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mediators need not be lawyers. In fact, the American Bar | Association Section on Dispute Resolution has issued a statement | that "dispute resolution programs should permit all individuals | who have appropriate training and qualifications to serve as | neutrals, regardless of whether they are lawyers." ABA Section | of Dispute Resolution Council Res., April 28, 1999. |
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| At the same time, the law and commentary recognize that the | quality of the mediator is important and that the courts and | public agencies referring cases to mediation have a heightened | responsibility to assure it. See generally Cole et al., supra, | Section 11.02 (discussing laws regarding mediator | qualifications); Center for Dispute Settlement, National | Standards for Court-Connected Mediation Programs (1992); | Society for Professionals in Dispute Resolution Commission on | Qualifications, Qualifying Neutrals: The Basic Principles | (1989); Society for Professionals in Dispute Resolution | Commission on Qualifications, Ensuring Competence and Quality | in Dispute Resolution Practice (1995); Society for | Professionals in Dispute Resolution, Qualifying Dispute | Resolution Practitioners: Guidelines for Court-Connected | Programs (1997). |
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| The decision of the Drafting Committees against prescribing | qualifications should not be interpreted as a disregard for | the importance of qualifications. Rather, respecting the | unique characteristics that may qualify a particular mediator | for a particular mediation, the silence of the Act reflects | the difficulty of addressing the topic in a uniform statute | that applies to mediation in a variety of contexts. | Qualifications may be important, but they need not be uniform. | It is not the intent of the Act to preclude a statute, court | or administrative agency rule, arbitrator or contract between | the parties from requiring that a mediator have a particular | background or profession; those decisions are best made by | individual states, courts, governmental entities, and parties. |
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| 3. Section 9(d). Violation of disclosure [and impartiality] | requirements. |
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| This provision makes clear that the mediator who violates the | disclosure requirements of Sections 9(a) or (b) may not refuse | to disclose a mediation communication or prevent another | person from disclosing a mediation communication of the | mediator, pursuant to Section 4(b)(2). If a state adopts the | impartiality provision of Section 9(f), a violation of that | provision triggers the same denial of the privilege. Only | those states adopting the impartiality provision should adopt | the second bracket [(a), (b), or (g)]; all other states should | adopt the | first bracket [(a) or (b)]. |
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