Posts Tagged ‘New York’

Update on mandatory judicial retirement legislation: bills in 16 states, but so far no enactments; Hawaii appears to be closest but has choppy history on the subject

March 19th, 2013

I’ve mentioned in the past the sheer volume of bills, particularly in the last 3 years, to increase or eliminate the mandatory retirement age for judges. So far while there has been a great deal of activity no state has been able to get an increase or elimination either onto the governor’s desk or before the voters.

Hawaii in particular looks to be the most likely to get an increase or elimination, but it not at all clear how the state legislature will fare and how the voters will react. Hawaii has a particular history with the subject of mandatory judicial retirement, one that does not suggest adoption is certain.

2005-2006 session: Eliminate it

In 2005, Hawaii had the first Republican governor since statehood with the power to appoint judges via merit selection, a legislature made up of a supermajority of Democrats (41 to 10 in the House, 20 to 5 in the Senate), and several members of the state’s courts up against the mandatory retirement age of 70. The state’s senate proposed a constitutional amendment (SB 995) eliminating the mandatory retirement age of 70. The vote went along party lines, the move was viewed as partisan in general, and it which went down to a nearly 2-1 defeat in the November 2006 elections.

2007-2010: Raise it

After the defeat in 2006 and taking the 2007 session off, the legislature went back to work on the subject. HB 2344 of 2008 would have raised the age from 70 to 72, while SB 3202 of the same year would have raised it from 70 to 80, but only for judges appointed after November 4, 2008 when the item would have been on the ballot. The 70-to-72 version went nowhere, the 70-to-80 version was approved in the House and Senate, but using slightly different language that could not be reconciled in conference committee in time.

A 2009/2010 version (HB 621) to raise the age from 70 to the end of the term in which a judge turned 70 was never even brought up for a committee hearing.

2011-2012: Increase it and/or work around it

The 2011/2012 session saw attempts to try and work around the mandatory retirement age of 70. SB 650 authorized the chief justice of the supreme court to appoint judges forced into retirement as “emeritus judges” to serve as per diem judges or judicial mentors in courts no higher than the court level they reached prior to retirement and for terms not to exceed three months. An amended version, removing any reference to “judicial mentors” was approved by the House and Senate unanimously, but there was a catch. Because it was a constitutional amendment, the legislature was required under the constitution to give the governor 10 days written notice before passage. They failed to do so and had to swiftly repass the bill to get it onto the 2012 ballot. Despite no apparent opposition, the provision failed when over 10% of voters simply declined to vote on the item. Final tally: 49.6% Yes, 39.9% No, 10.4% not voting.

In the meantime the effort to raise the age was reintroduced and redebated (SB 2206 of 2012) again with an eye towards raising it from 70 to 80. It was approved unanimously in the Senate and the House Judiciary Committee in March 2012, but the focus for the remaining months of the legislature was on SB 650, the work around, rather than the increase.

2013-2014: Increase it and/or work around it (again)

Despite the loss in 2012, the legislature appears inclined to try and repropose the judge emeritus concept again to voters. HB 275 and SB 346 effectively cut and paste the language that was on the November 2012 ballot. The difference here would be that House version applies to any retired judge or justice, trial or appellate, regardless of whether they are forced into retirement at age 70 or not; the Senate version mentions only “judges” and otherwise reproduces the language of the 2012 bill (i.e. only those forced to retire at age 70):

SB 650 of 2012: The chief justice may appoint judges who have retired upon attaining the age of seventy years as emeritus judges, permitting the appointed judges to serve as temporary judges in courts no higher than the court level they reached prior to retirement and for terms not to exceed three months per each appointment.

HB 275 of 2013 (as approved by House): The chief justice may appoint judges and justices who have retired as emeritus judges, permitting the appointed judges and justices to serve as temporary judges in courts no higher than the court level they reached prior to retirement and for terms not to exceed three months per appointment.

