Release Date: September 20, 1995
Judicial Conference Finalizes Long Range Plan
The Judicial Conference of the United States yesterday approved
a lengthy series of recommendations from its Proposed Long
Range Plan for the Federal Courts relating to federal court
jurisdiction, adjudicative structure, governance, the allocation
of resources, and other aspects of federal court operations and
administration.
Among the many items from the plan approved by the Conference
at its semiannual meeting in Washington are the following:
- When legislation is considered that may affect the federal
courts directly or indirectly, Congress should be encouraged to
take into account the judicial impact of the proposed legislation,
including the increased caseload and resulting costs to the federal
courts.
- The Supreme Court of the United States, not a new appellate
court, should continue to be the sole arbiter of conflicting precedents
among the courts of appeals.
- Each court of appeals should comprise a number of judges sufficient
to maintain access to and excellence of federal appellate justice.
Circuit restructuring should occur only if compelling empirical
evidence demonstrates adjudicative or administrative dysfunction
in a court so that it cannot continue to deliver quality justice
and coherent, consistent circuit law in the face of an increasing
caseload.
- Press and public access to court proceedings should be generally
unrestricted. Access should be balanced with the court's primary
mission to administer justice, keeping in mind that there are
very limited situations in which privacy and other concerns require
confidentiality.
- Attention should be given to the problem of frequent, prolonged
judicial vacancies in the federal courts. The executive branch
and the Senate should be encouraged to fill vacancies promptly
and the judicial branch should utilize procedures to mitigate
the impact of vacancies on the capacity of the courts to conduct
judicial business.
The Judicial Conference formally received the long range plan
at its previous meeting in March 1995. It gave members until mid-April
to review the plan and identify items for further study by Conference
committees. As a result, nearly two thirds of the plan was approved
with little or no change. The remaining recommendations were submitted
to the Conference at its current meeting. A final version of the
approved plan will be published later this year. The plan represents
the culmination of a four-year-long process and is the first comprehensive
long range-plan for the federal court system.
In other action, the Conference:
- Approved the report on death penalty representation adopted
by its Defender Services Committee. The committee found that Post
Conviction Defender Organizations (PCDOs) are a cost-effective,
efficient means of providing representation in death penalty cases.
The committee reached its conclusion based on interviews and data
it obtained from federal and state judges, state attorneys general,
resource center directors and staff, traditional federal defenders,
state bar representatives, and private attorneys. In FY 96 Congress
is expected to eliminate the funding for the existing 20 PCDOs
that currently serve 50 U.S. districts, but may allow for a six-month
phase-out.
- Amended its September 1993 proposal for the creation of 19
new bankruptcy judgeships to instead transmit a request to Congress
to create 11 new bankruptcy judgeships as follows: one judgeship
each in the Eastern District of New York, the Northern District
of New York, the District of New Jersey, the Eastern District
of Pennsylvania, the Eastern District of Michigan, the Southern
District of Florida, and the District of Maryland, and four bankruptcy
judgeships in the Central District of California.
- Unanimously voted to defer any review of the issue of whether
cameras should be permitted in the courts of appeals until the
next regularly scheduled session of the Conference in March 1996.
- Recommended that the name of Judge A. David Mazzone (D. Mass.)
be presented to the President for reappointment to the U.S. Sentencing
Commission, subject to the advice and consent of the Senate. The
Conference also agreed to forward to the President the names of
Judges Diana E. Murphy (8th Cir.), Donald E. O'Brien (N.D. Iowa),
and William B. Enright (S.D. Cal.) for the appointment of one
of them to the commission succeeding Judge Julie Carnes (N.D.Ga.),
who does not seek reappointment. Two Democratic vacancies on the
commission will occur on October 31, 1995.
- Approved a resolution in memory of the late Chief Justice
Warren E. Burger. In part the resolution states, "His [Burger's]
reputation as a jurist, a scholar, and an esteemed colleague will
be forever a part of the history of this Conference and a grateful
nation."
- Approved a resolution in recognition of the tenth anniversary
of L. Ralph Mecham, Director of the Administrative Office of the
U.S. Courts. It states, in part, "Director Mecham's distinguished
leadership has served to reshape and strengthen the Administrative
Office of the U.S. Courts to meet current and anticipated challenges."
The Judicial Conference of the United States is the principal
policy-making body for the federal court system. It is chaired
by the Chief Justice of the United States and composed of the
chief judges of the 13 U.S. courts of appeals, a district judge
from each of the 12 geographic circuits, and the chief judge of
the Court of International Trade. The chair of the Executive Committee
of the Conference presides when the Chief Justice is not present.
The Conference meets twice a year to consider administrative and
policy issues affecting the court system and to make recommendations
to Congress concerning legislation involving the Judicial Branch.
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