The Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) has received approval to regulate alternative business structures (ABS) and will begin accepting applications in January.

Antony Townsend
The watchdog had originally hoped to have an appropriate regulatory system in place when the Legal Services Act was implemented on 6 October (26 July 2011).
However, the implementation date was delayed because the Government had not approved the SRA’s proposed disciplinary process for ABSs.
The order designating the SRA as a licensing authority for ABSs was laid before Parliament today and will come into force on 23 December. The SRA will begin accepting applications on 3 January, with the first successful applicants revealed in the second half of February 2012
SRA chief executive Antony Townsend said: “This is a milestone that we’ve been working towards for nearly two years.
“It means the public can have confidence that ABSs providing reserved legal activities will be regulated according to the same rigorous professional standards as traditional law firms.”
Readers' comments (3)
Anonymous | 1-Dec-2011 5:11 pm
Slightly misleading headline - the first ABS went "live" on 6 October 2011 licensed by CLC.
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Anonymous | 2-Dec-2011 10:21 am
Wonderful. If the SRA can't manage to implement successfully the new system for practising certificate renewal, then how likely is it that the SRA will be able to oversee properly the impact of ABS?
I would say that it doesn' t look good.
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Anonymous | 3-Dec-2011 9:41 pm
MMMMMMM interesting... so that's why my Degree Certificate and Uni Official results have not been returned in nearly 5 months!
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