According to the Office of the Judiciary, two new authorities will become established in Samut Prakan and Rayong to deal with the growing number of legal cases involving labor problems.
The two regions have a lot of different companies, and they need new courts to tackle disputes involving these types of disputes.
According to assistant government official Karom Polpornklang on Wednesday, the government approved the Office’s plans to establish the two labor courts this year.
He claimed that the government even approved for the Regional Provincial Courts 1 and 2 to step aside from their responsibilities and help the new authorities to get over once they are operational. They are now deliberating labor circumstances in Samut Prakan and Rayong.
The Regional Provincial Courts 1 and 2 were overburdened, according to Mr. Karom, which caused several trials to be delayed due to the extreme task of handling labor disputes in the two regions.  ,
The Labour Court Establishment and Court Proceedings Act’s act allows for the establishment of new judges.  ,
Mr. Karom predicted that the new judges would expedite labor trial deliberations and provide prompt justice. To handle the workload and pressure in the two courts, manpower may be effectively distributed.  ,
Court staff with a focus on the field must employ certain adjudication procedures because labor courts are designated as specialized courts.
He claimed that launching new judges would merely serve to raise public trust in administrative justice requirements.  ,
The Samut Prakan prosecutor is anticipated to spend 63 million baht on staff costs, 10 million baht on organizational management, and 363 million ringgit on purchases and other charges during its first three years of operation. Six fairness personnel and 24 administrative personnel will serve as the court’s members.
In terms of the Rayong court, the first three years of operation may cost 55 million ringgit in staff, 8 million ringgit in organizational management, and 11 million ringgit in building and investment costs. Four justices and 24 administrative officers will make up the court.