SB 346 of 2013: The chief justice may appoint judges who have retired upon attaining the age of seventy years as emeritus judges, permitting the appointed judges to serve as temporary judges in courts no higher than the court level they reached prior to retirement and for terms not to exceed three months per each appointment.

 HB 275 as amended was approved unanimously by the full House February 28.

HB 792, SB 886 and SB 1022 all increase the mandatory judicial retirement age from 70 to 80. Of the three, it is SB 886 which has had the greatest success; it was approved unanimously by the Senate February 15 and unanimously by the House Judiciary Committee March 7. The next hurdle is the House Finance Committee. Despite the swift passage so far, it could be delayed up to a year and carried over until the 2014 session (as occurred with SB 650, mentioned above).

The latest status report on the bills in Hawaii and the other 16 states considering the issue this session are below the fold.

» Read more: Update on mandatory judicial retirement legislation: bills in 16 states, but so far no enactments; Hawaii appears to be closest but has choppy history on the subject

Bills for mandatory recusal of judges for campaign contributions introduced in 3 states this year; hearing on one bill later this week

March 4th, 2013

I mentioned in December 2012 that Texas legislators had prefiled a bill (HB 129 of 2013) to require judges of state’s top appellate courts (Supreme Court and Court of Criminal Appeals) recuse if a party, attorney, firm, etc. contributed $2,500 or more to judge’s campaign in last four years.

Two other states have introduced similar bills, including one set for a hearing later this week.

New York AB 5460 is a repeat of bills introduced in the past several years to require recusal where a judge received $500 or more from a party, attorney, or firm in the last five years. AB 5460 and its predecessors also required that the judge, parties, firms, and attorneys notify one another as soon as they became aware of the conflict. Court rules adopted in 2011 (New York Rules of the Chief Administrative Judge 151) set the limit at $2,500 from an individual party/attorney/firm OR $3,500 in the aggregate from all parties/attorneys/firms in the prior two years.

Illinois HB 2218 effectively replicates the provisions of the New York bill: $500 in prior five years, all parties, attorneys, and judges must disclose as soon as case is assigned.  HB 2218 is set for a hearing March 6 before the House Judiciary Committee.

Veterans Courts: 2013 legislatures are both encouraging them and trying to give the executive control over them

February 26th, 2013

I’ve been monitoring for the last several years legislative interest in veterans courts, and 2013 appears to bear out the continued interest in them. Many states already operate such courts through court rule or the calendar/docketing practices of individual judges, such as in Buffalo, New York where the a veterans court has operated for years.

What sets 2013′s bills apart is the shift in focus from establishment (such bills are still being introduced) to encouragement and control.

3 states (Kentucky HR 118, Oregon HCR 24, Washington State SB 5797) are considering bills or resolutions “encouraging” or “urging” veterans courts.

3 states (Oregon’s HB 3194 and HB 3195; Texas SB 462, South Carolina’s HB 3014) would transfer to or establish it is the executive branch, not the judiciary, that is to create veterans courts and/or set the rules for their operation.

Details and current status of the efforts below the fold. » Read more: Veterans Courts: 2013 legislatures are both encouraging them and trying to give the executive control over them

Effort to increase judicial retirement age fails for 7th year in a row in VA, faring better in other state legislatures

February 12th, 2013

It appears that for the 7th year in a row, an effort to increase the mandatory retirement age of 70 for Virginia’s judges will fail, but similar efforts in other states are showing signs of movement.

A full list of all such effort to eliminate mandatory judicial retirement from 1990-2010 is here.

A list of what states have what mandatory judicial retirement ages is here.

Hawaii: The history of Hawaii’s interest in increasing its judicial retirement age is a complex one. When the Democrat-dominated legislature faced the prospect in 2006 of having a Republican governor appoint new judges to the state’s courts, they swiftly put onto the ballot an effort to raise the retirement age. Numerous political leaders, including the Democrat Attorney General came out against it and the effort failed. In the last several years, however, the effort has been renewed. SB 886 of 2013, approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee on January 29, would increase the age from 70 to 80.

