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The Michigan Indigent Defense Commission has been busy this fall: moving into permanent office space in downtown Lansing, updating the first set of proposed minimum standards for indigent defense delivery systems, obtaining overwhelming responses to our first survey distributed to courts statewide, and beginning the process of hiring regional consultants to help improve the representation of poor people in Michigan.
The MIDC received important feedback from many members of the criminal justice community on the first set of proposed minimum standards and wishes to thank everyone who submitted comments and suggestions in writing and at our public hearing. The text and comments on these standards now incorporate this feedback and can be found on our website. The updated version makes clear that improvement does not rest with counsel alone; rather, the standards should be implemented as system-wide requirements and reforms. The standards are designed to improve the entire system, and will fortify defense attorneys around the state as they work towards better representation for their indigent clients.
The MIDC met on October 20, 2015 to discuss the revisions to the first set of standards. No formal action was taken on the standards at that meeting. Any further comments received from the public will continue to be posted on the MIDC website along with final revisions to the standards. The next MIDC meeting is Tuesday December 15, 2015 at 1 p.m. in Lansing at the Commission Office. The Commission is expected to take action at that meeting and submit the first set of proposed standards to the Michigan Supreme Court during the first week of January 2016.
MIDC staff moved to permanent office space on the 3rd floor of the Capitol National Bank Building at 200 N. Washington Square in downtown Lansing. The most recent Commission meeting was held in the office’s conference room, which will also be used for training and outreach events beginning early next year. The office is open Monday through Friday. A new, main telephone number for the office has recently been installed to reach the staff at 517-657-3066. Requests for information can be sent anytime to info@michiganidc.gov.
During the Commission meeting, MIDC Research Director Jonah Siegel presented initial results from a survey distributed to every court in Michigan this summer. At the time of the October Commission meeting, responses to the survey were reported from more than 95% of courts (Circuit and District) around the state. The survey seeks to measure the delivery of criminal justice for poor people in Michigan, and can be viewed on the MIDC’s website. The MIDC has received many questions about the results of this survey from criminal defense practitioners. A summary of the results will be distributed later this fall and the data collected will be used to inform the development of statewide standards for public defense.
The MIDC is currently seeking regional consultants to help provide direction and guidance to indigent defense delivery systems on compliance with standards. Successful candidates will work on the forefront of indigent defense reform in Michigan. Consultants will serve as the liaisons between local systems and the MIDC and will work with criminal justice stakeholders to design the most appropriate plans for meeting minimum standards for indigent defense in a particular county or system. Interested candidates should send a resume and a short (one-page) proposal detailing qualifications, desired pay rate, and the preferred region of the state for placement to opportunities@michiganidc.gov. The Request for Proposals is available on the MIDC’s website, along with frequently asked questions about the scope of the work and the consultant’s responsibilities. The deadline for submitting proposals is November 20, 2015.
The Regional Consultants will serve as independent contractors through the current fiscal year, ending September 30, 2016. The MIDC then intends to hire full time regional managers next fiscal year, beginning October 1, 2016. The MIDC staff is currently working on an annual appropriations request to bring the staff up to permanent levels. If the MIDC receives this funding, it is anticipated that the staff will grow from four people to up to 16 permanent members by the fall of 2016. With staffing at that level, the MIDC will be in the best possible position to implement minimum standards for indigent defense.
The MIDC staff continues to travel around Michigan meeting with members of the criminal justice community and the general public. In recent weeks, Executive Director Jonathan Sacks has met with judges or practitioners in Kent, Wayne, Lenawee and Kalamazoo Counties. Jonathan also presented to a large group of criminal defense attorneys in Wayne County at the CAP session on September 11, 2015, and was a panelist at the State Bar of Michigan’s Criminal Law Section program entitled “Exploring Indigent Defense Reform” along with Commissioner Nancy J. Diehl, Hon. Sarah J. Smolenski and Muskegon Public Defender Fred Johnson. Jonathan will be a speaker at the upcoming conference of the Criminal Defense Attorneys of Michigan in Traverse City on November 13, 2015. Registration and information about the entire conference is available through CDAM’s website.
MIDC staff was pleased to be invited to speak to the Gray Panthers of Metro Detroit and welcomes any opportunity to discuss our work with the public. Please contact us to make arrangements at info@michiganidc.gov.
