All about California’s Sargent Shriver Civil Counsel projects

06/30/2020 , California , Miscellaneous , Custody Disputes - Parents

UPDATE: 2020 projects data released

 

The Shriver projects have released their latest report.  Some of the key findings:

 

  • Across the pilots, 67 percent of cases were settled, 3 percent resolved via trial, and 8 percent ended by default, compared to non-Shriver cases where 34 percent were settled, 14 percent resolved via trial, and 26 percent ended by default.
  • For custody cases:
    • 34% of Shriver cases were fully resolved during a settlement conference, compared to 4% of non-Shriver cases.
    • Within the 2 years after the pleading was resolved, 89% of Shriver clients stayed out of court, compared to 68% of non-Shriver comparison cases.
    • “16% of cases with Shriver representation resolved without any hearings at all, versus 2% of comparison cases. Further, while nearly two thirds (63%) of comparison cases required hearings to resolve the pleading, less than half (40%) of Shriver representation cases did.
 

There’s a concise fact sheet on the results of the custody representation project.

 

Data analyst NPC Research released a report taking another look at the data. 

 

UPDATE: Shriver funding doubled!

AB 330, enacted in 2019, increased the funding for the Shriver projects by almost twofold.

 

UPDATE: Report on Shriver projects shows may positive results of representation

 

On July 28, 2017, the first report on the Shriver projects was released (check out the California Judicial Council’s press release and a brief story in SFGate), and the California Judicial Council unanimously approved a third round of 3-year grants totaling $7.2 million.


Update: Shriver “pilots” are now permanent projects

 

The Shriver pilots were originally set to sunset after six years.  However, in June 2016 the Governor signed legislation making the Shriver pilots permanent.


Background

 

In October 2009, the Governor signed the “Sargent Shriver Civil Counsel Act”, which created pilot programs (Cal.Gov.Code § 68650) for the right to counsel in cases affecting basic human needs (such as domestic violence, deprivation of child custody, housing, and elder abuse). The bill’s findings stated that “Due to insufficient funding from all sources, existing programs providing free services in civil matters to indigent and disadvantaged persons, especially underserved groups such as elderly, disabled, children, and non-English-speaking persons, are not adequate to meet existing needs.”  It then stated that “Legal counsel shall be appointed to represent low-income parties in civil matters involving critical issues affecting basic human needs in those specified courts selected by the Judicial Council as provided in this section.”

 

The pilots, which cover housing, custody, and guardianship in eight different sites, began operation in 2012 and were subsequently featured in a New York Times article about the civil right to counsel movement.


To see more about the pilots, check out the NCCRC’s comprehensive bibliography section.