Title
Title
Juvenile Dependency: Court-Appointed Dependency Counsel Workload and Funding Methodology Options (Action Required)
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Summary
Summary
At its June 2016 meeting, the Judicial Council tabled any action on the two recommendations provided by the Court-Appointed Counsel Funding Allocation Methodology Joint Subcommittee of the Trial Court Budget Advisory Committee (TCBAC) and Family and Juvenile Law Advisory Committee (FJLAC). The Judicial Council also tabled action on a recommendation of the TCBAC related to one of the subcommittee's recommendations and directed the TCBAC to further advise the council on the recommendations provided by the subcommittee at the council's July 2016 meeting, including when allocations for fiscal year 2016-2017 should be adopted by the council. The TCBAC recommends the council adopt the proposed one-time modification to the court-appointed counsel funding methodology as it pertains to courts with smaller caseloads. The TCBAC further recommends the council encourage small court pilot projects, and further review by advisory bodies and specific stakeholders of the court-appointed counsel funding allocation methodology as it pertains to courts with smaller caseloads.
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Recommendation
Recommendation
The Trial Court Budget Advisory Committee (TCBAC) unanimously recommends that the Judicial Council, effective July 29, 2016:
1. Direct small courts to pursue pilot projects to decrease attorney costs, including: coordinating calendars in courts that share attorneys, developing conflict attorney panels that could serve several courts, developing expert witness panels that could serve several courts, and expanding remote appearances by attorneys.
2. On a one-time basis in 2016-2017, approve a modification to the court-appointed counsel funding allocation methodology to provide $406,000 in relief from the reallocation of funding to courts with smaller caseloads and set aside a $200,000 reserve to provide funding to small cour...
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