Archive for the “Personal” Category


Edward Gallas died peacefully on Saturday, Aug. 14, 2010. He was attended by his wife, Nesta, and his two daughters Karen and Stephanie Gallas.

Edward was born on Oct. 30, 1917, in Los Angeles, Calif. He was the son of Joseph Gallas and Catherine Lehner. Edward attended Cathedral High School in Los Angeles where he was an excellent baseball player.

Upon graduating, he was offered a major-league baseball contract with the St. Louis Cardinals, but instead decided to attend college. He enrolled in Loyola University and graduated in 1937. In 1943 he married the love of his life, Nesta Mabyn Williams. They worked for over 50 years in the field of public administration.

Edward was a Navy logistics officer stationed in Hawaii during World War II. Following the end of the war, he returned to California where he worked for the League of California Cities. He later returned to Hawaii, where he started a family and worked as a management consultant to the emerging nations in the South Pacific.

In 1959, Edward and Nesta moved the family back to California where Edward became the first professional court administrator for the Los Angeles Superior Courts. He would later co-author with Nesta and Ernest Friesen “Managing the Courts,” the first book written on court administration. In 1967 he was appointed director of personnel for the New York and New Jersey Port Authority and remained there until his retirement in 1978.

Following his retirement, Edward and his Nesta worked as consultants for the United Nations, the World Bank and the federal government. He provided consulting assistance to the governments of Jamaica, China, Thailand, Laos and Moldova. He was also active in the American Society for Public Administration and was elected to the National Academy of Public Administration in 1975.

Edward loved to travel and worked in, or visited, over 60 countries during his lifetime. He also loved good wine, fine dining, gardening and the company of his friends and family. He will be dearly missed.

He is survived by Nesta Gallas, his wife of 66 years, and four children, Geoffrey Gallas of Philadelphia, Pa., William “Boo” Gallas and wife Diane of Manhattan Beach, Calif., Karen Gallas and husband Dave Edwards of Peacham, Vt., and Stephanie Gallas of Vergennes, Vt.; as well as 11 grandchildren and one great-grandchild.

Our hearts go out to Geoff Gallas and his mother, Nesta, for the loss of Edward, a giant in our field of judicial administration.

Photo credit = Microsoft clip art

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I live in rural Humboldt County on the California coast near the Oregon border. Every year, my wife and I spend 10 days or so attending the county fair here, which is one of the last truly rural fairs in the state. Our biggest lure? The horse racing, of course!!

The local economy is still dominated by timber, fishing, ranching and dairy, which means that the natives are serious about their rural culture. In fact, livestock is a way of life here, not just a photo opportunity

So if you don’t hear any court related stories from me for a week or so, it’s because I’ll be at the finish line cheering for my horse picks. Hope springs eternal, but I also know that they don’t call it the sport of kings for nothing !!

Chris Crawford
www.justiceserved.com

Photo credit = Humboldt County Fair

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OK, I admit to being a wimp. I used to be able to travel even back-to-back assignments and still multi-task with no problem. This is a weak excuse for not posting to this blog for two weeks, but as the Anthony Hopkins character said in Howard’s End, “One doesn’t like it, but there it is.”

The NACM conference the week of July 19 was action packed and memorable. A series of meetings, ad hoc business opportunities, education classes, vendor floor shows and the city of New Orleans distractions combined to make an action packed week. A week at home catching up with project work was followed closely by 3-days on site with a contract engagement in Illinois.

Yes, they are excuses, but damned good ones although the latest project work is very satisfying and working out to the mutual benefit of client and contractor, it nonetheless takes a lot out of you. I very much enjoy the interaction and positive collaboration, but the travel and brain drain are a formidable combination, especially when combined with a major conference.

Here’s the takeaway the transformational nature of the current financial meltdown is real and palpable. Court professionals everywhere are adjusting to the new reality.

Few of us have the luxury of stopping the music long enough to react to the outside influences in our lives. We deal with a seemingly unending series of crises, and do our utmost to give each one our full attention.

Lest you think I am embarking on another slack-fest, I am warning that the Humboldt County Fair starts 8/12 and I have box seats at the horse races until 8/22. You are liable to have long delays between email and phone responses during this period and I readily admit that the cause will be slackiosity and not fatigue. Well maybe fatigue, but not the work kind.

