Judicial branch asks for eCourt staff, marshals and debt-service funding in supplemental
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State court administrator Amy Quinlan told the committees the judiciary needs positions to support Maine eCourts (e-filing review specialists, call-center clerks), IT security, deputy marshals, and one-time funding for transcript and civil-commitment costs; the branch also requested debt-service increases tied to a $150M 2025 bond for courthouse projects.
The state Judicial Branch told Appropriations and Judiciary members its supplemental budget request focuses on staffing to make the eFiling and electronic case-management rollout work statewide, along with other operational and facility costs.
State Court Administrator Amy Quinlan said the Maine eCourts rollout will require six additional e-filing review specialists and nine call-center clerks to support public filings and phone support; she told the committee those centralized positions are proven to increase timeliness and free local clerks to perform courtroom duties. "We should be done by the end of this year... We will have rolled out our eFiling and electronic case management system to all states, all courts statewide in all case types," Quinlan said of the eCourts timeline.
The supplemental asks also include one-time funding for transcript costs (to cover civil-commitment and other records), an IT security analyst for cyber protection as the new systems come online, two assistant clerk and three deputy marshal positions to support additional workload and courthouse safety, and debt-service increases to match a front‑loaded bond issuance for courthouse construction projects issued in 2025.
Lawmakers questioned the branch on the timing of debt service, staffing vacancy rates, and how transfers from personal services to cover nondiscretionary "all other" costs would be managed; Quinlan said language in the package would allow the judicial branch limited flexibility to move salary savings to cover some nondiscretionary operational costs but cautioned that is not a long‑term solution.
Quinlan also identified the need to staff the judicial response to the new extreme risk protection order (red flag) law, requesting two district-court positions, two assistant clerks and two marshal positions to handle expedited processes and dual‑system programming work for legacy and new case-management systems.
