LD 1295
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Page 65 of 67 An Act To Enact the Uniform Mediation Act Page 67 of 67
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LR 464
Item 1

 
uniformity of the law will provide greater protection of
mediation than any one state has the capacity to provide. No
matter how much protection one state affords confidentiality
protection, for example, the communication will not be protected
against compelled disclosure in another state if that state does
not have the same level of protection. Finally, uniformity has
the capacity to simplify and clarify the law, and this is
particularly true with respect to mediation confidentiality.
Where many states have several different confidentiality
provisions, most of them could be replaced with an integrated
Uniform Mediation Act. Similarly, to the extent that there may
be confusion between states over which state's law would apply
to a mediation with an interstate character, uniformity
simplifies the task of those involved in the mediation by
requiring them to look at only one law rather than the laws of
all affected states.

 
§10013. Effective date

 
This chapter takes effect January 1, 2004.

 
REPORTER'S NOTES

 
The Uniform Mediation Act was drafted such that it can be
integrated into the fabric of most state legal regimes with
minimal disruption of current law or practices. In particular,
it is not the intent of the UMA to disrupt existing law in
those few states that have well-established mediation
processes by statute, court rules, or court decisions. For
example, its privilege structure, exceptions, etc., is
consistent with most of the hundreds of privilege statutes
currently in the states.

 
Many of these can simply be repealed, and this Section
provides the vehicle for so doing. However, states should take
care not to repeal additional provisions that may be embedded
within their state laws that may be desirable and which are
not inconsistent with the provisions of the Act. An Act is
still uniform if it provides for mediator incompetency or
provides for costs and attorneys fees to mediators who are
wrongfully subpoenaed. For example, in Ohio the Act would seem
to replace the need for the generic privilege statute, O.R.C.
2317.023, and that part of the domestic mediation statute
O.R.C. 3109.052 relating to privilege, but not the public
records exception, O.R.C. 149.43 or failure to report a crime,
O.R.C. 3109.052.

 
In contrast, Alabama has fewer statutes that would be subsumed
by the Act. For example, the Act would seem to replace the
need for the confidentiality provision in Ala. Code 24-4-12
(communications during conciliation sessions of complaints


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