News from and about the NCSC, Virginia Electronic Notary Statute, IJIS Institute, E-Paper, the Legal Information Institute, and the Canadian Forum on Court Technology.
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
This and That in Court Tech – September, 2012
News from and about the NCSC, Virginia Electronic Notary Statute, IJIS Institute, E-Paper, the Legal Information Institute, and the Canadian Forum on Court Technology.
Friday, September 14, 2012
All-in-One Desktop PC’s and Virtualization in the Courtroom
Articles on All-in-One computers often used as part of the judge’s electronic bench and virtual desktop software in the courtroom are discussed.
American Probation and Parole Association Issues Procurement Guide
APPA has issued a procurement guide for automated case management systems that provides structure and advise that the courts can use as well.
Wednesday, September 5, 2012
The Last Mile - Tyler “Judge Edition” Report
One of the leading commercial court automation companies, Tyler Technologies reports on their “SessionWorks Judge Edition” program.
Courtesy of the Oregon eCourt The QUARTERLY newsletter |
Friday, August 31, 2012
A Lot of This and That in Court Tech – End of August, 2012
There is a lot of court tech news including the E-Courts 2012 program, US Federal Courts revise jury instructions regarding social media, Navigating the Hazards of E-Discovery manual, E-Notarization in Virginia, location based verification, another court website hacked, two good articles from IJCA Journal, and an award for a CMS in the Catalonia, Spain courts.
Thursday, August 23, 2012
Microsoft and Open Document Format (ODF) and Why You Should Care
Electronic document formats matter for courts. This article
discusses a recent Microsoft announcement.
Thursday, August 16, 2012
Court Case Management Systems 2012 Part 3: The Court Organization, Users, and Roles
Court Case Management Systems must have the ability to define and capture the court’s organizational structure and user work roles in the basic design.
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
Canadian Court Tech Forum 2012 and CLCT Court Audio Visual Certification Training Announced
Two court technology events are announced.
Monday, August 6, 2012
This and That in Court Tech – August, 2012
News about US Federal Court Cameras Pilot, CITOC E-Filing Webinar, Why Jurors Go Online, Courts and Big Data, and some resources for planning for Microsoft Windows 8
Thursday, August 2, 2012
NJ Governor vetoes bill to help pay for court technology & indigent defense; becomes 2nd state governor to veto court technology bills this year
Cross-posted to Gavel to Gavel
Earlier this week NJ Governor Chris Christie's veto of AB 763, a bill that would among other things raise various court fees to help pay for court technology, was delivered to the Assembly. The governor's veto occurred in late June but wasn't filed until July 30. The bill, as approved by the legislature, is similar to one vetoed by South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley earlier this year and later overridden.
AB 763 provides the Supreme Court may, subject to limitations provided in the bill, adopt Rules of Court to revise or supplement filing fees and other statutory fees payable to the court for the sole purpose of funding: (1) the development, maintenance, and administration of a “Statewide digital e-court information system,” that incorporates electronic filing, service of process, document and case management, financial management, and public access to digital court records; and (2) Legal Services of New Jersey.
The veto now goes back to the Assembly. Its prospects are unclear: the original version passed the Assembly on March 2012 on a 64-14 vote. The Senate passed its version 24-11, shy of the 27 votes needed to override. The Assembly then re-passed the Senate amended version, but on a 48-30 vote; it would have 52 votes in the Assembly to override.
Earlier this week NJ Governor Chris Christie's veto of AB 763, a bill that would among other things raise various court fees to help pay for court technology, was delivered to the Assembly. The governor's veto occurred in late June but wasn't filed until July 30. The bill, as approved by the legislature, is similar to one vetoed by South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley earlier this year and later overridden.
AB 763 provides the Supreme Court may, subject to limitations provided in the bill, adopt Rules of Court to revise or supplement filing fees and other statutory fees payable to the court for the sole purpose of funding: (1) the development, maintenance, and administration of a “Statewide digital e-court information system,” that incorporates electronic filing, service of process, document and case management, financial management, and public access to digital court records; and (2) Legal Services of New Jersey.
The veto now goes back to the Assembly. Its prospects are unclear: the original version passed the Assembly on March 2012 on a 64-14 vote. The Senate passed its version 24-11, shy of the 27 votes needed to override. The Assembly then re-passed the Senate amended version, but on a 48-30 vote; it would have 52 votes in the Assembly to override.
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