Indiana: SB 124, which would outright eliminate the mandatory retirement age of 75 for appellate judges, was approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee on February 7. Indiana in 2011 eliminated the mandatory retirement ages for its trial courts.

Michigan: SJR 5 of 2013 picks up where SJR 21 of 2012 left off in pushing for an outright elimination of the state’s mandatory judicial retirement age of 70. The 2012 bill, introduced late in that session, was approved by the Senate Judiciary in September 2012. The 2013 version has already re-passed the Senate Judiciary Committee on January 31.

North Carolina: HB 12 would increase the state’s judicial retirement age from 72 to 75 and is currently pending in the House Judiciary A Committee.

New York: The state legislature already approved in 2011 (SB 5827) an effort to increase the mandatory retirement age for the judges of top appellate court from 70 to 80 and to allow judges for the state’s main trial court to be certified for 2-year periods from age 70-80. SB 886 of 2013 is the second passage required for state constitutional amendments. If approved in 2013 or 2014, it would go to the voters on the 2014 ballot.

Pennsylvania: While lawsuits have been filed against the state’s existing mandatory retirement age of 70 as a form of age discrimination, SB 85 of 2013 would eliminate it legislatively. That bill is currently pending in the Senate Judiciary Committee. Update 2/13/13: A House version (HB 79) would up the age from 70 to 75. h/t to Pennsylvanians for Modern Courts for the pointer.

South Carolina: The effort to eliminate the judicial retirement age of 72 (SB 71) is pending in the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Virginia: Like prior effortsSB 740 / SB 762 of 2013 met with initial success and was approved by the full Senate on a 30-10 vote in January. However, the bill was assigned to the House Committee on Courts of Justice, Civil Subcommittee, which killed the bill on a 4-4 tie vote in 2012 killed it again in 2013 on a vote vote.

Washington State: HB 1266 / SB 5046 would allow district court judges only to serve out the term in which they read age 75 (currently they have to resign the end of that year). The House bill was approved by the House Judiciary Committee on February 5. The Senate version was approved by the full Senate 48-0 on January 30.

Wyoming:  I’ve noted the efforts here. In short the House has approved a plan (HB 167) to increase the mandatory retirement for supreme court and district court judges from 70 to 75 and imposes a mandatory retirement age for circuit judges at 75 (currently, they have none). This was after Senate leadership balked at the House’s original idea (HJR 1) to simply eliminate the mandatory retirement age.

Should failure to confirm judicial nominees result in automatic confirmation or automatic rejection? KS & TN debate the issue this week

January 29th, 2013

The last several years have seen numerous challenges to merit selection systems in the state legislatures, with perhaps the most common feature being some sort of legislative confirmation (often but not always in lieu of ending merit selection commissions). Two legislatures, Florida and Tennessee, have outright approved such plans, although the Florida proposal was rejected at the ballot box in 2012 and the Tennessee bill must be approved a second time before going to the voters. Under the 2012 Florida bill, the Senate would have had 90 days to confirm nominees  for the state’s supreme court or else the nomination was deemed confirmed. The Senate would have been allowed to call itself back into session for such a confirmation process.

I noted when this subject came up in Florida that, in states where there is some sort of legislative confirmation (House, Senate, or both) there were already examples of a variety of scenarios:

Kansas’ bills to end the state’s merit selection system (HCR 5002 and SB 8 / SCR 1601)  and the Tennessee bill approved in 2012 and requiring approval in 2013/2014 (HJR 8 / SJR 2) opt for automatic confirmation. Kansas would have Senate confirmation within 60 calendar days or within 20 days of a new session start. Tennessee provides for confirmation by both houses within 60 calendar days or within 60 calendar days of a new session start. Neither appears to contemplate the chamber(s) coming back into session for confirmations.

