Contact:
Lorri Montgomery
Communications Manager
The National Center for State Courts
757.259.1525 or lmontgomery@ncsc.dni.us
Coconino
County Court Administrator
Receives ICM's Director's Award of Merit
Williamsburg, VA (June
1, 2004) – Gary L. Krcmarik, court administrator for Coconino
County Superior Court, is the 2004 recipient of the Institute for Court
Management’s Director’s Award of Merit, presented annually to a
graduating fellow of ICM’s prestigious Court Executive Development
Program (CEDP). Krcmarik and 11 other court professionals from around
the country appeared before the U.S. Supreme Court May 14 as part of
graduation ceremonies. The Institute for Court Management is the
educational arm of the National Center for State Courts.
The Director’s Award of Merit is
presented to the CEDP graduate who wrote the best research paper.
Krcmarik’s paper was titled “Effective Use of Jury Management System
in Coconino County Superior Court.”
CEDP is the only program of its kind in
the United States and was established more than 30 years ago, in part,
by U.S. Chief Justice Warren E. Burger in his call for improving the
management of state court administration. The intensive educational
program consists of four phases, and those who successfully complete all
four phases become fellows of ICM, which better prepares them for
management and leadership positions in the courts. Since the first class
of CEDP graduates in 1970, more than 1,000 court professionals from 48
states, the District of Columbia, Guam and 12 foreign countries have
become fellows.
The curriculum phases include:
- Phase
I requires participants to take six in-depth courses that cover
topics of court performance standards, research methods, caseflow
and fiscal management, human resources, and technology management.
- Phase
II is a three-week full-time course at the National Center’s
headquarters in Williamsburg, Va. in which participants take a range
of classes to sharpen their conceptual and interpersonal skills and
learn leadership and management theory as it applies to court
management.
- Phase
III requires participants to prepare a master’s-level research
paper that relates to evaluating and implementing a key court
activity in their home jurisdiction.
- In
Phase IV participants present their research projects and evaluate
their classmates’ reports.
The National Center for State Courts is a
non-profit organization dedicated to improving the administration of
justice by providing leadership and service to the state courts. The
National Center, founded in 1971 with the encouragement of Chief Justice
of the United States Warren E. Burger, provides leadership, research,
technology, education, and training to the state courts. The National
Center also is taking the lead on several key issues facing the justice
system. For example, it has established a major civil justice reform
initiative, which is a multi-year project that examines the most
efficient practices in civil case management and how complex litigation
procedures can be improved through the use of technology. Other national
initiatives being driven by the National Center include improving public
trust and confidence in the courts, self representation, and the
judicial selection process.
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