Lenawee County Public Defender Office Opportunities
The newly-formed Lenawee County Public Defender Office has recently posted employment opportunities for the positions of Deputy Public Defender, Senior Public Defender, and Assistant Public Defender.
See the full descriptions and additional information on Lenawee County’s website.
Draft Minutes – October 20, 2015 Meeting
The Michigan Indigent Defense Commission met on Tuesday October 20, 2015 in Lansing at the MIDC Office located at 200 N. Washington Square, 3rd Floor. The attached minutes linked below are a draft and are not official. They are subject to approval at the next Commission meeting, to be held on December 15, 2015 in Lansing.
DRAFT minutes from October 20, 2015 meeting.
UPDATED First Set of Proposed Minimum Standards
The Michigan Indigent Defense Commission met on Tuesday October 20, 2015 in Lansing for its regular business meeting and to discuss revisions to the first set of proposed minimum standards for indigent defense delivery systems. The MIDC will meet on December 15, 2015 to take action on the first set of standards with final revisions and updates that have been made by the Commission.
Please contact the Commission at info@michiganidc.gov with any comments, questions, suggestions or concerns about the first set of proposed minimum standards.
Proposed standards would raise bar for MI’s indigent defense system
On October 26, 2015, Michigan Indigent Defense Commission Chair Jim Fisher and Executive Director Jonathan Sacks spoke with WKAR’s Mark Bashore on Current State to discuss the work of the MIDC, the first set of proposed minimum standards, and how they will change and improve Michigan’s Indigent Defense Delivery Systems.
Listen to the entire interview on WKAR’s Current State.
Fall Outreach Message
View this message on Adobe Slate.
The Michigan Indigent Defense Commission has been busy this fall: moving into permanent office space in downtown Lansing, updating the first set of proposed minimum standards for indigent defense delivery systems, obtaining overwhelming responses to our first survey distributed to courts statewide, and beginning the process of hiring regional consultants to help improve the representation of poor people in Michigan.
The MIDC received important feedback from many members of the criminal justice community on the first set of proposed minimum standards and wishes to thank everyone who submitted comments and suggestions in writing and at our public hearing. The text and comments on these standards now incorporate this feedback and can be found on our website. The updated version makes clear that improvement does not rest with counsel alone; rather, the standards should be implemented as system-wide requirements and reforms. The standards are designed to improve the entire system, and will fortify defense attorneys around the state as they work towards better representation for their indigent clients.
The MIDC met on October 20, 2015 to discuss the revisions to the first set of standards. No formal action was taken on the standards at that meeting. Any further comments received from the public will continue to be posted on the MIDC website along with final revisions to the standards. The next MIDC meeting is Tuesday December 15, 2015 at 1 p.m. in Lansing at the Commission Office. The Commission is expected to take action at that meeting and submit the first set of proposed standards to the Michigan Supreme Court during the first week of January 2016.
MIDC staff moved to permanent office space on the 3rd floor of the Capitol National Bank Building at 200 N. Washington Square in downtown Lansing. The most recent Commission meeting was held in the office’s conference room, which will also be used for training and outreach events beginning early next year. The office is open Monday through Friday. A new, main telephone number for the office has recently been installed to reach the staff at 517-657-3066. Requests for information can be sent anytime to info@michiganidc.gov.
During the Commission meeting, MIDC Research Director Jonah Siegel presented initial results from a survey distributed to every court in Michigan this summer. At the time of the October Commission meeting, responses to the survey were reported from more than 95% of courts (Circuit and District) around the state. The survey seeks to measure the delivery of criminal justice for poor people in Michigan, and can be viewed on the MIDC’s website. The MIDC has received many questions about the results of this survey from criminal defense practitioners. A summary of the results will be distributed later this fall and the data collected will be used to inform the development of statewide standards for public defense.
The MIDC is currently seeking regional consultants to help provide direction and guidance to indigent defense delivery systems on compliance with standards. Successful candidates will work on the forefront of indigent defense reform in Michigan. Consultants will serve as the liaisons between local systems and the MIDC and will work with criminal justice stakeholders to design the most appropriate plans for meeting minimum standards for indigent defense in a particular county or system. Interested candidates should send a resume and a short (one-page) proposal detailing qualifications, desired pay rate, and the preferred region of the state for placement to opportunities@michiganidc.gov. The Request for Proposals is available on the MIDC’s website, along with frequently asked questions about the scope of the work and the consultant’s responsibilities. The deadline for submitting proposals is November 20, 2015.