Tennessee’s Senate Judiciary Committee considers SJR 2 later today while Kansas’ full Senate is set to vote on  SB 8 / SCR 1601 tomorrow.

Legislatures looking to take away or get involved in supreme courts’ power over bar admission & practice

January 3rd, 2013

There’s been a particular uptick in the number of bills and resolutions through which legislatures are attempting to influence of takeover outright who is admitted to practice law in the state. Some, such as the one adopted in California in 2012, merely urge or suggest. Others, such as the two prefiled in New York and South Carolina, change the rules or take the power of the Supreme Court to set them. While few such bills are proceeding out of committee, the increased activity is notable.

2013

New York SB 808 Requires judiciary accept into bar anyone who has graduated from an accredited law school, been admitted to the bar of another state, and has completed 1 year of externship under the direction of a NYS attorney. Prefiled in Senate Judiciary Committee.

South Carolina SB 152 Provides Supreme Court may make rules regarding South Carolina Bar subject to statute. Provides constitutional provision giving Supreme Court power to regulate practice of law is subject to statute. Provides any rule requiring attorney be a member of the South Carolina Bar is superseded and of no force and effect. Prefiled in Senate Judiciary Committee.

2012

California ACR 167 Declares an applicant’s immigration status should not be the determining factor in deciding whether to approve a license to practice law, would commend Sergio C. Garcia for his hard work and success, and would also commend the State Bar of California for its efforts to admit Sergio C. Garcia to the State Bar of California. Approved by Assembly & Senate (Governor’s signature not required).

Florida HB 4055 Repeals provisions prohibiting practice of law by retired justices of state Supreme Court. Approved by full House. Died in Senate.

New Hampshire HB 1474 Prohibits requiring membership in any bar association or other professional organization as a condition for practicing law or for appointment to certain positions. Referred to interim study by full Senate 5/16/12.

New York AB 10669 Requires judiciary accept into bar anyone who has graduated from an accredited law school, been admitted to the bar of another state, and has completed 1 year of externship under the direction of a NYS attorney. Died in committee.

2011

Florida HB 7113 Repeals provisions prohibiting practice of law by retired justices of state Supreme Court. Approved by full House. Died in Senate.

Florida SB 2212 Specifically authorizes Brian Pitts to practice law in the state. Died in committee.

New York AB 2013 Allows graduates of law schools who have achieved a juris doctorate from a law school accredited by a national accrediting agency and who have passed the bar exam and been admitted to practice in another state, to sit for the bar exam in New York State. Died in committee.

Washington HB 1664 / HJR 4216 Transfers all mandatory, regulatory, licensing, and disciplinary functions of the state bar association to the state supreme court. Died in committee.

2010

Florida SB 2696 Grants legislature power over admission and practice of law. Died in committee.

Florida SB 58 Specifically authorizes Brian Pitts to practice law in the state.

New Hampshire HB 1564 Establishes the authority and procedure for the regulation of attorneys by the Supreme Court. Removes the requirement in the election or appointment of the county attorneys that the person be a member of the state bar. Rejected by full House 3/11/10.

New York AB 11339 / SB 7792 Allows graduates of non-ABA accredited law schools admitted to the bar of another state to sit for NY bar exam. Died in committee(s).

2009

Georgia HR 72 Urges the Supreme Court of Georgia to disbar or disallow admission to the bar any attorney who is convicted of altering or backdating a legal document. Died in committee.

South Carolina SB 448 (Constitutional Amendment) Removes Supreme Courts power over the admission to the practice of law and discipline of attorneys. Transfers power to such body as may be created by the General Assembly. Died in committee.

Washington HB 2216 / SB 6025 Transfers all mandatory, regulatory, licensing, and disciplinary functions of the Washington state bar association to the state supreme court. Died in committee(s).

