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Whatcom County Council Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee

WHA-CJS-2025-06-10 June 10, 2025 Public Health & Safety Committee Whatcom County 24 min
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The Whatcom County Council's Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee received a critical update on new public defense caseload standards from Public Defender Stark Follis. The Washington State Supreme Court issued a ruling on June 9, 2025, establishing new caseload limits that will be phased in over 10 years, starting January 1, 2026. The standards will ultimately cap felony attorneys at 47 cases per year and misdemeanor attorneys at 120 cases per year, but the Court granted counties a gradual implementation schedule requiring 10% annual reductions until full compliance by 2036. Follis reported his office is currently handling caseloads despite being down two attorney positions, but faces ongoing challenges in recruitment. The office operates with 27 attorney positions and approximately 50 total FTEs, managing cases at or slightly below current standards. A significant funding boost from the state through Office of Public Defense (OPD) pass-through funds will increase from $200,000 to $442,000 this year, helping address budget pressures. The meeting highlighted the broader crisis in public defense, with jurisdictions statewide struggling to recruit attorneys and manage increasing caseloads. While Whatcom County appears positioned to meet initial compliance requirements without adding staff, the long-term trajectory toward full standards compliance remains uncertain.

**AB2025-009 - Report from Public Defender's Office** - **Action Taken:** REPORTED (informational only, no formal vote) - **Staff Recommendation:** Information/discussion item - **Key Details:** Compreh…

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**Public Defense Caseload Standards Implementation** The central discussion focused on how new Supreme Court-mandated caseload standards will affect Whatcom County's public defense system. Follis explained the standards originated from a RAND Corporation study, were developed by the Council on Public Defense, and adopted by the Bar Association in March 2024. The Supreme Court's June 9, 2025 ruling made compliance mandatory but extended the implementation timeline. The final standards set maximum annual caseloads at 47 felonies and 120 misdemeanors per attorney, compared to current limits of 150 felony cases. The 10% annual reduction schedule means attorneys will be limited to 135 felony cases in 2026, 121 in 2027, and so on. Follis indicated the office can likely comply with early-year reductions without adding staff by eliminating their c…
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**Stark Follis, Public Defender** Expressed cautious optimism about meeting initial compliance requirements but concern about long-term implementation. Opposed to adopting RAND Corporation's case waiting policy, which would further reduce allowable caseloads. Advocated for increased diversion programs to reduce case filings rather than adding attorney positions. **Council Member Todd Donovan** Questioned whether courts and prosecutors could adopt procedural efficiencies to help meet standards without additional spending. Focused on understanding the mathematical basis for compliance projections. **Council Member Ben Elenbaas** Explored whether improved case resolution efficiency could help meet standards,…
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**Stark Follis, on the work environment:** "It's not an easy place to work. It's a, it's a high, highly stressful and highly demanding place for people to work. And, you know, there, unfortunately, there is some burnout associated with that." **Stark Follis, on career longevity:** "Few and far between are the old guard like me who make a career of this and retire. There are a few but, but not too many. Most, most people move on to something else after some period of time." **Stark Follis, on…
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- **January 1, 2026:** New caseload standards take effect, requiring 10% reduction in maximum assignments - **Annual reductions:** 10% decreases each year until 2036 full compliance deadline - **Budget planning:** Mid-biennium review will incorporate OPD funding increase and potential future staf…

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After this meeting, Council members have a clearer understanding of the 10-year implementation timeline for public defense standards, eliminating previous uncertainty about immediate compliance requirements. The $442,000 OPD funding increase provides budget relief that wasn't previously confirmed. The Supreme Court's ruling creates a definitive compliance framework where none exi…
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## Meeting Overview On a Tuesday morning in mid-June, the Whatcom County Council's Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee convened for what was scheduled as a brief 15-minute update but stretched to nearly 25 minutes as members grappled with significant news that had just broken the previous day. Committee Chair Barry Buchanan called the hybrid meeting to order at 11:45 AM, with committee members Tyler Byrd and Jon Scanlon present, along with several other council members joining remotely. The sole agenda item was a report from Public Defender Stark Follis about his office's operations and, more importantly, new caseload standards that the Washington State Supreme Court had adopted just one day earlier. These standards represent a fundamental shift in how public defense services must be delivered across the state, with far-reaching implications for county budgets, staffing, and the criminal justice system itself. What emerged was a story of cautious relief mixed with long-term uncertainty about how Whatcom County will navigate the evolving landscape of indigent defense. ## The Supreme Court's Reprieve: New Caseload Standards Bring Mixed News The centerpiece of Follis's presentation was the breaking news about caseload standards that had been years in the making. The journey began with a nationwide caseload study by the RAND Corporation two years prior, which prompted Washington's Supreme Court to ask the Council on Public Defense—a subdivision of the state bar association—to develop new recommendations. After extensive study, the Council proposed dramatically reduced caseloads: 47 felony cases and 120 misdemeanor cases per attorney annually, with implementation planned over three years starting in July 2025 and full compliance required by July 2027. "We looked at that number, and we looked at the number of FTEs that we had, and we all recognize that there is was…
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### Meeting Overview The Whatcom County Council's Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee met on June 10, 2025, to receive a report from Public Defender Stark Follis about new caseload standards adopted by the Washington State Supreme Court. The meeting focused on how these standards will impact the Public Defender's Office staffing and budget over the next decade. ### Key Terms and Concepts **Caseload Standards:** Limits on how many cases a public defender can be assigned in a 12-month rolling period, not how many cases they can have pending at one time. **Public Defender's Office:** County department that provides legal representation to people who cannot afford private attorneys in criminal cases. **Conflict Office:** Separate legal office that handles cases where the main Public Defender's Office has a conflict of interest. **RCW 10.101 Pass-Through Funds:** State funding that flows through the Office of Public Defense (OPD) to help counties pay for indigent defense services. **Case Weighting Policy:** A system that adjusts attorney caseloads based on time spent on recurring court calendars like arraignments and probation hearings. **Supreme Court Rule:** Court-mandated requirements that counties must follow, unlike advisory bar association standards. **Diversion Programs:** Alternatives to prosecution that keep people out of the criminal justice system entirely. **Mid-Biennium Review:** Mid-cycle budget process where departments model potential spending reductions or increases. ### Key People at This Meeting | Name | Role / Affiliation | |---|---| | Barry Buchanan | Committee Chair | | Tyler Byrd | Committee Member | | Jon Scanlon | Committee Member | | Stark Follis | Public Defender | | Aly Pennucci | Deputy Executive | | Todd Donovan | Council Member (attending) | | Ben Elenbaas | Council Member (attending) | | Kaylee Galloway | Council Member (attending) | | Mark Stremler | Council Member (attending) | ### Background Context For years, public defender offices nationwide have struggled with overwhelming caseloads that compromise ef…
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