Archive for October, 2013

Become A Mediator With Online Mediation Training In Texas

ADRMediator Training

Do you want to help others calmly solve problems and figure out proper solutions for any issues they may have? Mediation is commonly used for people who are going to court, whether it is because they are getting a divorce, filing a lawsuit, or disputing with someone else over belongings, property, and more. Those situations tend to get messy when there is no mediation. You can learn to talk to people and help them communicate better so that they can make an agreement with the person or people they are having trouble with. If this interests you, online mediation training in Texas is available.

When you do the online mediation training in Texas, you can learn the mediation techniques that you will use within your career. You will take hours of the training so that you are ready for any situation that may come your way. There is no need for you to have a law degree to become a mediator, but the training is a must. During training, you learn how to help clients settle cases and come to agreements after weighing in facts from each case, especially since every case will is different. As a mediator, you can relieve stress from the lives of your clients while earning a decent wage.

Jerry Ray Hall of ADR Services International, Inc. has been training mediators for over 30 years. Jerry Ray Hall has provided training to OSHA, NASA, Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Texas Governors office, Texas Department of Transportation and University of Mass. at Lowell.

Jerry Hall information on Zoominfo

 

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Information On Online Mediation Training In Texas

ADRMediator Training

Online mediation training in Texas is something that you can pursue from your own home if you are looking for a highly paying career that allows you to truly have a major impact. Mediators can make as much as $250,000 per year with only part time work. Although there are some deceptively inexpensive, or even free, online mediation training in Texas choices on the world wide web today, the best online mediation classes will be the type that actually give you college credit and will count towards your continuing education credits with the State Bar of Texas.

In the state of Texas, you are legally required to obtain a total of at least 40 hours of mediation training before you can work as a mediator. While it is possible to obtain these training hours either online, in person, or in any combination of the two, many people today find that it is easiest to do online mediation training in Texas entirely on the Internet. This allows you to take your course at your convenience and to make sure to really take your time to understand the material before you actually begin practicing as a mediator.

The following list will detail some of the things you might want to look for when you are searching for the best online mediation training course.

Choosing State Bar Approved Courses

The State Bar of Texas does approve certain mediation courses and since you will be working in the area of law it is essential that you choose a company offering mediation courses that are approved by the State Bar of Texas. Some companies, such as adrmediator.com, have been offering mediation training for more than 30 years, and selecting a company that has been offering Texas State Bar approved courses for a considerable time will help insure that you get the training you need.

Choosing The Right Trainers

All mediation courses are not created equal: you should ideally look for a course that has highly experienced instructors who are there for support when you need it. As you progress through your training you will inevitably have questions that may not be immediately answered in the training manuals. This is where the trainers come in: the best online mediation courses make their instructors available to students via email, live chat, or even on a live support line during business hours.

Knowing The Field of Mediation and Your Role As a Mediator

Mediation is a wide and varied field, and it is one of the most rapidly expanding areas in the legal arena. With more lawsuits being filed every day, there is no doubt that skilled mediators are desperately needed. Your role as a mediator will naturally vary based upon the case, but in general you are helping to resolve legal conflicts before they have to be decided by a judge. Your goal will be to ultimately serve your clients as well as possible, making both sides in the dispute feel as if they got a reasonable deal. Ultimately, most cases are far better resolved if they don’t reach the judge since the court costs and legal fees are considerably lower for both sides. Additionally, in your role as a mediator you will help people to save a considerable amount of time: the average case that is dealt with via a professional mediator will almost always resolved far more quickly than it would have had the case gone to court.

Getting Started as a Mediator

After completing your online mediation training in Texas, you will need to market your mediation skills to help get your practice off the ground. A good mediation school will give you the tips and guidance that you need to do effective marketing so that you can engage potential clients and grow your mediation business quickly. You will need to make contacts in a variety of fields to get your mediation business started. Most notably the legal field will be full of valuable contacts, as will the real estate field and the insurance field. Your online mediation training will teach you how to get your name out to the most influential people in these fields so that you can begin your new career!

