––––––––––––––––––––
Subscribe to the Legal News!
http://www.legalnews.com/Home/Subscription
Full access to public notices, articles, columns, archives, statistics, calendar and more
Day Pass Only $4.95!
One-County $80/year
Three-County & Full Pass also available
- Posted July 17, 2013
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Program simplifies paying fines in Wayne courts
A fine for speeding in Detroit and a right-turn-on-red ticket in Livonia can now be paid in a single court visit, thanks to a new collaboration by the 36th District Court and other district courts in Wayne County.
The program, called the Out County Collections Program, makes it more convenient for the public to take care of multiple traffic cases at the same time.
"Our goal is to make it as convenient as possible for people to pay what they owe to Detroit, whether they live in Detroit or in one of the surrounding communities," said Michigan Court of Appeals Judge Michael Talbot, special judicial administrator for the 36th District Court.
Additionally, the program is intended to improve collections for Detroit. The 36th District Court is owed about $279 million in unpaid court fines, fees, and costs, and has been collecting only 7.7 percent of what offenders owe, Talbot said. A May 2013 reportby the National Center for State Courts found that "The current collectionsrates for the [36th District Court] are quite low compared to national averages."
The out-county courts will keep a portion of the funds they collect to reimburse them for their efforts; the balance will be forwarded to the court in Detroit, explained Deborah Green, Region I administrator for the State Court Administrative Office.
"The city of Detroit, as the court's funding unit, will receive much-needed funds from improved court collections," said Green, who is working with Talbot at the 36th District Court.
Talbot said, "This program will help encourage citizens to handle their court matters more timely and completely. The end result will be improved compliance with court orders, more convenient access to the justice system for the citizens, and more money coming into the city of Detroit. It's hard to argue with so many wins coming out of one program."
Published: Wed, Jul 17, 2013
headlines Oakland County
- Leading role: Firm’s new CEO ‘humbled by trust placed in me’
- ABA issues ethics guidance on a lawyer’s use of listservs, particularly for pending matters
- Department uses $1.3 million opioid settlement dollars to expand hospital supports for substance-exposed babies and their families
- Whitmer announces 85 new jobs coming to Oakland County
- Nessel announces $10.25 million settlement with 5 wireless carriers over deceptive and misleading advertising
headlines National
- Civil legal aid lawyers are often the last line of defense. Why are there so few of them?
- Bankruptcy law firm files for Chapter 11 after losing advertising dispute
- Dentons and Boies Schiller face $300M racketeering suit after client loses international arbitration
- Mother’s Day and the changing face of family dynamics and custody arrangements
- Federal judge reprimanded for handcuffing teen spectator in scared-straight approach
- Lawyer whose firm sued Boeing finds emergency slide that fell from company’s plane near his home