Northwest Corner officials OK with probate court plan

A proposal on the restructuring of  Connecticut’s probate court districts was approved Sept. 4 by a legislative commission. Under the new law, the state’s current 117 districts will shrink to 50 or fewer.

The commission, which has until Sept. 15 to make a decision, was scheduled to present its proposal for 50 new districts to the General Assembly on Sept. 10.

Legislators will have the final say on a plan that would go into effect Jan. 5, 2011. All judgeships will be on the 2010 ballots.

It appears commissioners were moved by appeals from a large number of judges and officials here, who banded together to call for a change to an earlier proposal.

The plan had raised concerns in rural areas that districts will become too large geographically. The state’s goal, however, is to get a financial crisis under control. Under current structuring, courts are expected to be self-sustaining, paying salaries and other costs out of fees collected for services. Excess funds go into a pot that pays for things such as judges’ benefits.

But a large proportion of services are provided to people unable to pay. These pro bono costs are causing a shortfall that it is believed will bankrupt the system by next year.

A goal of the new plan is to eliminate money-losing courts, or combine them with profitable courts.

Good news locally is that Northwest Corner towns will be consolidated with towns to the south, as favored by local Probate Judge Charlie Vail and selectmen across the district, rather than an expansion east along the Route 44 corridor.

The Northwest Corner Probate District towns of North Canaan, Falls Village, Sharon, Salisbury, Cornwall and Norfolk will combine with Kent, Warren, Litchfield, Harwinton, Morris and Thomaston.

The New Hartford, Winchester and Torrington probate court districts will be combined. The new district will encompass Barkhamsted, Colebrook, Hartland, Goshen, New Hartford, Torrington and Winsted.

The new legislation also signals drastic changes to the court system, including the removal of financial autonomy. It requires judges to be attorneys, and to be paid based on the amount of work performed. That will make many incumbents and potential candidates ineligible to run.

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