Sources
http://www.mediators.bz/

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Online Mediation Training In Texas Is Important

ADRMediator Training

Online mediation training in Texas is very important for those who would like to enter into the field of mediation but have a very limited schedule. Online mediation training in Texas allows you to take courses in mediation without having to travel to a classroom. It also allows you to take the courses you need on your own schedule. That way if you work during the day, as most people do, you can choose to take the courses in the morning before work or in the evening after you get home from work. Mediation is an expanding field that is utilized by those who want to settle conflicts outside of the legal system.

Many people who are filing for a divorce choose instead to bypass the courts and instead opt for a mediation session. During mediation the tone is significantly different than the feeling you get inside of a divorce courtroom. The former couple sits down and talks out their differences with the help of a mediator who acts as a third party to the conversation. The mediators job is to keep people calm, this helps steer the conversation away from being confrontational. It allows both parties to discuss the separation in a civilized manner.

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Don Winner of the Panama-Guide(The other Guide) a third world scam artists tries to shake down companies by putting made up bad press any where he can on his blog site. If the company or person doesn’t pay he makes up false statements and runs them on his blog site along with very nasty comments from his friends (Clyde Jenkins, known Child Molester in Panama) to give him credibility.

You can Check this out by going to Facebook and look for Don Winner the Fraud of Panama. When he tried to shake down ADR Services International, Inc. President Jerry Hall a new arrival to Panama working with the US Embassy to train their staff in Conflict Resolution. Jerry Hall in no other words told him they would not advertise on his type of publication or blog site because of the lack of ethics by Don Winner. Don Winners Panama Guide(The other Guide) is nothing but copied stories from La Prensa or La Critica translated with Google Translater and run on his blog. He is known for his copyright infringement practices throughout Panama by Eric Jackson and Okke Onstein who are the actual reporters in Panama.
Hence the smear campaign against ADR Services International, Inc. and Jerry Hall. ADR Services International, Inc. enjoys a excellent reputation world-wide for their customer service and high quality of Legal Services which includes Mediation of every type of legal dispute arising in the courts. Jerry Hall as a Honorary Sheriff and Fort Bend Constable Advisor knows the tricks that these bloggers try to pull. Don Winner is anoth

Con Man working as another con job in car sales. This guy is a crook

er one of the scammers. Living in a third world country having left the United States under questionable circumstances he found refuge in one of the most corrupt countries in Latin America Panama. Panama is known for harboring felons, trying to escape legal prosecution in other countries.
You can be assured if they can’t come back to America there is a good reason.
Jerry Hall closed his offices in Panama after fulfilling the assignment with the US Embassy, Don Winner just could not put enough slander and bad press on his web site after Jerry Hall uncovered the Land Scams Don Winner working with Tom McMurrain who was prosecuted in the USA for Money Laundering and over 187 count indictment. Tom and Don Winner were scamming investors on Land Deals once Jerry arrived on the scene and help get an Investors money back Don went crazy on his blog, understanding Jerry Hall has just put a damper in Don Winners source of income.
Next comes Eddie Kahn, a tax evasion specialist, Don Winner and his blog was bring Expats newly arriving in Panama to a seminar on how to avoid paying taxes in the USA. Eddie Kahn was Don Winners partner on this scam. When Jerry Hall brought to the attention of the Expat

This is the Don Winner everyone Knows in Panama a crazy idiot who thinks he yields and power

community living in Panama there is no legal way to avoid paying taxes. Don Winner was on the attack again, slandering Jerry Hall and ADR Services International, Inc. over and over on his blog.
Shortly after Jerry Hall brought to the attention of the Expats that Eddie Kahn was no tax expert, the US Government working with Jerry’s information lead to the arrest of Eddie Kahn for Tax evasion and his consulting helped Wesley Snipes wind up in Jail for 5 years for tax evasion another customer of Eddie Kahn and Don Winner.
Don Winner’s web site is the forefront for land scam deals, false information and anything illegal in Panama Don Winner usually has his hand in.
This reporter has verified this information and found the article by Don Winner to be nothing short of fraud and misdirection and slander on the character of Jerry Ray Hall and ADR Services International, Inc.

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Absolute Confidentiality—Is It Wise?

