Court Will Not Take Any New Cases Unless You Bring Paper

Published:

BUDGET PINCH IN MORROW COUNTY
Paperless court is motionless
Saturday,  March 14, 2009 3:20 AM
Dana Wilson
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
A Morrow County court is going BYOP: Bring your own paper.

 

The Municipal Court that handles civil, small claims, criminal and traffic cases won't accept new case filings starting Monday because it's almost out of supplies and has no money to re-order.

The court has just enough paper to handle hearing notices and other documents for pending cases, but not new ones, Judge Lee W. McClelland said.

"Basically, unless they want to provide paper, we can't process anything," he said.

The judge sent a memo explaining the problem to local government and law-enforcement officials this week. He said that the county hasn't yet paid the bill for basic supplies the court ordered and had delivered back in November. The purchase orders sent to the county auditor were returned, "indicating that no funds were available to pay them," McClelland wrote.

Morrow County Sheriff Steven R. Brenneman received McClelland's memo. He doesn't understand how a court can refuse to take legal charges.

"We are going to do our job, and if we make arrests or issue citations, we're taking them to the court," Brenneman said. "Whether the court accepts them, I guess that's something they're going to have to deal with."

McClelland also announced that his court, like many other Morrow County government offices hit with budget cuts, will switch to a four-day workweek and be closed on Friday starting the week of March 30. The court will operate 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday.

Several agencies already have volunteered to bring in enough paper to process their own Municipal Court filings, McClelland said.

"They're still going to issue tickets, and the court is going to be open to take pleas," McClelland said.

State Highway Patrol Lt. Chad McGinty, commander of the Mount Gilead post, said he called McClelland after receiving the memo. He is concerned about what will happen to the patrol's court cases if they cannot be adequately processed.

"When we issue a citation, we aim at changing driving behavior, and that means following that case to the end," McGinty said.

Morrow County Prosecutor Charles Howland declined to comment on the Municipal Court's changes but said that Common Pleas Court still will operate five days a week.

The county, hit by declines in investment income and sales-tax receipts, is operating with roughly $1.2 million less than last year. The general-fund budget dropped from about $7.7 million in 2008 to about $6.5 million this year, according to the county treasurer.

Cuts were the county's only option, Commissioner Olen Jackson said. "There isn't any more," he said. "That's what we have to work with. 

Entry #214

Comments

Avatar truecritic -
#1
I'll bet the Judges and Prosecutors get paid their outrageous salaries.
Scrape a small amount off those salaries and get more than enough for all the paper they need!
Avatar konane -
#2
Agree, been wondering when inflated salaries were going to cause an implosion. Think most large governments need an outside auditor to trim fat, find graft and waste, then they might function as they're supposed to instead of like an endless party.

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