Catharine Arrowood, the president of the North Carolina Bar Association, recently wrote this piece about court funding in North Carolina. It’s received considerable attention. The thrust of the argument is this: “[W]hile our population has been increasing by double digits and the technology and tools available to better serve a large and widespread population have been improving, we cut spending on our courts from 3% of our state budget to 2.2%. No wonder too many of our court personnel work extra jobs to make ends meet. No wonder we have been unable to implement a statewide electronic filing and case management system. No wonder we have insufficient money to conduct jury trials and pay court reporters.” The article indicates that the General Assembly may address the funding problem, but contends that structural reforms should also be considered, including moving to a regional, rather than county-based, system. It’s worth a read. FBI director on race and policing. James Comey spoke at Georgetown University last week. The New York Times has video of the speech here together with a written summary. The topic was the relationship between police and minority communities. Comey addressed some of the factors that may lead officers of all races to react differently to minority citizens and suspects than to whites, and some of the historical reasons for minority communities’ mistrust of law enforcement. This is a big and complicated issue, and to my mind, it is nice to see someone with a big pulpit taking it on in [...]
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