The
administrative office of the courts shall conduct a unified
family court pilot program.
(1) Pilot program sites shall be selected through a request
for proposal process, and shall be established in no more than
three superior court judicial districts.
(2) To be eligible for consideration as a pilot project
site, judicial districts must have a statutorily authorized
judicial complement of at least five judges.
(3) The administrative office of the courts shall develop
criteria for the unified family court pilot program. The pilot
program shall include:
(a) All case types under Title 13 RCW, chapters 26.09, 26.10, 26.12, 26.18, 26.19, 26.20, 26.26, 26.50, 26.27, and 28A.225 RCW;
(b) Unified family court judicial officers, who volunteer
for the program, and meet training requirements established by
local court rule;
(c) Case management practices that provide a flexible
response to the diverse court-related needs of families involved
in multiple areas of the justice system. Case management
practices should result in a reduction in process redundancies
and an efficient use of time and resources, and create a system
enabling multiple case type resolution by one judicial officer or
judicial team;
(d) A court facilitator to provide assistance to parties
with matters before the unified family court; and
(e) An emphasis on providing nonadversarial methods of
dispute resolution such as a settlement conference, evaluative
mediation by attorney mediators, and facilitative mediation by
nonattorney mediators.
(4) The administrative office of the courts shall publish
and disseminate a state-approved listing of definitions of
nonadversarial methods of dispute resolution so that court
officials, practitioners, and users can choose the most
appropriate process for the matter at hand.
(5) The administrative office of the courts shall provide to
the judicial districts selected for the pilot program the
computer resources needed by each judicial district to implement
the unified family court pilot program.
(6) The administrative office of the courts shall conduct a
study of the pilot program measuring improvements in the judicial
system's response to family involvement in the judicial system.
The administrator for the courts shall report preliminary
findings and final results of the study to the governor, the
chief justice of the supreme court, and the legislature on a
biennial basis. The initial report is due by July 1, 2000, and
the final report is due by December 1, 2004.
[2005 c 282 § 31; 1999 c 397 § 2.]