| An area that Mandatory Binding Arbitration must be eliminated is elder care. It recently took our family a considerable amount of effort to find a good care either in home or a facility that did not REQUIRE binding arbitration clause plus an NDA for family member who now needs 7/24 care. This industry hires inexpensive and untrained labor that regularly makes mistakes that injure customers. The "customers" in many cases have dementia or cognition issues. Mandatory Binding Arbitration is almost always bad for customers. The game board is tilted against them. Arbitrators must be agreed to by both parties, but companies are the primary repeat customers of arbitrators and will NOT select arbitrators that don't usually and regularly find for them. Binding Arbitration as currently used should be eliminated as an option in all contracts. It should always exist as an option of the parties, but not be binding at the initiation of any service. Binding Arbitration is a tool of companies to allow them to NOT be accountable to their customers AND prevent that lack of accountability to made public. A mandatory binding arbitration clause in any contract presented to you should always be a warning flag that the other side does not intend to be accountable. Never enter into such contracts if you can avoid them. |
Is there any empirical evidence of this? I've done arbitration twice and the arbitrators seemed pretty impartial.
Most people just go with AAA arbitrators, which are well respected.
I've seen my colleges ask for information about potential arbitrators (I'm an lawyer but I don't specialize in arbitration), and never has anyone even suggested that an arbitrator was a company man or anything like that.
We need a low cost alternative to court. Courts apply strict procedural and eventuality rules and engage in broad discovery that really increases the cost of a case. A case costs tens of thousands of dollars in legal fees.
My biggest problem is that arbitration isn't really all that much cheaper than court in many cases now.
I think it would be interesting to have an online arbitration process for disputes under 10 thousand dollars. Both sides upload a memo arguing their side and attach accompanying documentation and evidence including sworn statements by witnesses. The arbitrator decides if a hearing is needed and if it is they do a video chat hearing.