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Oregon lawmakers agree to $12 million band-aid for ailing public defense system

Kacy Jones speaks with a client during a hearing at Multnomah County Courthouse in Portland in 2019. Jones was an attorney with the nonprofit Metropolitan Public Defender until 2021.
Conrad Wilson
/
OPB
Kacy Jones speaks with a client during a hearing at Multnomah County Courthouse in Portland in 2019. Jones was an attorney with the nonprofit Metropolitan Public Defender until 2021.

Plan would add public defenders in counties hardest hit by shortage as state continues to violate constitutional right to counsel

Oregon lawmakers have reached an agreement to temporarily patch the state鈥檚 public defense system, which for months has failed to meet its constitutional obligations and instead left some criminal defendants without an attorney.

Gov. Kate Brown and legislative leaders plan to spend an additional $12.8 million through the end of 2023, OPB has learned. The money would go to the Office of Public Defense Services, an independent state agency that鈥檚 part of the Oregon Judicial Department. A recent report by the American Bar Association found Oregon has around 1,300 fewer public defenders than it needs to adequately provide criminal defense for people who cannot afford an attorney.

The extra funding would pay for the equivalent of 36 full-time public defense attorneys, as well as support staff and money for criminal defense investigations. Those resources are expected to target the counties where more than 100 indigent criminal defendants don鈥檛 have a public defender.

鈥淭his is a civil rights crisis,鈥 Rep. Tawna Sanchez, D-Portland, who co-chairs the Joint Committee on Ways and Means, said in a statement. 鈥淭here are Oregonians who don鈥檛 have access to any legal representation and our public defenders are completely overwhelmed. The $12.8 million we are sending to OPDS will help address this urgent problem.鈥

The funds are a fraction of what鈥檚 needed to address the larger systemic failures surrounding the state鈥檚 public defense system, which has essentially run out of public defenders in several of the most populous communities. At times that list has including in Lane, Marion, Washington and Multnomah counties.

鈥淲e still have a huge amount of work to do to address the chronic underfunding and structural issues that are plaguing our public defense system,鈥 Sanchez said.

A growing crisis

Last fall, courts across the state noticed an uptick in the number of defendants who didn鈥檛 have the legal representation they鈥檙e constitutionally guaranteed. In December, officials with the Office of Public Defense Services said there were more than 60 people charged with crimes who didn鈥檛 have a defense attorney.

Since then, the crisis has ballooned. In Multnomah County alone, more than 80 people were without a defense attorney as of Tuesday, according to court staff. As of Monday, at least 20 people were in custody. In Washington County, eight of the nine people without attorneys are in custody, including one person charged in 2019 with attempted murder. That person has not had an attorney since November.

Marion County Courthouse in Salem, Ore., May 19, 2021.
Kristyna Wentz-Graff
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OPB
Marion County Courthouse in Salem, Ore., May 19, 2021.

鈥淥ur system is not set up to work well for defendants or lawyers,鈥 said Sen. Elizabeth Steiner-Hayward, D-Portland, who co-chairs the Joint Committee on Ways and Means. 鈥淲e are working on a variety of strategies including addressing some very acute needs related to high caseload in four counties.鈥

A combination of factors has led to the state鈥檚 current public defense crisis. For two years, the pandemic has slowed hearings and trials in parts of the state. At the same time, police and district attorneys continue to make arrests and investigate crimes 鈥 which have increased in some communities 鈥 leaving some public defenders with hundreds of open cases. Several public defense firms have stopped taking new clients charged with certain crimes, saying the current loads are so high that attorneys risk violating their ethical obligation to adequately represent clients. Still, many in the public defense community have said today鈥檚 problems long predate the pandemic and are the result of chronic underinvestment, mismanagement and a lack of political will.

Oregon鈥檚 rules of professional conduct as well as the American Bar Association鈥檚 Criminal Justice Standards, require defense attorneys to perform tasks such as establishing trust with their clients, keeping them informed and independently investigating the case.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e not to be recommending a plea to your client, which after all affects his or her liberty, without completing your investigation and study of the case,鈥 Stephen Hanlon, the ABA鈥檚 project director for its report on Oregon, said last month during a public meeting on the findings.

Put another way: public defense is more involved than an attorney simply showing up to court to represent a person.

鈥楳ore work to be done鈥

Public defense leaders welcomed news of the additional $12.8 million in funding, even if it is far short of a permanent fix. They said the situation in some counties is so dire that they鈥檒l take any help the Legislature is willing to provide.