Jerry Hall

Jerry Hall

First, the good news. The California Legislature wants to encourage mediation. Rojas v Superior Court, 2004 Cal LEXIS 6281 at p. 14. (July 12, 2004). Now the bad news. Rojas itself shows that the current legislation, California Evidence Code section 1115 et seq., fails to get the job done. The current legislation, as construed in Rojas, exalts the policy of absolute confidentiality—and absolute confidentiality alone—as the key to the encouragement and effectiveness of mediation.
But other policies can encourage the use of mediation, too. The current legislation, though, fails to take those other policies into account, much less strike an appropriate balance between those other policies and the policy of confidentiality when those policies conflict. For now, “absolute confidentiality” reigns supreme. And it may kill mediation.

Quality Is Key
One particular policy stands in the most stark conflict with absolute-confidentiality, and must (I repeat, must) be taken into account if mediation is to survive. When parties bring their disputes to mediation, they must be assured that they will receive quality service. Why would anybody come to mediation—much less pay for the privilege of participating—if quality of service is not assured?
In the American economy, a principal way to regulate and assure the quality of service in any professional activity is to subject that activity to the law of torts:
• Negligence rules both regulate misconduct and protect against harm caused by that misconduct. For example, tort liability for negligence has the effect, and to a degree the purpose, of regulating a defendant’s future conduct.
• It is a policy of negligence law to allow a person to recover for an injury that was proximately caused by another’s duty of reasonable care.
• Observation: The policy reason supporting a cause of action for negligence is to discourage or encourage specific types of behavior by one party for the benefit of another party…. [57A Am.Jur.2d, Negligence section 1.]

An Illustration from the Dentist’s Chair

A simple example of what would happen absent the law of torts proves the point. Suppose you visit your dentist for root canal therapy. Just before she plunges the needle into you and asks you to count backward from 100 by threes, she says, “Oh, by the way, the Legislature just amended the Evidence Code to provide that no evidence of anything that happens in the course of this treatment is admissible in any judicial or other proceeding.”
You ask, “So, even if you drill a hole in my face, I can’t introduce evidence
of that in court if I sue you for malpractice?”
• “Right!” the dentist replies. “Now, don’t worry, you’ll hardly feel this….”
I don’t care how bad the pain is at that point; my bet is that you’d get out of that chair and cross the nearest state line before you next lean back and open wide. The regime of absolute confidentiality would drive your dentist out of business. That’s because absolute confidentiality, an evidentiary rule, in effect suspends the operation of tort law wherever it applies. Absent the quality that tort law encourages and regulates, the service is just not in demand.

Four Hypothetical Problems

This is just the corner into which we have painted ourselves with the current absolute-confidentiality regime of the Evidence Code. Mediation customers are robbed of an important assurance of quality service. Once litigators and other users and stakeholders think about it, there is a serious question regarding whether mediation services will continue to be in demand. The following four hypothetical situations define the parameters of the immediate problems.
1. Suppose an attorney attends mediation and engages in misconduct that would warrant professional discipline. His client complains to the State Bar, and a disciplinary proceeding ensues. The errant lawyer defends on the grounds that, under Section 1119, the State Bar may not consider the evidence of what he said at the mediation. The “plain meaning” of Section 1119 would seem to support the lawyer’s argument. Section 1119(a) states, in relevant part, that “No evidence of anything said … for the purpose of, in the course of, or pursuant to a mediation or a mediation consultation is admissible or subject to discovery, and disclosure of the evidence shall not be compelled, in any arbitration, administrative adjudication, civil action, or other noncriminal proceeding in which, pursuant to law, testimony can be compelled to be given. The evidence seems to be material to what was “said in the course of a mediation.” The State Bar disciplinary proceeding seems to be an “administrative adjudication.” Can this lawyer use Section 1119(a) to “Get Out of Jail Free?”
2. Same client sues same lawyer for legal malpractice in state court. Lawyer moves in limine to exclude all evidence of what was said at the mediation. Does the lawyer get out of this jail free, too?
3. Same client notices that its liability insurance carrier, which is providing him a defense, has sent a claims representative to the mediation. Claims representative improperly threatens to pull the defense and otherwise engages in conduct that deserves to be called “bad faith” in order to get client to use its own money to fund the settlement. Client, scared, uses its own money and settles the case.
Client sues insurer for bad faith. Here comes another motion in limine. Another jail escape?
4. Mediator screws up to a fare-thee-well. Mediator gives manifestly incorrect legal advice, bullies, and coerces a settlement, drafts a release that subjects the parties to horrendous and avoidable tax consequences, includes his “standard” onerous confidentiality provision without allowing the parties the time to read it.
One party sues the mediator for malpractice. Mediator, too, moves in limine to exclude all evidence of what he said at the mediation. The plain meaning of Section 1119 seems to guarantee that this mediator walks, too. After all, is it not the case that everything a mediator does in his professional capacity is “in the course of” a mediation?

