I have often been forced down the lawyer path of giving construction dispute advice with the preamble of β€œon the one hand, and on the other”, I was thus somewhat surprised to read that Helen Garthwaite (23 June, page 80) has the confidence to take a firm view.

She was pleading the case for judge mediators and had noted that β€œInterestingly some mediation clauses specify that the mediator shall be … A lawyer”. This, she suggested, was because clients β€œlove” judges.

Well, β€œinterestingly”, her article began with the word β€œCynics” (which describes most folk in construction) and she should therefore not be surprised that the interpretation I put on this β€˜lawyer-preference’ is not that clients value judges but that lawyers – who instigate all the changes in quite serviceable standard form (if the parties do what they have agreed to do – having lost income to arbitration or adjudication are seeking to embed themselves in mediation and thus guarantee their pensions.

John Wilding, John Wilding & Co

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