| | 5.__Application to judge.__Subsections 1, 2, 3 and 7 do not | apply to an individual acting as a judge. |
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| | 6.__Special qualification not required.__This chapter does | not require that a mediator have a special qualification by | background or profession. |
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| | 7.__Impartial; agreement otherwise.__ A mediator shall be | impartial, unless after disclosure of the facts required to be | disclosed in subsections 1 and 2, the parties agree otherwise. |
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| 1. Sections 9(a) and 9(b). Disclosure of mediator's conflicts | of interest. |
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| This Section provides legislative support for the professional | standards requiring mediators to disclose their conflicts of | interest. See, e.g, American Arbitration Association, American | Bar Association & Society of Professionals in Dispute | Resolution, Model Standards of Conduct for Mediators, Standard | III (1995); Model Standards of Practice for Family and Divorce | Mediation, Standard IV (2001); National Standards for Court- | Connected Mediation Programs, Standard 8.1(b) (1992). It is | consistent with the ethical obligations imposed on other ADR | neutrals. See Revised Uniform Arbitration Act (2000) Section | 12; Code of Professional Responsibility for Arbitrators of | Labor-Management Disputes, Section 2(B) (1985) (required | disclosures). |
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| Sections 7(a)(2) and 7(b) make clear that the duty to disclose | is a continuing one. |
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| b. Reasonable duty of inquiry |
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| The phrase in Section 9(b)(1) "make an inquiry that is | reasonable under the circumstances" makes clear that the | mediator's burden of inquiry into possible conflicts is not | absolute, but rather is one that is consistent with the | purpose of the Section: to make the parties aware of any | conflict of interest that could lead the parties to believe | that the mediator has an interest in the outcome of the | dispute. Such disclosure fulfills the reasonable expectations | of the parties, and furthers the Act's core principles of | party self-determination and informed consent by assuring the | parties that they will have sufficient information about the | mediator's potential conflicts of interests to make the | determination about whether that mediator is acceptable for | the dispute at hand. |
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| One may reasonably anticipate many situations in which parties | are willing to waive a conflict of interest; indeed, depending |
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