There is a constitutional obligation on governments to set compensation for Provincial Court judges and judicial justices through an independent, objective and effective commission process.
In accordance with this obligation, the provincial Judicial Compensation Act, S.B.C. 2003, c. 59 (“Act”) requires the appointment of an independent commission to consider and report on all matters respecting the remuneration, allowances and benefits of Provincial Court judges and judicial justices. In 2015, the Act was amended to merge the Provincial Court judges and the judicial justices compensation commissions into a single Judicial Compensation Commission. The 2016 Judicial Compensation Commission was the first commission after this legislative change.
The 2019 Judicial Compensation Commission reviewed and made recommendations concerning the remuneration, allowances and benefits for Provincial Court judges and judicial justices for the period of April 1, 2020 to March 31, 2023 and delivered its final report (PDF, 427KB) to the Attorney General on October 24, 2019.
The following Commissioners were appointed to the 2019 Judicial Compensation Commission:
Maia Tsurumi was counsel to the Commission.
The Judicial Compensation Act (section 5) stipulates that the Commission must be guided by the need to provide reasonable compensation for Provincial Court judges and judicial justices, taking into account all of the following:
The Act also states that the Commission may consider factors it considers relevant, but if it relies on another factor, the report of the commission must explain the relevance of the factor.