REFORMS NEEDED FOR THE
TRAINING OF AND SUPPORT FOR TOWN AND VILLAGE
COURT JUSTICES
New York City Bar Offers
Recommendations and Assistance
( June 25, 2007) The New York City Bar Association
issued two reports today with key recommendations
to improve the training of town and village justices
and court clerks, and to provide assistance to
those courts. These recommendations can be enacted
now by the Office of Court Administration, and
will provide immediate improvements to the Town
and Village Court System without legislative
action or a constitutional amendment. The City
Bar will be issuing recommendations on deeper
changes to the system, but believes strongly
that these interim measures will improve the
current system.
New York’s Town and Village Courts have
an extensive impact on the lives of New Yorkers,
and the justices of those courts need not be
lawyers – 72% of over 2,000 justices serving
in New York State are from other backgrounds.
Many justices currently operate courts without
adequate knowledge of relevant laws, constitutional
guarantees and legal procedures. “The Task
Force research shows that many justices have
insufficient knowledge of the rules of evidence,
of application of legal principles, of the standards
of judicial conduct, and of the administrative
and fiscal responsibilities demanded of the justice
courts,” says Hon. Phylis Skloot Bamberger,
chair of the Task Force.
The City Bar believes that the current training
regimen for these justices is inadequate, and
a questionnaire prepared by the City Bar’s
Task Force on Town and Village Courts, which
authored the reports, found that the justices
themselves have an interest in and a desire for
improved training and education. This is an opportunity
for the Bar to be of assistance to these justices,
and utilize the extensive experience, skill,
and training of its membership to improve the
quality of justice across New York State.
As the office of Court Administration works
on its action plan for providing better training,
the City Bar recommends that its members be utilized
as a part of the preparation and presentation
of training programs. The City Bar should undertake,
with other bar associations and similar organizations
around the state as appropriate, to identify
volunteer attorneys to work with the New York
State Judicial Institute to prepare courses for
town and village courts.
Furthermore, the City Bar recommends that the
Judicial Institute establish a collaborative
program for Town and Village Justices with the
other major judicial organizations to continue
training on court administration, fiscal responsibility,
and accountability.
Finally, the report recommends that any advisory
committee established to oversee the revised
training programs for the justices be strictly
neutral with respect to the issues that come
before these courts, and in employment or association
have no interest in the outcomes of cases before
these courts, or alternately ensure that the
committee’s membership reflect the perspectives
of all potential litigants. As the committee
would be formed by the state government, steps
must be taken to avoid bias in favor of governmental
and prosecutorial interests.
Additionally, the City Bar believes that the
Resource Center of the Office of Court Administration
(OCA) should be enhanced to provide sufficient
support for Town and Village Court Justices.
The recommendations are as follows:
- OCA should fund a sufficiently large staff
of lawyers to respond promptly to the justices’ inquiries
about judicial conduct; assist in evening and
night-court sessions; and regularly prepare
and distribute updates to the relevant laws,
regulations and case law;
- OCA should fund a staff to assist the justices
in town courts in carrying out their responsibilities
as record keepers, finance officers, and administrators
of their courts;
- Bar associations and other legal organizations
around the state should prepare a list of lawyers
available to answer inquiries on behalf of
the justices;
- OCA should publicize the Resource Center,
encouraging justices to call for assistance
while emphasizing that the decisions remain
their responsibility;
- Regional offices should be established, especially
in areas where judges are not lawyers, to offer
on-site assistance, small group training sessions
and other face-to-face contact with justices;
- The Resource Center should conduct its work
even if all justices are required to become
lawyers, because like judges of other courts,
they will need such assistance.
The full report elaborates on these recommendations
and further describes the training and resource
issues facing Town and Village Courts in New
York today.
The full reports are available online at: www.nycbar.org/pdf/report/NYC_ECOPY23W_110911.pdf and www.nycbar.org/pdf/report/NYC_ECOPY23W.pdf.