30 Years a Specialist & 21 Years Together: The Page Provan Story
Some anniversaries arrive with fanfare. Others sneak up quietly and then suddenly feel enormous.
At the end of June and the beginning of July 2026, two milestones sit side by side. One marks 30 years as an accredited family law specialist. The other marks 21 years working alongside Bruce Provan. Together, they say something important about the history of Page Provan and about what long-term commitment in family and fertility law really looks like.
Thirty years as an accredited family law specialist
On 30 June 2026, the 30 year mark arrives for accreditation as a family law specialist. That date matters not simply because of the length of time involved, but because of what it represents. Back on 30 June 1996, specialist accreditation in Queensland family law was in its first year. Family law was the first area in Queensland to have accredited specialisation, and being part of that inaugural group was significant.
At the time, the goal was straightforward. Get accredited. There was no grand plan mapped out for the next three decades. There was certainly no expectation that this would become a 30 year milestone. It was a professional step taken seriously, but without any sense that it would one day stand as a marker of an entire career.
That first year was unusual in one respect. The pass rate in Queensland was around 70 per cent. By comparison, New South Wales and Victoria were sitting closer to the low 30s. Today, the pass rate is also around the 30 per cent mark, which makes that early Queensland result stand out even more.
Why the difference? The answer is practical rather than mysterious. Many of those sitting in that first cohort had already been practising family law for quite some time. They were experienced practitioners bringing years of real work into the assessment process. With close to nine years of family law experience at that point, being one of the more junior people in that initial group says something about the depth of experience around the room.
Specialist accreditation is not a decorative title. In family law, it reflects tested experience, technical competence and a sustained focus on a demanding area of legal practice. Over time, that matters more and more. Family law deals with some of the most stressful, intimate and high stakes moments in people’s lives. It requires legal precision, but it also requires judgement, steadiness and perspective.
For anyone trying to understand what specialist accreditation means in Queensland, the Queensland Law Society provides the professional framework for accredited specialisation. The point is not the badge itself. The point is what sits behind it: decades of doing the work.
The early years of specialisation in Queensland
It is easy now to take specialist accreditation for granted, but in 1996 it was new territory in Queensland. Family law led the way. That matters historically because it shows how seriously the profession regarded the complexity of the field even then.
Family law has never been simple. It sits at the intersection of legislation, court practice, children’s needs, financial realities and human behaviour. Over the last 30 years, that complexity has only deepened. The law has evolved. Social expectations have changed. Families themselves look different. Fertility law, surrogacy law and broader LGBTIQ legal issues have become more visible and more legally sophisticated.
What has remained constant is the need for careful, informed advice. Whether dealing with parenting disputes, property matters or modern fertility arrangements, the central task is still the same: help people navigate difficult legal terrain with clarity.
That is one reason long experience matters so much. Family law is not an area where shortcuts work well. Good judgement is built over years. It comes from repeated exposure to hard cases, changing law, courtroom realities and clients facing genuine pressure.
Anyone seeking guidance in this area can also find current background information through the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia, which remains central to modern family law practice in Australia.
Twenty one years working with Bruce Provan
The second milestone lands just one day later.
On 1 July 2026, 21 years have passed working alongside Bruce Provan. There is a joke that a sentence like that sounds like one gets less for murder, but behind the humour is real gratitude. Professional partnerships that last are rare. Professional partnerships that remain strong over two decades are rarer still.
When that working relationship began on 1 July 2005, the dynamic was different. One was a partner, the other an associate. At the time, the focus was not on some distant anniversary. It was simply on the work immediately in front of them and seeing how things would go.
That is often how enduring professional relationships begin. Not with lofty declarations, but with competence, trust, shared standards and a willingness to keep turning up for the work.
Over 21 years, a working relationship becomes much more than a line on a firm history. It becomes part of the architecture of the practice. It shapes how clients are advised, how difficult decisions are approached, how standards are maintained and how the firm responds to changing law.
There is also something important in the endurance itself. In law, longevity is not just about survival. It is about consistency. It is about building a practice where clients know they are dealing with people who have seen issues before, who understand consequences, and who do not lose their nerve when matters become complicated.
For those looking for broader information about fertility and family law services in this area, Page Provan’s fertility lawyers page outlines the kind of work involved in helping clients navigate these highly specialised issues.
What these milestones really mean
Anniversaries can sound sentimental if they are treated as mere numbers. These are not mere numbers.
Thirty years speaks to depth of practice, sustained accreditation and the long view that only time can bring.
Twenty one years speaks to partnership, trust and shared professional purpose.
Together, they help explain why Page Provan has the identity it does. This is not a practice built overnight. It has been shaped through decades of family law work and years of close collaboration.
That foundation matters especially in areas like fertility law and surrogacy law, where legal issues can be both deeply personal and technically demanding. People entering surrogacy arrangements, donor conception matters or wider family law disputes need advice that is not only current, but grounded in long experience.
That is why practical understanding counts. The law is not static. Rules shift. Procedures change. Courts develop. Social realities evolve. But the best legal advice tends to come from lawyers who have lived through those changes and understand both where the law has been and where it is heading.
Experience, perspective and the long game
One of the striking things about both milestones is how little they were predicted at the start.
There was no expectation in 1996 that specialist accreditation would become a 30 year marker. There was no assumption in 2005 that a working relationship would stretch into a 21 year partnership. In both cases, the future was not planned in sweeping terms. The work simply continued, year after year, matter after matter.
That says something useful about legal careers and legal practice more generally. The strongest foundations are often built incrementally. Competence is repeated. Standards are maintained. Relationships are formed. Trust accumulates.
For clients, that accumulated experience can make an enormous difference. In family and fertility law, legal questions are rarely abstract. They affect children, relationships, identity, finances and future security. These are not areas where casual advice will do.
For those considering surrogacy in Australia, it is also worth understanding the health and regulatory context through current government sources such as the Australian Government Department of Health, Disability and Ageing. Legal advice works best when it sits alongside an informed understanding of the broader system.
There is also a practical reason these anniversaries matter. They reflect continuity. In a changing legal landscape, continuity helps create confidence. A firm with decades of specialist experience and a long standing partnership is usually better placed to deliver careful and consistent advice than one still trying to work out what it stands for.
The enduring foundation of Page Provan
Page Provan’s story is not really about anniversaries for their own sake. It is about endurance in a demanding field.
It is about starting specialist accreditation in the first year it existed for family law in Queensland and still being here 30 years later.
It is about beginning a professional relationship in 2005 and finding, two decades on, that it has become an enduring legal partnership.
It is about the steady development of a practice dedicated to family law, fertility law and the legal issues that shape modern families.
That kind of professional history cannot be manufactured. It is earned slowly. It is built through years of hard work, difficult cases, changing law and the ongoing privilege of helping people through major life events.
For those wanting a practical overview of surrogacy issues in Australia from a legal perspective, this surrogacy basics guide is a useful starting point.