Court
News Ohio
Funding
Crisis Strikes Throughout
Federal Courts, Judge Tells Senate Panel
July 23, 2013
A
judge today told a U.S. Senate
panel that the number of personnel working in federal courts is at the
lowest
level since 1999, and that court clerks and probation and pretrial
services
staff could be furloughed for close to 70,000 hours this fiscal year.
“If
sufficient funding is not
provided to the courts, we cannot provide the people of the United
States the
type of justice system that has been a hallmark of our liberty
throughout the
nation’s history,” said Judge Julia S. Gibbons, chair of the Budget
Committee
of the Judicial Conference of the United States. She testified before
the
Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Bankruptcy and the Courts at a hearing
titled:
“Sequestering Justice: How the Budget Crisis is undermining our Courts
(senate.gov).”
Judge
Gibbons called special
attention to the funding problems facing the Federal Defender program,
which
incurred a $52 million cut due to sequestration. About 90 percent of
federal
criminal defendants require court-appointed counsel. “Funding cuts are
threatening that very right, a right that has been a bedrock principle
of our
criminal justice system for half a century,” Judge Gibbons testified
(pdf).
Judge
Gibbons shared the following
with the subcommittee:
Job
cuts. Clerks of court and
probation and pretrial services offices are expected to lose as many as
1,000
staff in Fiscal Year 2013, with furloughs accounting for an additional
8,600
workdays lost. Those offices have lost 2,100 positions since July 2011,
Judge
Gibbons said. “The current staffing level of 20,100 personnel is the
lowest
since 1999, despite significant workload growth since that time.”
Public
safety risks. Judge Gibbons
noted that funding for courthouse security has been cut 30 percent,
“creating
security vulnerabilities throughout the federal court system.” She also
said
that the courts’ probation and pretrial supervision offices have lost 7
percent
of their staffing since July 2011, while supervising a record number of
offenders and criminal defendants in the community.
Cuts
in court-appointed counsel.
The Federal Defender offices have downsized by about 6 percent, between
October
2012 and June 2013, Judge Gibbons said. Further, it is anticipated that
there
will be a suspension of at least 15 days of payments to panel attorneys
and
that Federal Defender Organization staff will be furloughed for an
average of
15 days over the last half of this fiscal year.
FY
2014 concerns. The Judiciary has
great concern that a continuing resolution for FY 2014 at current
sequestration
levels would result in the loss of thousands of additional court and
federal
defender jobs, as well as deeper cuts in court services.“ Such a
scenario would
be devastating for our entire system of justice,” Judge Gibbons said.
“Our
workload does not go away
because of budget shortfalls,” she continued. “Deep cuts mean that the
Judiciary cannot perform adequately its Constitutional and statutory
responsibilities.”
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