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Public defender warns of heavy caseloads and staffing shortfall; cites RAND workload benchmarks

2234609 · February 6, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

El Dorado County's chief public defender told supervisors the office is operating at roughly 18% of recommended staffing levels under a national workload study, with rising specialty caseloads — conservatorships, contempt and mental-health diversion — and potential additional burden from Proposition 36 and Care Court.

El Dorado County Chief Public Defender Terry briefed the Board of Supervisors Feb. 5 about mounting workloads and staffing challenges in the public defender’s office, citing national workload research and county-specific pressures.

Terry said the office currently has about 30.5 full-time equivalents and that, using national workload assumptions (2080 available attorney hours per year and estimated hours per case), a typical felony or misdemeanor attorney’s expected caseload is much lower than current assignments. She summarized the RAND Corporation national…

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