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| Release Date: September 21, 2001 | Release Number: 64 |
Appointed by the Chief Justice in 1997, the task force recommended an experimental mediation program for civil appeals in the First Appellate District. Pursuant to the recommendations of the task force, the Judicial Council sponsored a two-year pilot program for mandatory mediation in the First District. The goals of the program were to address the interests of both litigants and the court by reducing costs, time to resolution, and the adversary culture of litigation, while increasing litigant satisfaction with the judicial process and dispositions without judicial intervention. The program was funded by the Legislature for the pilot period from July 1, 1999, through June 30, 200l.
In its report on the two-year pilot program, the task force found that:
Due to the success of the pilot program, the task force has made five recommendations:
1) The mediation program should be extended indefinitely in the
First Appellate District.
2) Participation in the mediation program should continue to
be mandatory.
3) Court-sponsored training should remain an integral part of
any appellate mediation program.
4) The program should retain its pro bono feature. However,
the number of pro bono hours demanded from mediators
should be limited. After the limit has
been reached, mediators should receive reasonable compensation from the
parties.
5) Other appellate districts should have the option of developing or
expanding their own alternative dispute resolution
programs, with the financial assistance of
the Administrative Office of the Courts, if necessary.
Copies of the body of the report, Mandatory Mediation in the First
Appellate District of the Court of Appeal: Report and Recommendations,
can be found on the California Courts Web site at www.courtinfo.ca.gov/reference/documents/mediation.pdf.
For more information, contact John Toker, the court’s mediation program
administrator, at 415-865-7373.
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