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Accountability through Measurement. A court performance measurement report of the Lubbock County District Courts and County Courts at Law August 1, 2006. Why Measure Court Performance?. Perceptions and beliefs of court insiders are not always accurate
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Accountability through Measurement A court performance measurement report of the Lubbock County District Courts and County Courts at Law August 1, 2006
Why Measure Court Performance? • Perceptions and beliefs of court insiders are not always accurate • Allows the Courts to identify and focus on areas of greatest importance to a broad and diverse audience • Fosters greater creativity among court staff by setting desired outcomes • Helps the Court prepare, justify and present budgetary requests • Reinforces the Court’s desire to have effective judicial governance and accountability
One statement sums it up… “What gets measured gets done.” - Peter Drucker
Where the Courts started… • Judicial, County and community leaders worked together starting in mid-1998 • “Achieving the Goal” – Senator Duncan • OCA Case Management Review • Reformed case management system in conjunction with the local Bar Associations and Criminal District Attorney • New Local Rules formulated in 2000
Where the Courts started… • Number of pending cases • 1999 - 23,963 • 2005 - 12,803 46.6%
Where the Courts started… • Average Clearance Rate • 1999 - 93% • 2005 - 105% 12%
Where the Courts started… • Age of Disposed Cases • FY 1998 • Felony - 81% over 120 days old • District Civil - 34% over 18 months old • 2005 • Felony - <19% over 120 days old • District Civil - <15% over 18 months old
Where the Courts started… • Age of Pending Caseload • 1999 - 40% of pending criminal cases were older than 18 months • 2006 - <9% of pending felonies and <4% of pending misdemeanors are older than 18 months
Where the Courts started… • Age of Pending Caseload • 1999 - 65% of pending civil cases were older than 18 months • 2006 - <15% of pending civil cases are older than 18 months
What are the CourTools? • Simplification of Trial Court Performance Standards published in mid-90s • TCPS consisted of almost 68 measures that were difficult to gauge and difficult to interpret • CourTools consists of 10 measures that are fairly simple to gauge and easily interpreted • CourTools was developed by the National Center for State Courts • Released in April 2005 • We are among the first in the nation to implement and interpret the results
Measure 1: Access & Fairness • Measures individual satisfaction with the ability to make use of the Courts (Access) • Doesn’t measure winning or losing, but perceptions of how the legal process dealt with their issue, interest or case (Fairness) • Conducted using a survey of all court users • Plan to administer survey in August and release in Fall 2006
Measure 2: Clearance Rates • Measures court productivity in keeping current with the incoming flow of cases • The number of outgoing cases in relation to the number of incoming cases • Determines if courts are keeping up with incoming cases and/or if the courts are reducing the backlog • Can help pinpoint problems or indicate process improvements needed
Measure 3: Time to Disposition • Calculates the length of elapsed time from case filing to case resolution • Compares resolved cases to established time frames in the Local Rules • Time frames were established in 2000 in conjunction with the Local Bar and others
Measure 3 (cont.) Civil – Level One: 92.0% were disposed within the standard Level Two: 91.2% were disposed within the standard Level Three: 85% were disposed within the standard Criminal – Felony: If all cases are Level One – 66.5% were disposed within the standard If all cases are Level Two – 73.5% were disposed within the standard If all cases are Level Three – 82.9% were disposed within the standard Misdemeanor: 57.9% are within the standard
Measure 3 (cont.) Family Law – Level One: 56.0% were disposed within the standard Level Two: 76.3% were disposed within the standard Level Three: 100% were disposed within the standard
Measure 4: Age of Active Pending Caseload • Age of pending cases from filing until time of measurement • Addresses three questions: • Does backlog exist? • Which cases are a problem? • Given past and present performance, what is expected in the future? • Completed using data mostly from May 15
Measure 4 (cont.) Civil – Level One: 90.6% are within the standard Level Two: 80.0% are within the standard Level Three: 90.4% are within the standard Criminal – Felony: If all cases are Level One – 78.9% are within the standard If all cases are Level Two – 85.4% are within the standard If all cases are Level Three – 91.3% are within the standard Misdemeanor: 73.3% are within the standard
Measure 4 (cont.) Family Law – Level One: 62.0% are within the standard Level Two: 80.5% are within the standard Level Three: 100% are within the standard
Measure 5: Trial Date Certainty • The number of times cases disposed by trial are set for trial • Closely associated with timely case disposition • Evaluate calendaring and continuance policies • Trials include jury trials, non-jury bench trials
Jury Trial Date Certainty - 2005 County Court at Law Civil District Civil Misdemeanor Felony
Bench Trial Date Certainty - 2005 Civil Misdemeanor Felony Family
Measure 6: Reliability and Integrity of Case Files • Percentage of case files that can be retrieved within established time standards and that meet standards for completeness & accuracy of contents • Specifically review the following: • How long does it take to retrieve file (on-site, off-site)? • Do case contents and docket summary match up? • Is the file organized and complete in its requirements (filemarks, sealed documents sealed, correctly captioned, petition & citation present, etc) • Report anticipated to be released Fall 2006
Measure 7: Collection of Monetary Penalties • Payments collected & distributed within established timelines, expressed as a percentage of total monetary penalties ordered in specific cases • Verifies that court orders are observed & enforced • Takes into account working off penalties • Incorporating Collections 5 year report • 112% increase in misdemeanor collections
Measure 8: Effective Use of Jurors • Measures Court’s ability to effectively manage jury service • Juror yield • Total number of jurors who are summoned to appear vs. those who appear and are qualified to serve • Factors in those who are no-shows, undeliverable, disqualified, exempt, excused, or postponed
Measure 8 (cont.) • Juror Utilization • Rate at which prospective jurors are used in trial or voir dire, expressed as a percentage of those who qualified and available to serve • Study underway – to be completed in Winter 2007
Measure 9: Court Employee Satisfaction • Ratings of court employees assessing the quality of the work environment and relations between staff and management • Committed, happy staff positively affect court performance • Surveys opinion on whether staff have the materials, motivation, direction, sense of mission, and commitment to do quality work. • Can use results to make changes to improve employee satisfaction
Measure 10: Cost per Case • The average cost of processing a single case, by case type • Used to evaluate existing practices and improve court operation – cost-effectiveness • Takes total court expenditures (personnel, operating costs) and allocates those as a percentage of staff assigned to case types. Then, that amount is divided by the total number of dispositions of that case type. • Adjusted for inflation over time
Where do we go from here… • The Courts have developed 17 specific strategies to address issues uncovered in these measures • The Courts are committed to implementing those strategies for improvement • The Courts will report findings of CourTools measures annually