Serenity now !!

Chris Crawford
www.justiceserved.com

Photo credit = Duke Travel resources

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The National Association for Court Management 2010 Annual Conference is in New Orleans next week and I’m excited about the program and activities I have planned there. The conference theme is Wisdom in Action: Proven Court Practices and the week is jam packed with terrific content.

Let’s start with the governance issues with a NACM Board Meeting on July 19 and joint FACT Steering Committee and Joint Technology Committee meeting on July 20. There are a load of administrative issues that deserve attention and it’s a pleasure to be part of the policy solutions. Follow that with education events interspersed throughout the week, an ICM Fellows’ reception* on July 21, vendor show on July 22 and hosting duties for one of the education sessions. Cap off the week with me serving as faculty for a Best of Court Websites course that is repeated on July 23.

*Last year I was honored to be feted with the ICM Fellow STAR Award at a reception held in Boston at the 2009 NACM Annual Conference, so I plan to be front and center when this year’s recipient is named.

In between there is a lot of catching up, social events, business networking and marketing opportunities. I also plan to enjoy the wonderful city, its food and entertainment.

I admit that I’m not looking forward to the July heat and humidity in New Orleans, but I am looking forward to showing my support for the Gulf Coast in what seems to be a series of unfortunate setbacks that should in no way reflect poorly on the spirit and perspicacity of the local denizens.

Oh yeah, and in case you are tracking this blog so you know when to burglarize my house, I left a huge, hungry dog inside so back off !! Laissez Les Bon Temps Roulez … Let the Good Times Roll !!

Chris Crawford
www.justiceserved.com

Photo credit = Tales from an Open Book blog

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We’ve known for a long time that computer hard drives hold a treasure trove of information and need to be scrubbed clean before recycling or donation lest they divulge valuable information to the wrong people. With the omnipresence of “smart” devices nowadays, this exposure also applies to cell phones, answering machines and even copy machines.

An April 15, 2010 segment of the CBS Evening News featured “Digital Photocopiers Loaded With Secrets,” exposing scary scenarios about tons of information available for the picking in used copy machine warehouses. As the story notes, nearly every digital copier built since 2002 contains a hard drive - like the one on your personal computer - storing an image of every document copied, scanned, or emailed by the machine. YIKES !!

Can you imagine the range of information these hard drives hold? Personally, I also use mine as a heavy duty printer, which means that every file I printed off my computer is also captured in the bowels of the beast. DOUBLE YIKES !!

My God, think of all those hormone-crazed office workers who at one time or another dropped their trousers and photocopied their rear ends. Oh, the humanity !!

So what can be done? For starters, these manufacturers should do a better job of advising purchasers of the risks and take the next step of offering remedies. Sharp offers such a package for what may seem like a steep price of $500, but when one considers the cost of identity theft and liability it no longer seems so high. There are other commercial packages and services on the market that offer preventative solutions and pre-disposal disk scrubbing

You can watch the 5 minute CBS Evening News on their website, or on YouTube.

It’s shocking, but worth the time if it shocks you into taking remedial action when the time comes to dump your current copier.

Life is indeed becoming more complicated.

Chris Crawford
www.justiceserved.com

Photo credit = Tutoorials.com

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On this the first day of summer, what better time to celebrate our freedom and our yearning for vacation to get away from it all? What’s keeping us? Our Crackberries, of course! Those little balls-and-chains that tether us to work, email, text messages, reminders and to-do lists. As court managers, we never seem to escape, but thank goodness that judges haven’t fallen prey to this madness or have they?

According to the distinguished Herbert B. Dixon Jr., judge of the District of Columbia Superior Court, judges are indeed Blackberry power users as covered in his excellent piece entitled Developing an Addiction to Your BlackBerry in 13 Easy Steps published in the American Bar Association The Judges’ Journal, Volume 49, Number 2, Spring 2010.

But does the good judge advise restraint? Does he caution against the temptation to stay connected and extol the virtues of living a balanced life of work and play? Hell no he trots out a series of power user tips that will turn our species into giant thumbed creatures who sleep at our desks.