 

New York Year in Review: Commencing actions in criminal and family court electronically

December 27th, 2012

New laws affecting the courts enacted by the New York legislature in 2012 include the following:

AB 9400 Extends the chief administrator of the courts authority to allow referees to determine certain applications to a family court for an order of protection.

AB 10706 Authorizes pilot program permitting use of electronic means for commencing actions in certain criminal and family court proceedings.

Will Texas’ legislature join Alabama & California in mandating judges recuse due to specific campaign contribution limits?

December 20th, 2012

In 2009, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Capteron v. Massey that some campaign contributions to judicial candidates can be so high that due process requires the judge recuse. The high court failed to specify what amount would trigger recusal, but as I noted in “The Legislature Must Save the Court from Itself”?: Recusal, Separation of Powers and the Post-Caperton World, state legislatures have tried for decades to set specific limits. It now appears Texas’ legislature may join Alabama and California in setting specific recusal limits.

HB 129 of 2013 would require judges of state’s top appellate courts (Supreme Court and Court of Criminal Appeals) recuse if a party, attorney, lawfirm, etc. contributed $2,500 or more to judge’s campaign in last 4 years.

It further provides a way to address funds made via PAC: under a formula an individual’s contribution to the PAC would count as a contribution to the judicial campaign if the PACs total contributions made to all candidates meets (or fails to meet) certain thresholds.  This avoids individuals and firms barred by the $2,5000 limit from simply setting up a PAC which then funnels the money to a campaign anyway.

Five states now have specific contribution levels compelling recusal for at least some of the state’s judges, although most do so via rule of court and not statute.

  • Alabama Code § 12-24-2(c): $2,000 for trial judges, is $4,000 for appellate jurists during “election immediately preceding his or her new term in office”. The statute has never been enforced because no one has sought pre-clearance for the statute under the federal Voting Rights Act.
  • Arizona Code of Judicial Conduct Rule 2.11(A)(4): “The judge knows or learns by means of a timely motion that a party, a party’s lawyer, or the law firm of a party’s lawyer has within the previous four years made aggregate contributions to the judge’s campaign in an amount that is greater than the amounts permitted pursuant to A.R.S. § 16-905.” This appears to mean a $872 limit.
  • California: By statute enacted in 2011 (Code of Civil Procedure 170.1) trial court judges must recuse if their campaign received $1,500 in support of the judge’s last election (if last election was in last 6 years) or in support of an upcoming election. A new rule adopted as Code of Judicial Conduct Rule 3E(5)(j) by the state’s Supreme Court in November 2012 applies a $5,000 limit to contributions for appellate justices.
  • Utah Code of Judicial Conduct Rule 2.11(A)(4):  $50 in prior 3 years. (“The judge knows or learns by means of a timely motion that a party, a party’s lawyer, or the law firm of a party’s lawyer has within the previous three years made aggregate contributions to the judge’s retention in an amount that is greater than $50.”)
  • New York Rules of the Chief Administrative Judge 151: for trial judges, $2,500 from an individual party/attorney/firm OR $3,500 in the aggregate from all parties/attorneys/firms in the prior two years. The rule was adopted in early 2011.

 

 

Ohio House and Senate OK plan to increase penalties for assaults on judges, court staff; NY & WA approved similar plans in 2011

December 11th, 2012

Ohio looks poised to join New York and Washington State in increasing the penalties for assaulting judges and court staff during the 2011/2012 legislative cycle.

Under HB 52, an assault against judges, magistrates, prosecutors, or court officials or employees engaged in the performance of their duties would be automatically raised to a fifth degree felony. The bill had passed the House in mid-2011 but lay dormant in the Senate for over a year. It is now set to be sent to the governor.

Ohio’s HB 52 is similar to a new Washington law (HB 1794 of 2011) that adds to the assault in the third degree statute assaults on a judicial officer, court-related employee, county clerk, or county clerk’s employee while in they are performing their duties. Such an assault is automatically a Class C felony.

New York went a step further, creating the new, specific crime of assault on judge (AB 409 of 2011). Such an assault is automatically a Class C felony.