鈥淵our brain, your body cannot sustain that level of trauma for an unlimited amount of time,鈥 said Shannon Wilson, executive director at Public Defender of Marion County. 鈥淏y bringing more attorneys in, we鈥檙e going to help improve retention for the attorneys who stayed 鈥 It鈥檚 a glimmer of hope.鈥

Wilson said their office has had considerable turnover and no applications. They said they recently re-wrote a job description and noted the office is dedicated to reducing the caseload so the public defenders can provide effective counsel. After changing that, Wilson said, they got six applications.

鈥淲e have a lot of appreciation for all the folks that are making this happen because it鈥檚 so vital for public defense,鈥 said Autumn Shreve, government relations manager for OPDS. 鈥淲e are in a crisis state and I think these dollars are going to be extremely important for addressing that. There鈥檚 more work to be done. For now, it鈥檚 a step in the right direction.鈥

Gov. Brown, who as the head of the executive branch has no oversight of public defense, 鈥渃onvened a meeting鈥 Feb. 7 via video about the ongoing failure to provide a constitutional right to Oregonians.

Oregon Supreme Court Chief Justice Martha L. Walters addresses the Oregon House of Representatives on Monday, Jan. 14, 2019, in Salem, Ore. Bradley W. Parks / OPB
Bradley W. Parks
/
OPB
Oregon Supreme Court Chief Justice Martha L. Walters addresses the Oregon House of Representatives on Monday, Jan. 14, 2019, in Salem, Ore. Bradley W. Parks / OPB

Brown, Senate President Peter Courtney, House Speaker Dan Rayfield, Steiner-Hayward and Sanchez were all in attendance, according to the governor鈥檚 staff. Oregon Supreme Court Chief Justice Martha Walters, who oversees the judicial branch, also attended.

The meeting was to discuss 鈥渟hort term funding solutions鈥 for OPDS 鈥渋n light of the challenges that public defenders continue to face,鈥 Brown鈥檚 office said in a statement. 鈥淭he Governor is supportive of devoting additional funds this biennium to the agency to hire more public defenders.鈥

Oregon鈥檚 chief justice, too, has expressed concerns about public defense in the state. After the ABA study, Walters released a statement, saying public defense 鈥渋s in desperate need of improvement and support.鈥

Pay raises

Despite Walters鈥 stated support for public defense, privately, some attorneys have questioned whether leaders in the judiciary appreciate the harm playing out in many of Oregon鈥檚 courtrooms.

On the same day Walters met with the governor and legislative leaders, she testified before lawmakers on behalf of SB 1581, which would raise the salaries for judges, including her. When adjusted for the costs of living, Oregon鈥檚 judges , according to the National Center on State Courts.

鈥淭his bill addresses a structural imbalance in Oregon鈥檚 justice system,鈥 Walters testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee. 鈥淚t increases the salaries of judges to make them comparable to the salaries of experienced public-sector lawyers who appear in your courts and to help us recruit and retain a highly-qualified and diverse bench.鈥

The bill before lawmakers would increase the salaries of judges by roughly $40,000 between now and Jan. 1, 2023. For example, circuit court judges would see their salaries increase from $158,556 now to $197,868 at the start of next year. If the bill passes, appeals court and supreme court judges would see salaries that top $209,000 and $213,000, respectively. In total, the bill would spend an additional $26 million on judge salaries through 2025.

Like judges, public defenders argue they are underpaid and overworked, and the public defense crisis is playing out at a time when .

The Joint Ways and Means Committee is trying to figure out how to spend an additional $2.5 billion during the ongoing 35-day legislative session. That figure does not include the $750 million the state is carrying over to the 2023-2025 biennium. Steiner-Hayward said there are structural issues in the state鈥檚 public defense that she wants to fix after this session.

鈥淭here are a lot of legislators who care deeply about doing this right,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檇 like to count myself in that group.鈥

Without additional funding, it鈥檚 unclear how the state could begin to address the tenuous state of public defense in Oregon. In late January, Walters emailed members of the Oregon State Bar and asked attorneys to pitch in and represent defendants who are without counsel.

Of the thousands emailed, OPDS said seven attorneys who responded were qualified to take on criminal defense work. When the agency asked how many clients those attorneys were willing to take, none replied.
Copyright 2022

Conrad Wilson is a reporter and producer covering criminal justice and legal affairs for Oregon Public Broadcasting, a JPR news partner. His reporting comes to JPR through the Northwest News Network, a collaboration between public media organizations in Oregon and Washington.
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