FY25 Attorney Workload Data
For the second consecutive year, the MIDC is releasing annual, statewide attorney workload data based on the quarterly reports submitted by local systems. Though we recognize that this data is not at all “real-time,” we hope it will nevertheless be helpful in allowing systems to gauge the general annual workloads of their attorneys who work in other systems.
Consistent with FY24, we present the FY25 data in two formats. The Excel document has multiple worksheets and is filterable so that users can manipulate the data in various ways. The PDF document is simpler and does not include the lists of every system in which each attorney works, but it provides an easy, quick reference for users who are less comfortable with Excel. Here are some important caveats and explanations to use the data most effectively:
- An attorney’s Std 6 % in the data shows how close they are to the statewide workload maximum established by the MIDC’s Standard 6. It is shown as a percentage, so an attorney with a 100 Std 6% is exactly at the annual maximum for the year. An attorney at 80 is at 80% of the annual maximum.
- FY25 data improves on FY24 data in a number of ways: FY25 includes separate reporting for Probation Violations (PVs), splits misdemeanors into traffic and non-traffic misdemeanors, splits felonies into low-severity and high-severity felonies, and requires salaried attorneys to report docket hours for the first time. Standard 7 qualification levels also became mandatory to report in FY25.
- Local systems were not required to be compliant with the MIDC’s attorney workload standard until midway through FY25, so we would expect some attorneys to be over the workload cap.
*Note: Please see the first tab on the worksheet in the Excel document for additional information on viewing each tab and utilizing the filter feature.
Navigate the Excel document here: FY25 Workloads by Attorney FY25 Attorney Workload Data
View the .pdf document here: FY25 Attorney Workload Data