Four Possible Solutions

Of these problems, the first is relatively easy to solve. The other three require more work. With respect to State Bar disciplinary proceedings, the template is Business and Professions Code section 6090.6, brought to my attention by my friend Paul Dubow, which provides, in part:
• In a disciplinary proceeding, the State Bar shall have access, on an ex parte basis, to all nonpublic court records relevant to the competence or performance of its members, provided that these records shall remain confidential.
If the State Bar has access to evidence of what is said in a mediation on the same confidential basis, the State Bar will still be able to serve its important consumer-protection role of regulating the legal profession. But problems 2-4 are not so easy to solve. Civil malpractice and bad faith actions cannot be pursued with the same degree of confidentiality as State Bar disciplinary proceedings. Trials are public. So the challenge is to fashion a rule that would allow these civil actions to go forward on the merits and also maintain appropriate confidentiality for other mediation participants, those who are not parties to the malpractice or bad faith claims. After all, the evidence of the alleged misconduct would often involve evidence of what opposing parties said and did, and whether or not an attorney, mediator, or insurance carrier responded appropriately.
Those opposing parties, though, came to mediation with an expectation of confidentiality, and have a legitimate interest in keeping their mediation disclosures confidential. And they presumably have no interest in the malpractice action against their opponent’s lawyer or insurer, or in the particular malpractice claim against the mediator. They could be expected to object to the proffered disclosures, and their objections must be taken seriously.
Notwithstanding these complexities, we have to engage these issues on their merits. And, we need to question some of our assumptions. I do not believe that absolute confidentiality is necessary for effective mediation. Theory tells us that absolute confidentiality is necessary for candor, so that parties will talk about their weaknesses as well as their strengths. But let’s face it: the gaming of mediation has evolved far beyond such naiveté. Nobody confesses their weaknesses in mediations. Why should they? If the other side already knows, there’s no need to confess anything. If the other side does not know, it would be downright stupid to disclose, voluntarily, something that would weaken your bargaining position.
This reality is reflected in the leading text on the subject, Harold I. Abramson’s Mediation Representation at pp. 248–49 (NITA, 2004). According to Professor Abramson, one discloses only advantageous evidence. With respect to “Acknowledging Harmful Evidence and Legal Weaknesses” (p. 249), Professor Abramson teaches only that “(y)ou should be prepared to respond intelligently and honestly to any evidence and law harmful to your client’s case that may be known to the other side.” There’s no mention of confession or any candor that requires confidentiality for its expression. Nobody goes out of their way to set out a petard on which they know they will be hoisted. It is senseless to design a mediation confidentiality law as if protecting someone’s right to do so is important.

Conclusion
I don’t know what answers the coming debate will yield. I doubt that the answer will be that the current confidentiality statute is beyond improvement. I do know that the time for the debate is upon us. In California, one organization in the ADR community is facing the task with an open mind. The Consumer Attorneys of California have already indicated that revising the mediation confidentiality statute will be a significant legislative priority for them next year. SCMA will engage with them, defense counsel, the State Bar, the Judicial Branch, and others to work through these tough issues. We want to change those parts of the statute that need to be changed, and preserve those parts that need to be preserved. The fruit of this effort will be a better statute, one which promotes and encourages quality mediation even better than the legislation we now have. We can’t wait to begin.

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