I have opined early and often warning of this ailment. Despite my own best efforts to avoid it, I turned on the email feature on my Crackberry and now have to struggle to keep from regularly checking the status of incoming messages. I have even succumbed to the dreaded texting monster, though I keep a rubber band around my wrist and snap it every time I send a message, just to keep from overusing it.

What I haven’t been able to do is completely unplug. I can’t seem to go on vacation or even enjoy a weekend or holiday without that blasted gizmo implanted in my hip.

So save yourselves it’s too late for me. Eschew the beast, live a more simple life. At least then you’ll have the luxury of assimilating information before responding. Of deciding whether to call someone back after a relaxing day with your family.

You’ll be glad you did.

Chris Crawford
www.justiceserved.com

Photo credit = Associated Press photo by Richard Drew in a San Francisco Chronicle article on a Blackberry legal ruling

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OK, I admit it. I am a dyed-in-the-wool Mac-head who started with a Mac SE/30 (at court, no less) and tried my level best to live peaceably in a Windows-dominated work world. In 1998, I was forced to pull the plug on Apple computing and fell asleep next to the Microsoft pod in order to be effective in managing and consulting in court technology. Just when I am officially over the break-up, along comes the iPad. GAD !!

I looked, I touched and I played around with it this can be nearly fatal in the Mac world because this technology is soooo freaking cool. Then I remembered why we broke up. The costs were too high compared to the competition, the choices of software were extremely limited, files tended to be proprietary rendering sharing almost impossible, collaborating with non-Mac colleagues became a nightmare, and if you got stuck somewhere remote (especially internationally) you were screwed.

The single biggest reason I decided not to take the plunge again is the lack of versatility in this particular tool. It became clear that I couldn’t leave my laptop behind if I needed to actually compute or make a Powerpoint presentation, so what’s the point of carrying two or more tech devices around with you? That’s why I dumped my MP3 player after I picked up a Crackberry, which also enabled me to drop a separate PDA.

So here’s the question is there a legitimate role for the ultra-cool iPad in the court technology world? I posted this inquiry on the LinkedIn FACT forum and David Slayton, the ubiquitous court administrator from Lubbock posted a similar inquiry on the Court2Court listserv. Here is an excerpted summary of the replies:

From OREGON: As an administrator I have been using a Fujitsu Lifebook for the last three years and along with One Note can be a great organizational tool to almost rid yourself of legal pads. Standard tablets are definitely a production/working tool and Lenovo is coming out with one that will allow you to detach the screen to make it iPad like. However, I’d be wary of the iPad at this point as a production tool. I think the learning curve to make it work properly could be an issue.

From FLORIDA: We’re looking at the possibility of iPads or other netbooks, notebooks, and tablet PC’S as one element of a three-pronged project to improve the judiciary’s ability to perform work with electronic records in chambers, courtroom and from home. The current focus is on how to make the case file images easily available, how to “group” commonly used images in each case for easier access, and allowing multiple documents in singles cases as well as multiple documents in multiple cases to be open at once.  The challenge that has been issued is to make the electronic files as easy to use as paper, if not easier.  We are experimenting with touch screens for use in chambers and courtrooms, and the iPads would be used for travel and home use if a home desktop PC is not desired by the judge.  The project is in its infancy and no actual demonstration of iPad use has been accomplished yet.

From CANADA (1): While I generally support the use of most technology in a courtroom or by judges generally, I must say I am not a fan of iPads. Tablets have existed for years and I militated for their adoption by judges. However, I can’t be supportive of a tablet with no power nor USB connection. Notwithstanding its low price the iPad will only add to the armada of poorly integrated technologies the judiciary needs to deal with. Judges will still need a computer, a cellphone, etc. I think real tablet PCs are still the way to go, no matter the hype around Apple’s new toy.

From Canada (2): The value will only be if applications utilized in the eTrials are able to run on the technologies.  Many of the Judges I work with are still coming to terms with technologies generally.  There is still a limited understanding of the difference between true electronic courtbooks and those simply mirroring a case management solution through simple VGA technologies with limited workflow, in saying this it does work it is just more costly and less efficient, particularly when it comes to true court management ie exhibit management and integration.

