FINAL BILL REPORT
SHB 1747
C 105 L 05
Synopsis as Enacted
Brief Description: Administering the state-funded civil representation of indigent persons.
Sponsors: By House Committee on Judiciary (originally sponsored by Representatives Wood, Rodne, Priest, Clements, Lantz, Williams, Darneille and Ormsby).
House Committee on Judiciary
House Committee on Appropriations
Senate Committee on Judiciary
Senate Committee on Ways & Means
Background:
Various organizations, such as Columbia Legal Services, the Northwest Justice Project, and
volunteer attorney programs, provide civil (not criminal) legal services to low-income people
in Washington.
Although funding comes from a variety of sources, state funding for civil legal services
generally comes from the Public Safety and Education Account (PSEA) and is administered
by the Department of Community, Trade, and Economic Development (DCTED), which is an
executive branch agency. The DCTED uses a distribution formula based on the distribution
of low-income individuals by county.
State-funded providers may not use state funds for certain categories of cases and activities.
A Civil Legal Services Oversight Committee was created in 1997, made up of one member
from each of the minority and majority caucuses of the House of Representatives and one
member from each of the minority and majority caucuses of the Senate. The oversight
committee is responsible for reviewing the activities of state-funded civil legal services
providers. The committee is required to meet at least four times each year and to accept
public testimony at two of the meetings.
The Task Force on Civil Equal Justice Funding, which was created by the Washington
Supreme Court, recommended moving the administration and oversight of civil legal services
from the DCTED to the Administrative Office of the Courts.
Summary:
The Legislature finds that civil legal aid to indigent persons is an important component of the
state's responsibility to provide proper and effective administration of civil and criminal
justice.
The Office of Civil Legal Aid (OCLA) is created as an independent agency of the judicial
branch. Administration of state-funded civil legal services is transferred from the DCTED to
the OCLA.
The Supreme Court must appoint a director of the OCLA from a list of three names provided
by the Access To Justice Board (ATJB). The director will serve at the pleasure of the
Supreme Court and will receive a salary to be determined by the new Civil Legal Aid
Oversight Committee (Committee). The director must:
A new, 11-member oversight committee is created to replace the four-member oversight
committee.
The Committee consists of:
Members serve a three-year term, subject to a renewal of one additional three-year term. At
the time of appointment, a member may not be employed by a state-funded legal aid provider.
Members serve without compensation, except for travel reimbursement and other expenses.
The Committee must oversee the activities of the OCLA and review the director's
performance. The Committee may make recommendations to the Supreme Court, the ATJB,
and the Legislature regarding state-funded civil legal aid.
Votes on Final Passage:
House 96 0
Senate 37 12
Effective: July 1, 2005