Merit selection: comprehensive state-by-state review of efforts to modify or end existing systems

April 10th, 2012

The debate over merit selection systems has reached a head in the last several years, with strenuous efforts at play to create merit selection systems in states which lack them coupled with vigorous efforts in other states that have merit selection to heavily modify or end their systems.

Over the next two days I’m going to look at both aspects of merit selection. Today I’ll be examining 2012 efforts to modify or end existing merit selection systems as created by constitutional provision or statute. Several states use “merit selection” entirely as the result of governors’ creating nomination panels; because these don’t involve the legislature I will not focus on them. All information as to which states have what is from the American Judicature Society’s 2011 report “Judicial Merit Selection: Current Status” located here.

Tomorrow (April 11) I will examine efforts to implement statutory and/or constitutional merit selection systems in states that do not currently have them.

Alabama – Circuit Court in select counties [interim only]: No activity

Alaska – Supreme Court, Court of Appeals, Superior Court: No activity

Arizona – Supreme Court, Court of Appeals, Superior Court in larger counties: A 2011 bill (SCR 1001) revising numerous provisions of the merit selection system (commission composition, number of names submitted, etc.) plus increasing judicial terms will be on the 2012 ballot. A 2012 effort to simply end the merit selection system and replace with partisan elections (SCR 1034 / SB 1371) was rejected in committee.

Colorado – Supreme Court, Court of Appeals, District Court: No activity

Connecticut – Supreme Court, Appellate Court, Superior Court: No activity

Florida – Supreme Court, District Court of Appeal; Circuit [interim only]: A 2011 bill (HJR 7111) requiring Supreme Court nominees chosen by the governor be subject to Senate confirmation will be on the 2012 ballot. Several attempts to change the composition of the nominating commissions and allowing a governor to fire a majority of the commissioners at will (vs. staggered terms) failed at the last minute (HB 971 / SB 1570).

Hawaii – Supreme Court, Intermediate Appellate Court of Appeals, Circuit Court, District Court: Constitutional amendments HB 2343 and SB 2209 would require judicial selection commissions to provide more public disclosure of their proceedings, specifically information about those whose names are considered to fill vacancies. The Senate version appears now to be the primary bill, having been approved by the full Senate and the House Judiciary Committee. Another constitutional amendment, SB 2205, would lower the number of names submitted to fill vacancies: for Supreme, Intermediate Appellate & Circuit: from 4-6 to specifically 3. For District: from not less than 6 to specifically 3.

Idaho – Supreme Court, Court of Appeals, District Court [interim only]: No activity

Indiana – Supreme Court, Court of Appeals, Tax Court, Superior and other trial courts in select counties: Proposals to substantially revised (SJR 13) or simply end (SJR 14) merit selection failed to advance.

Iowa – Supreme Court, Court of Appeals, District Court: Several bills introduced in 2011 to either alter or end merit selection were carried over into the 2012 session (see database for full list). None advanced.

Kansas – Supreme Court, Court of Appeals, District Court at district’s discretion : The prime focus was in ending merit selection for the Court of Appeals; because it is a statutorily created court the change would only require a change in statute rather than a constitutional amendment. While meeting with House approval in 2011 (HB 2101) the Senate failed to take up the bill. Undaunted, the House began attaching it to unrelated pieces of legislation (SB 83) and seeking to end the commission on judicial performance which makes recommendations for or against retention of judges (HB 2396).

