Anna Bradley, Chair of the SRA Board
Hello again, Cambridge & District, thank you once again for the opportunity to write for you. May I wish you all a Happy New Year. Hopefully 2021 will be full of more cheer than 2020.
What we know for certain is that it’s that time of year for casting our eyes on to our crystal balls and predicting what will happen in the next 12 months. We all love to think ahead, and you have probably read some great articles already in this edition along these lines.
Of course, a look back at the same series of articles from last year will show a distinct lack of forecasts mentioning global pandemics that will affect us all personally and professionally! And hands up, we and the legal sector as a whole were no different. Perhaps unsurprisingly, when we canvassed 700 solicitors in February to ask them what they thought were the biggest risks for the coming year, more than a month after Covid-19 had been classified as a new disease, there were only three who named it as a concern.
The first few months of the pandemic, as you know, brought real challenges. As our recently-published Risk Outlook for 2020/21 showed we saw a tripling in phishing scams in first two months of lockdown, a total of £2.5mn stolen in cyberattacks in first half of 2020 and banks seeing a 49 per cent increase in ‘investment scams’ in one month.
In general though, the sector has adapted really well and really quickly and who knows, we might even have some learning for the future.
It will of course be some time before the implications of the Covid-19 pandemic are fully understood. We already know that prolonged periods of homeworking are bringing more and new cybercrime attempts. Delays to court hearings will continue to impact on access to justice, while an empty city centre will impact on those firms that can’t work from home or which need that shop front to attract clients.
Don’t lose sight of perennial risks
But of course the pandemic – or indeed Brexit – should not mask the long-standing risks that we cover in our Risk Outlook For example, the Government’s National Risk Assessment of money laundering still rated the legal sector as high risk, and its findings mirrored our own. Firms and the sector just can’t afford to drop its guard when it comes to tackling money laundering, so do make sure your risk assessment is up to date. And on cybercrime and information security, remember that training your staff is the single most important thing to do.
Keeping up to date matters more now than ever before. We will be doing more on innovation and technology – an area that the sector has adopted swiftly over recent months – so do look for the opportunities and use our helplines and innovation space to explore your ideas safely and effectively.
And of course this year will also see us introduce our Solicitors Qualifying Examination, which you can read about this elsewhere in the magazine. One of its objectives is to remove barriers to increased diversity and you will see us doing more to gather in robust data on diversity, so that we can all understand better what is happening. We are particularly concerned that solicitors with disabilities might not be declaring this as the sector seems to be way below the national average when it comes to numbers.
Getting ahead of the game
Prevention is always so much better than cure. So this is a good time to stop, look and listen. Do take time to look at the business and assess if and where you may be vulnerable, so you can take steps to protect both your interests and those of your clients.
None of us know what 2021 will hold so building resilience today can only help with tomorrow.
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