The Louisiana judiciary went into
full bunker job protection mode at the latest
meeting of the body that advises on judicial policy, to the detriment of the
citizenry.
The Judicial
Council of the Supreme Court was nonplussed, to say the least, at a report
issued last month by the New Orleans-based Bureau of Government Research that
determined the state’s judiciary as a whole, but particularly in New Orleans,
was overstaffed. The Council, which has a majority of judges sitting on it with
the remainder of the 17 members from the legal community save a lone citizen
representative, spent considerable meeting time criticizing the report.
Perhaps what really irritated
them was in its calculations the BGR used the Council’s own data and formula for
deriving the ideal workload in demonstrating at the statewide level (using only
the ten largest districts) there were about a quarter more judges than needed (excluding
Orleans) and in New Orleans a stunning double-and-a-quarter times needed. This
led during the meeting to a series of attacks on the study’s methodology, the
irony being the Council ended up criticizing its own methodology. It even led
to one member to ask for redoing the formula – precisely a recommendation in
the BGR report which noted that many states followed the National Center for
State Courts' that used 25 base types instead of nine and to use time studies
rather than raw time amounts.