Blog Posts
Filter posts by topic:
Select a topic:
- ADR
- About Me
- Automobile Accident
- Child Inclusive Mediation
- Child Support
- Child custody
- Children
- Civil Case
- Collaborative Law
- Contractor
- Crime Victim
- Divorce
- Education Mediation
- Elder Law Mediation
- Estate Settlement Mediation
- Family Mediation
- Filing for Divorce
- Free Speech
- Health Care Mediation
- Ice and Snow
- Injuries
- Insurance
- Lawyer Wellness
- Mediation
- Name Change
- Negligence or Personal Injury Mediation
- Negotiation
- Parenting Plans
- Personal injuries
- Prison
- Real Estate and Housing Mediation
- Restorative Justice
- School
- Settlement
- Slip and fall
- Small Business Mediation
- Victim Offender Dialog
- West Virginia State Bar
- Wills and Estates
- Workplace Mediation
Search posts:
What's the Difference Between Litigation and a Long Train Ride?
Last week, my daughter, my mother and I took a train ride together. Years ago, my mother added the ride from Toronto to Vancouver to her "bucket list." After finding a great sale for winter trips, we planned the trip and departed on January 29, 2018. Little did I know that I was about to learn a little bit more about what it might feel like to be a litigant in the American legal system.
A friend and fellow mediator, Jeff Molenda, often quotes John R. Van Winkle's book, "Mediation: A Path Back for the Lost Lawyer." In the first section of his book, "The Litigation Train," Van Winkle claims that at the end of the twentieth century in the United States our litigation system is broken and has to come resemble a long, expensive train ride.