Del. Judiciary Responds to Attorney Concerns
The Delaware Supreme Court on Friday announced the judiciary's response to a 2016 report compiling feedback from more than 1,300 Delaware legal professionals, calling for better information-sharing and increased cooperation clarity among the state courts.
June 09, 2017 at 11:05 PM
7 minute read
The original version of this story was published on Delaware Law Weekly
The Delaware Supreme Court on Friday announced the judiciary's response to a 2016 report compiling feedback from more than 1,300 Delaware legal professionals, calling for better information-sharing and increased cooperation clarity among the state courts.
The 54-page report, announced at the Bench and Bar Conference in Wilmington, addressed issues raised in an exhaustive survey of practitioners conducted last year by the Delaware State Bar Association and the American College of Trial Lawyers. Many of the recommendations, the judiciary said, had been implemented already, but work to enact other changes would be ongoing.
“We wanted to make sure the public, and members of the bar, know that we take constructive and candid feedback seriously and that we are acting affirmatively on what we heard,” said state Supreme Court Chief Justice Leo E. Strine Jr. in a statement. “Last year we promised to respond to the ACTL Report with a concrete action plan and this is our fulfillment of that promise.”
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