(1) A superior
court may apply for grants from the family and juvenile court
improvement grant program by submitting a local improvement plan
with the administrator for the courts. To be eligible for grant
funds, a superior court's local improvement plan must meet the
criteria developed by the administrator for the courts and
approved by the board for judicial administration. The criteria
must be consistent with the principles adopted for unified family
courts. At a minimum, the criteria must require that the court's
local improvement plan meet the following requirements:
(a) Commit to a chief judge assignment to the family and
juvenile court for a minimum of two years;
(b) Implementation of the principle of one judicial team
hearing all of the proceedings in a case involving one family,
especially in dependency cases;
(c) Require court commissioners and judges assigned to
family and juvenile court to receive a minimum of thirty hours
specialized training in topics related to family and juvenile
matters within six months of assuming duties in family and
juvenile court. Where possible, courts should utilize local,
statewide, and national training forums. A judicial officer's
recorded educational history may be applied toward the
thirty-hour requirement. The topics for training must include:
(i) Parentage;
(ii) Adoption;
(iii) Domestic relations;
(iv) Dependency and termination of parental rights;
(v) Child development;
(vi) The impact of child abuse and neglect;
(vii) Domestic violence;
(viii) Substance abuse;
(ix) Mental health;
(x) Juvenile status offenses;
(xi) Juvenile offenders;
(xii) Self-representation issues;
(xiii) Cultural competency;
(xiv) Roles of family and juvenile court judges and
commissioners; and
(d) As part of the application for grant funds, submit a
spending proposal detailing how the superior court would use the
grant funds.
(2) Courts receiving grant money must use the funds to
improve and support family and juvenile court operations based on
standards developed by the administrator for the courts and
approved by the board for judicial administration. The standards
may allow courts to use the funds to:
(a) Pay for family and juvenile court training of
commissioners and judges or pay for pro tem commissioners and
judges to assist the court while the commissioners and judges
receive training;
(b) Increase judicial and nonjudicial staff, including
administrative staff to improve case coordination and referrals
in family and juvenile cases, guardian ad litem volunteers or
court-appointed special advocates, security, and other staff;
(c) Improve the court facility to better meet the needs of
children and families;
(d) Improve referral and treatment options for court
participants, including enhancing court facilitator programs and
family treatment court and increasing the availability of
alternative dispute resolution;
(e) Enhance existing family and children support services
funded by the courts and expand access to social service programs
for families and children ordered by the court; and
(f) Improve or support family and juvenile court operations
in any other way deemed appropriate by the administrator for the
courts.
(3) The administrator for the courts shall allocate
available grant moneys based upon the needs of the court as
expressed in their local improvement plan.
(4) Money received by the superior court under this program
must be used to supplement, not supplant, any other local, state,
and federal funds for the court.
(5) Upon receipt of grant funds, the superior court shall
submit to the administrator for the courts a spending plan
detailing the use of funds. At the end of the fiscal year, the
superior court shall submit to the administrator for the courts a
financial report comparing the spending plan to actual
expenditures. The administrator for the courts shall compile the
financial reports and submit them to the appropriate committees
of the legislature.
[2008 c 279 § 2.]