The Regional Consultants will serve as independent contractors through the current fiscal year, ending September 30, 2016. The MIDC then intends to hire full time regional managers next fiscal year, beginning October 1, 2016. The MIDC staff is currently working on an annual appropriations request to bring the staff up to permanent levels. If the MIDC receives this funding, it is anticipated that the staff will grow from four people to up to 16 permanent members by the fall of 2016. With staffing at that level, the MIDC will be in the best possible position to implement minimum standards for indigent defense.
The MIDC staff continues to travel around Michigan meeting with members of the criminal justice community and the general public. In recent weeks, Executive Director Jonathan Sacks has met with judges or practitioners in Kent, Wayne, Lenawee and Kalamazoo Counties. Jonathan also presented to a large group of criminal defense attorneys in Wayne County at the CAP session on September 11, 2015, and was a panelist at the State Bar of Michigan’s Criminal Law Section program entitled “Exploring Indigent Defense Reform” along with Commissioner Nancy J. Diehl, Hon. Sarah J. Smolenski and Muskegon Public Defender Fred Johnson. Jonathan will be a speaker at the upcoming conference of the Criminal Defense Attorneys of Michigan in Traverse City on November 13, 2015. Registration and information about the entire conference is available through CDAM’s website.
MIDC staff was pleased to be invited to speak to the Gray Panthers of Metro Detroit and welcomes any opportunity to discuss our work with the public. Please contact us to make arrangements at info@michiganidc.gov.
SADO Looking to Hire Two Investigators, One Project Attorney
Notice of Upcoming Commission Meeting and Agenda
Michigan Indigent Defense Commission Meeting
Location: Michigan Indigent Defense Commission Offices
Capitol National Bank Business and Trade Center
200 N. Washington Sq, 3rd Floor Conference Room, Lansing
(on the corner of N. Washington Sq. and E. Ottawa St.)
Date: Tuesday October 20, 2015
Time: 1:00 PM
Contact: Marcela Westrate, mwestrate@michiganidc.gov, 517-648-3143
Please click here for the Commission Meeting agenda.
Exploring Indigent Defense Reform
The Michigan Indigent Defense Commission is pleased to be participating in the State Bar of Michigan’s Annual Meeting in Novi on Friday October 9, 2015 from 10 a.m. – noon at the Suburban Collection Showplace Diamond Center in the Onyx Ballroom. Executive Director Jonathan Sacks and Commissioner Nancy J. Diehl are among the panel members discussing Indigent Defense Reform during the Criminal Law Section’s Program immediately after the business meeting. See the full schedule here.
The Michigan Indigent Defense Commission has been tasked with proposing minimum standards for indigent defense and working with Michigan’s 83 counties to implement plans that comply with the standards. Join us for an interactive discussion of the new standards from the perspective of all stakeholders: defense, prosecution, judges, and administration. How do the new standards affect you?
Speakers: Jonathan Sacks, Michigan Indigent Defense Commission, Lansing
Hon. Sarah J. Smolenski, 63rd District Court, Grand Rapids
Frederick D. Johnson Jr., Director Muskegon Public Defenders, County of Muskegon, Muskegon
Nancy J. Diehl, Former Wayne County Assistant Prosecutor & SBM Past President, Detroit
CDAM Fall Conference Schedule
Twice each year, the Criminal Defense Attorneys of Michigan offer an extensive three day training event covering the latest topics in criminal law, legal updates, and critical information to use in every day practice. Registration is open for the Fall 2015 conference in Traverse City, Michigan. MIDC Executive Director Jonathan Sacks will provide an update on the work of the Michigan Indigent Defense Commission on Friday November 13, 2015. The complete list of speakers and topics is available on the registration form.
You can register online at www.cdamonline.org or use this registration form.
MIDC Presentation in Wayne County
On September 11, 2015, Executive Director Jonathan Sacks presented at the Wayne County Criminal Advocacy Program and discussed the latest developments at the Michigan Indigent Defense Commission. The materials from the session are available online, and the video from the session is available to view from the CAP website.
Review the Materials and watch the video.