National Center for State Courts

 

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Trial Court Perforrmance Standards & Measurement System

Measure 1.2.5: Access to Information by Telephone

This measure involves simulating a request by a litigant or other interested person for information about the location and time of a court proceeding. A volunteer observer attempts to obtain information about the specific time and location of a court proceeding as well as the type of proceeding it is and its case number. The observer knows only the formal name of the court, the name of the litigant, and the day on which the proceeding in question is scheduled. He or she is not knowledgeable about routine court operations.

Planning/Preparation. Five proceedings from the court events sampled for Measure 1.1.1, Access to Open Hearings, are selected and the name of the parties, date, time, and location (i.e., courthouse, floor, and courtroom) of the scheduled events are recorded. If Measure 1.1.1 has not been conducted, five scheduled court events will have to be selected from the court’s calendar.

A stopwatch or watch with a second hand will be needed during the data collection phase.

Data Collection. The first step is for the observer to attempt to find the court’s general telephone number from the local telephone directory using the court’s official name (see Form 1.2.5, Access to Information by Telephone—Directions and Recording Sheet). If the number is not readily obtained from the local directory, the observer contacts the local directory information service. The observer notes the availability and difficulty of obtaining the court’s telephone number and records the number(s) obtained on the data collection form.

Using the telephone number obtained from the directory or directory assistance, the observer calls the court to obtain the time and location of each of the five events. To improve the simulation, the telephone contacts with the court should be distributed so that the frequency of the calls will not be noteworthy. Court officials should establish this distribution. For each event, the observer notes the elapsed time before the requested information is provided, using a standard stopwatch, and notes the number of individuals with whom he or she comes into contact. This information is recorded on Form 1.2.5. If the required information cannot be obtained within 1 hour (or if it cannot be obtained at all), the observer records a maximum of 60 minutes and six contacts for each event for purposes of the aggregate summary. He or she also makes notes as appropriate.

Data Analysis and Report Preparation. Data obtained for the five events are aggregated. First, the observer summarizes the ease or difficulty of obtaining the court’s telephone numbers from the telephone directories and notes the range of elapsed times for the five events. The elapsed time and number of contacts to acquire the information is then averaged across the five events (Telephone Information Accessibility Score). If the range of results from the calls varies widely, the court should separately evaluate, if possible, the circumstances of each simulation. The court may also wish to increase the number of simulations in order to achieve a more reliable average score and to better diagnose the patterns that explain extremes.

Go to Form 1.2.5

Go to Standard 1.2

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Copyright © 2001 National Center for State Courts
Last Modified: January 23, 2005