The Legislature sets the number of superior court judges in each county. The Washington State Constitution provides that the state and the county share the cost for superior court judges. A superior court judge's benefits and one-half of the salary are paid by the state. The county pays one-half of the judge's salary.
The Board for Judicial Administration recommends the creation of new superior court judge positions based on workload analyses by the Administrative Office of the Courts.
Whatcom County is currently authorized four superior court judges, which was set in 2013.
The authorized number of superior court judges in Whatcom County is increased from four to five.
PRO: The Washington State judiciary and Whatcom County Superior Court are preparing for adjudication in Water Resource Inventory Area 1, otherwise known as the Nooksack Basin adjudication. It is not often that we see an adjudication of this magnitude. The last time was in in 1977 with State v. Acquavella, which ended in 2019.
To illustrate the magnitude of impact this adjudication will have on the court, the Department of Ecology will serve notice by certified mail and legal publication on approximately 30,000 claimants. DOE expects that will result in anywhere between 5000 and 25,000 defendants claim filings. A total of 6168 cases in total were filed in Whatcom County Superior Court in 2022 so the court is expecting anywhere from two to four times the amount of normal claim filings that they handle in a typical year.
There is a deep interest in this water adjudication because water requirements for salmon must be preserved.
The Administrative Office of the Courts is requesting that the Legislature pay the entirety of the new judge?s salary and benefits until the conclusion of the adjudication pursuant to RCW 90.03.243. After the adjudication has ended, the position will revert back to the normal funding structure for superior court judges. RCW 90.03.243 provides that the county in which an adjudication or a suit to administer an adjudication is being held must be provided the extraordinary costs imposed on the superior court of that county due to the adjudication, so what we?re asking for in terms of state funding is aligned with statute. The county commission is on board.
In addition to the impending water adjudication, Whatcom County?s current judicial staffing ratio to county population and caseloads supports an additional judge. For example, in the last completed caseload report of 2022 Whatcom County had 6168 filings and a population of approximately 230,000 people but had the same number of judges as neighboring Skagit Superior Court, which had 4346 filings and a population of approximately 100,000 less people.