LD 1295
pg. 9
Page 8 of 67 An Act To Enact the Uniform Mediation Act Page 10 of 67
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LR 464
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person. Uniformity will add certainty on these issues, and thus
allows for more informed party self-determination.

 
Finally, uniformity contributes to simplicity. Mediators and
parties who do not have meaningful familiarity with the law or
legal research currently face a more formidable task in
understanding multiple confidentiality statutes that vary by
and within relevant States than they would in understanding a
Uniform Act. Mediators and parties often travel to different
States for the mediation sessions. If they do not understand
these legal protections, participants may react in a guarded
way, thus reducing the candor that these provisions are
designed to promote, or they may unnecessarily expend
resources to have the legal research conducted.

 
4. Ripeness of a uniform law.

 
The drafting of the Uniform Mediation Act comes at an
opportune moment in the development of the law and the
mediation field.

 
First, States in the past thirty years have been able to
engage in considerable experimentation in terms of statutory
approaches to mediation, just as the mediation field itself
has experimented with different approaches and styles of
mediation. Over time clear trends have emerged, and scholars
and practitioners have a reasonable sense as to which types of
legal standards are helpful, and which kinds are disruptive.
The Drafters have studied this experimentation, enabling state
legislators to enact the Act with the confidence that can only
come from learned experience. See Symposium on Drafting a
Uniform/Model Mediation Act, 13 Ohio St. J. on Disp. Resol.
787, 788 (1998).

 
Second, as the use of mediation becomes more common and
better understood by policymakers, States are increasingly
recognizing the benefits of a unified statutory environment
for privilege that cuts across all applications. This modern
trend is seen in about half of the States that have adopted
statutes of general application, and these broad statutes
provide guidance on effective approaches to a more general
privilege. See, e.g., Ariz. Rev. Stat. Ann. Section 12-2238
(West 1993); Ark. Code Ann. Section 16-7-206 (1993); Cal.
Evid. Code Section 1115, et seq. (West 1997); Iowa Code
Section 679C.2 (1998); Kan. Stat. Ann. Section 60-452 (1964);
La. Rev. Stat. Ann. Section 9:4112 (1997); Me. R. Evid.
Section 408 (1993); Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 233, Section 23C
(1985); Minn. Stat. Ann. Section 595.02 (1996); Neb. Rev.
Stat. Section 25-2914 (1997); Nev. Rev. Stat. Section
48.109(3) (1993); N.J. Rev. Stat. Section 2A:23A-9 (1987);
Ohio Rev. Code Ann. Section 2317.023 (West 1996); Okla. stat.
tit. 12, Section


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