Mandatory E-filing in Anne Arundel County
The Maryland Electronic Courts (MDEC) launched
in Anne Arundel County on October 14. That date marked the beginning of
mandatory e-filing for attorneys filing in Anne Arundel County (non-criminal
pleadings). This includes the District and Circuit Court for Anne Arundel
County as well as any appellate proceedings arising from an Anne Arundel County
case on or after October 14, 2014. The courts accepted paper filings during the
first four weeks of the rollout in Anne Arundel County. However, after close of
business on November 14, attorneys must file electronically or their filings
will not be accepted.
The MDEC project will create a single
Judiciary-wide integrated case management system that will be used by all the
courts in the state court system. Courts will collect, store and process
records electronically, and will be able to instantly access complete records
as cases travel from District Court to Circuit Court and on to the appellate
courts. The new system will ultimately become “paper-on-demand,” that is, paper
records will be available when specifically requested.
Caseflow management is the process by which
courts move a case from the initial filing to its final end. This includes all
pre-trial actions, trials, and events that may follow its disposition,
including monitoring, probation or restitution.
Effective caseflow management ensures justice
is possible --- not only in individual cases, but also across judicial systems
and courts, both trial and appellate. As part of the Maryland Judiciary’s
efforts to provide access to justice for all who utilize the court system,
effective caseflow creates processes and manages courts’ increasing workflow to
help ensure that every litigant receives procedural due process and equal
protection.
The quality of justice is enhanced when
judicial administration is organized around the requirements of effective
caseflow and trial management.
The Maryland Judiciary is working with its
justice partners, members of the bar and advocacy groups to update its entire
court management systems, including integrating new technology, business
processes and management practices. The project will result in the creation of
a single Judiciary-wide integrated case management system that will be used by
all levels of courts within the Judiciary.
The Judiciary has established an Advisory
Committee, chaired by General District Court Chief Judge Ben Clyburn, to steer
the activities surrounding the assessment, planning, implementation and
evaluation of the new integrated system. This committee has developed four
strategic goals that will serve as the guiding principles in the project:
·
Improved public
safety.
·
Improved access to
justice.
·
Fair and efficient
administration of justice.
·
Use of reliable
technological solutions.
The final implementation of this new system
will be a full service court management process with the following components:
·
Ability to send
documents to and obtain information from the court from anywhere at any time –
ensuring 24-hour access.
·
The convenience of
e-filing for litigants, allowing electronic document filings and exchange as
digital files replace paper files.
·
Increased efficiency
in the areas of case initiation and indexing, docketing and recordkeeping,
document generation and processing, in court docketing, disposition, monitoring
compliance and case closing.
·
An alternative dispute
resolution (ADR) component to better monitor issues resolution efforts
occurring outside of the court.
·
A bondsman tracking
component for tracking bonds posted by bondsmen statewide.
·
A scheduling component
for setting, maintaining and displaying information of court scheduled events,
and for calendar maintenance.
·
Enhanced ability to
create, display, track and archive electronic court case records.
·
Improved features to
allow for information exchanges with the Judiciary’s justice partners.
These components will work together to create
a new and improved vision of the Maryland Judiciary’s court management systems
and ensure the fair and prompt administration of justice.
Update provided courtesy of http://mdcourts.gov/mdec/index.html