MSC online dispute resolution tool goes live in Oakland County
The Michigan Supreme Court Office of Dispute Resolution this week announced the availability of its MI-Resolve online dispute resolution tool in Oakland County. MI-Resolve provides an efficient and accessible way of resolving disputes that are typically filed as small claims, general civil, or landlord-tenant cases in the district court. Now available in 18 counties (see map), the online service is one of the first of its kind in the nation.
“Keeping the virtual doors of justice open to everyone in Michigan has never been more important. Confronting the COVID-19 crisis makes closing the justice gap all the more urgent,” said Chief Justice Bridget M. McCormack. “Opening up online dispute resolution to Oakland County residents represents a huge step toward achieving that goal.”
Through MI-Resolve, parties can go online to negotiate directly with the other party, or have a Community Dispute Resolution Center (in this case, the Oakland Mediation Center) mediator help them resolve their dispute. If the dispute is resolved, the system produces the necessary court forms for filing in the individual courts. Also, the service is free, involving no cost to the parties or court.
The service is a game-changer for people who are busy with work or children and can benefit from mediation without leaving home, particularly as the state continues to operate under a shelter-in-place order.
Types of cases that have been managed through MI-Resolve, to date:
• Repayment of vehicle and personal loans;
• Non-delivery or quality of goods and services;
• Car accident (attempts to collect the deductible);
• Landlord/Tenant (return of security deposit and disputes over the amount of security deposit withheld, completion of repairs on rental homes);
• Return of private property between parties ending a domestic relationship;
• Completion of repairs or home improvements (contractor/home repairs); and,
• Neighbor use of property that doesn’t belong to them; building fence on neighbor lot.
MI-Resolve will continue expanding statewide.
Ex-Michigan tight end says he was abused
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) — The first former Michigan football player to publicly say that a team doctor abused him believes he would have sought medical help sooner for what has become late-stage cancer if he hadn’t been victimized in college.
Chuck Christian, a 60-year-old artist in suburban Boston, said during a videoconferencing interview Wednesday that the late Dr. Robert Anderson gave him unnecessary rectal exams before he played for the Wolverines during 1977-80 seasons.
Christian said he has stage 4 prostate cancer that could have been treated sooner and more effectively if he wasn’t emotionally scarred by Anderson’s annual physicals.
Christian, who is represented by attorney Michael Wright, is one of hundreds of University of Michigan graduates who allege that Anderson molested them under the guise of that the abuse was a normal part of the physicals they had to get in order to participate in sports.
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