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Albany municipal judge highlights paperless court, mental‑health docket and early glitches with red‑light/speed cameras
Summary
Municipal Court Judge Meyer described this year’s shift to electronic DMV abstracts and a paperless case system, outlined increases in court revenue, praised the mental‑health docket and victim services, and said initial camera citations from the new red‑light/speed program were dismissed when transmission glitches occurred.
Judge Alison Meyer, Albany municipal court judge, told the City Council on Feb. 10 that the court has shifted to electronic filing of DMV abstracts and moved to a paperless case management system that began in January 2024.
"We started electronically filing all of our abstracts with the DMV," Meyer said, noting the change reduced duplication and mail processing. "We went paperless in the court," she added, calling the change "life changing" for staff and for how the bench accesses case records and payments.
The nut graf: The court’s administrative upgrades are intended to speed information to the state DMV and reduce clerical burden; Meyer also described case‑management improvements, changes in court revenue and the municipal court’s mental‑health docket — a monthly specialty calendar that aims to connect defendants with treatment and, in some cases, lead to dismissal after completion.
Meyer told the council the court’s total revenue rose from $931,414 in 2023 to $1,015,832 in 2024, an increase of about $84,418; after statutorily…
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