Kentucky – Supreme Court, Court of Appeals, Circuit Court; District Court [interim only]: No activity

Maine – Supreme Judicial Court and Superior Court: No activity

Minnesota – District Court [interim only]: No activity

Missouri – Supreme Court, Court of Appeals, Circuit Courts in select counties: The state synonymous with merit selection saw efforts to outright end merit selection fail to advance (HJR 77, SJR 41, SJR 42). Efforts to modify the system were and are active. SJR 51 would allow the governor to appoint all nominating commission members subject to senate confirmation and a prohibition of members of the bar, judiciary, or their spouses from serving. HJR 44 increases the names given to the governor to chose from 3 to 5 and allows the governor to reject the first 5 person panel, ask for a second, and then select from the 10. It also alters the composition of the nominating commissions and, like the Florida provisions attempted to do, allows the governor to fire commissioners appointed by prior governors. HJR 44 was approved by the House Special Standing Committee on Judicial Reform 3/21/12 and is currently in the House Rules Committee.

Montana – Supreme Court and District Court [interim only]-: Legislature not in session.

Nebraska – Supreme Court, Court of Appeals, District Court, County Court: No activity

Nevada – Supreme Court and District Court [interim only]: Legislature not in session.

New Mexico – Supreme Court, Court of Appeals, District Court, Metropolitan Court: SB 24, which was approved by the Senate but not the House, would have created a special fund to help pay for the judicial nominating commissions associated with the state’s merit selection system. Funds were to have come from gifts, donations, etc. plus $50,000 a year from the legislature itself as an automatic, recurring appropriation.

New York – Court of Appeals (court of last resort in state): A single bill introduced in 2011 (AB 309) would have required the nominating commission submit all qualified names to governor. It has failed to advance.

North Dakota – Supreme Court and District Court: Legislature out of session

Oklahoma – Supreme Court, Court of Criminal Appeals, Court of Civil Appeals, District Court [interim only]: 2011 carry over bills SJR 36 would have ended merit selection for the appellate courts, allowing the governor to appoint anyone qualified subject to senate confirmation while SB 621 would have required nominees chosen via the state’s merit selection system be subject to senate confirmation. Neither have advanced in 2012. Other carry over bills from 2011 to end merit (HJR 1008 & HJR 1009 for appellate courts; SB 543 to fill interim vacancies in District Courts) went nowhere.

Rhode Island – Supreme Court, Superior Court, Family Court, District Court : No activity Update 4/11/12: HB 8043 filed just days ago extends until 2013 an existing law allowing any individual whose name was publicly submitted to the governor by the judicial nominating commission to be eligible for subsequent nomination by the governor.

South Dakota – Supreme Court, Circuit Court [Interim only]: No activity

Tennessee – Supreme Court, Court of Criminal Appeals, Court of Appeals, Trial Courts [interim only]: Tennessee has seen literally dozens of bills introduced in 2011 and carried over, plus new bills in 2012, dealing with the state’s merit selection system which is due to “sunset” and expire soon.

Put merit selection explicitly in constitution:

HJR 753 Adds legislative confirmation of nominees

HJR 830

SJR 183

SJR 710 Adds legislative confirmation of nominees

Extend merit to June 30, 2013:

HB 3575 / SB 3321

HB 2356 / SB 2346

HB 2537 / SB 2345

Extend merit to June 30, 2014:

HB 3451 (nominating commission only)

End merit:

HB 173 / SB 127

HB 231 / SB 281

HB 958 / SB 699

HB 3615 / SB 3714

SJR 475

SJR 635

Modify:

HB 1017 / SB 82 Retains merit selection, but makes judicial nomination commission recommendations advisory; allows governor to ignore recommendations.

HB 1702 / SB 646 Requires judges selected via merit selection system receive 75% yes in retention election.

HB 3452 / SB 2794 Retains merit selection, but alters nomination process and adds confirmation.

HB 3691 / SB 3652 Requires House and Senate speakers appoint all nine members of the judicial evaluation commission since the judicial council no longer exists.

Utah – Supreme Court, Court of Appeals, District Court, Juvenile Court: No activity

Vermont – Supreme Court, Superior Court, District Court: No activity

West Virginia – Supreme Court of Appeals, Circuit Court, Family Court [interim only]: No activity

Wyoming – Supreme Court, District Court, Circuit Court: No activity