Stat Report Getting Very Cautious Reception
San Joaquin Small Claims Court Re-Opens
The first task? Dealing with 1,200 cases that have been filed but shelved because there was no court. Read the Record’s report here.
Caseload Report Out, Will Have Budget Implications
Courts Monitor Publisher Participates In New Film
Long Beach Courts Move To New Public-Private Built Building
Check out the story here.
Litigation Rush Brings Another Firm To L.A.
For anyone waiting more than a year for fairly basic civil litigation to find a day in court, we can welcome DOAR to the waiting room. Find their press release here.
ADA Case Tackles Major Access Liability Issue
Courts Monitor launching national edition
The California Courts Monitor, “your daily ration of civil justice rationing,” is launching a national edition. The National Courts Monitor will bring the same focus to the crisis in United State’s civil courts as it has to California courts, according to Publisher Sara Warner.
She said the NCM will begin publishing online in the first quarter of 2014, quipping “is that vague enough for you?” The California website began publishing with a more general courts focus in 2012, but shifted to civil courts funding issues as a spate of budget cuts slashed through the judicial system. In addition to daily aggregation updates and occasional original reporting, the CCM has produced two newsprint products fashioned as “special reports” on courts issues.
Already? For 2014 Courts Face A Zinger
Sacramento Superior Court “stuck” with sheriff’s budget shortfall
According to a report by the Sacramento Bee, the Sheriff’s Department had notified Sacramento Superior Court in July that they expected a combination of funding shortfall and added costs totaling $2.2 million. Sheriff’s officials had told Superior Court managers that they’d have to pull as many as 15 deputies off the security detail to offset the shortfall.
According to the report, “Some judges reacted to the notification with zinging emails that forecast danger to themselves and the public if a reduction of that size became a reality. Chris Volkers, the court’s executive officer, threatened to sue if Sheriff Scott Jones went ahead with the cut.”
