stalking, custody and support, and name change
Forcible entry and detainer
Debt collection matters in which the dollar amount in issue does not exceed the statutory limit for small claims cases

For these cases, LPPs can assist clients in the following ways:

Choose, fill out, file and complete service of legal forms
Review and explain court orders or another party’s documents
Advocate for a client in a mediation
Complete settlement agreements after a negotiation

The Utah task force in charge of limited legal licensing expressed to the Utah Supreme Court the purpose of allowing LPPs is to “help people who can’t afford a lawyer or who don’t want to pay for one” navigate the legal system. Which explains why notably missing is the ability for LPPs to appear in court on behalf of a client.

Up until now, Washington was the only state to license non lawyers to practice law. Now, Utah has announced class offerings for paralegals to become licensed, with exams being held this coming Spring.

With these rules, licensed paralegals will be able to help take the workload off busy attorneys. The question many people are asking now is: will other states follow suit?

More Info: https://www.cowenlaw.com/

Author's Bio: 

We focus on cases involving 18-wheelers and commercial vehicles, product liability, oil field accidents, and other cases involving death or catastrophic injury.