From CALIFORNIA: I am told that legal services and self-help staff in California are very pleased with iPads, using them for real time legal research and for searching websites for information and forms.  I would think that judges would find them equally useful for legal research.  Do your judges, however, need to have portable access to legal research or are they always going to be in their offices or on the bench when they are querying a legal information site?  If they are at home preparing for calendars, they would probably find it very handy to have instantaneous access using an iPad.

From SOUTH DAKOTA: We had an iPad problem arise here just last week.  It’s our standard practice to collect jurors’ cell phones when they go into deliberations.  A bailiff guards the pile of phones on a table outside the deliberation room door. We also place trial exhibits on the table in the deliberation room for the jurors.  A police video DVD had been entered into evidence in a trial last week.  At one point the jury wanted to (re)view the video. Normally a bailiff would get a DVD player on a rolling cart for them, but instead a juror just pulled an iPad from her large purse and they played it for themselves.  Not a big deal in itself, we would have displayed it for them anyway, but that iPad could have easily accessed the open, public WiFi signal we have in the courthouse (or the WiFi signal from the big hotel across the street for that matter).  Luckily the jury did no “surfing” and the trial was not disturbed in any away, but now we’re having a discussion here about whether to collect “any internet-accessible device” along with the cell phones from the jurors, or maybe address this with a standard jury instruction as a number of courts already do, or both.

From OHIO: We’re considering the viewing of case filing images assembled into eBooks, and iPad is a possibility for this.

So there you have it we report and you decide !!

Chris Crawford
www.justiceserved.com

Photo credit = Apple iPad gallery

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Anyone active in the court management profession has come across Dr. Ron Stupak at one conference or another. Ron speaks eloquently about organizational development, strategic management and leadership, and my enduring memory of his various speeches is one in which he said that the most effective leaders are those who practice leadership with a small L.

This concept is open to interpretation, but to me it means that when acting in a lead capacity too many look for big, memorable “Capital L” leadership moments, when in actuality these moments are few and far between. If such moments do occur, they are often associated with some crisis intervention in which quick decisions are needed and organizations (and even society as a whole) seek assurance from those at the top that everything is going to be OK.

Small L leadership is the day-to-day business of building credibility, forging alliances, developing (and stretching) subordinates, articulating a vision of the future and deciding what to measure when determining success. This work is a marathon, not a sprint, and requires faithful, genuine hard work.

I had the recent honor of stepping in to help a friend by teaching a leadership course for judges in a southern state. It didn’t matter that I had not taught a leadership course before or that I had nothing to do with this particular curriculum development, Powerpoint presentation or creation of group exercises. Every course that I teach has major leadership components and you cannot survive 37 years (YIKES) of working in courts without strong and regular exposure to leadership in action (both positive and negative).

This course was developed using the National Association for Court Management’s 10 core competencies, and in particular the knowledge, skills and abilities described for effective Leadership. The course is divided into these discrete sections:

  • Be Credible in Action
  • Create Focus Through Vision and Purpose
  • Manage Interdependencies: Work Beyond the Boundaries
  • Produce a High Performance Work Environment
  • Do Skillful and Continual Diagnosis

I kicked off the class with US Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart’s concurring opinion in Jacobellis v. Ohio 378 U.S. 184 (1964), regarding possible obscenity in a movie called The Lovers, in which he famously saidI shall not today attempt further to define the kinds of material I understand to be embraced within that shorthand description ["hard-core pornography"]; and perhaps I could never succeed in intelligibly doing so. But I know it when I see it …

Similarly, there is an endless stream of books and reference materials on leadership (much of it even copyrighted, for some silly reason), but no matter how glib, succinct or erudite the description, people innately know leadership when they see it, and more important, recognize poor leadership regardless of position, wealth or social status.

I strive to be a good leader, but I know the effort must stem from your core, after which frameworks such as those embodied by NACM’s Leadership Core Competency serve as an excellent guide.

Chris Crawford
www.justiceserved.com

Photo credit = Patton, the movie, from the Heavyarmor blog

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One of the drawbacks to my profession as a court management consultant is the significant amount of travel that comes with the job. Last week, I found myself in the unfortunate confluence of bad travel juju, Midwestern weather and a must-appear obligation in Northern Michigan. Hence, my tale of woe.

First, I pride myself in my ethic to do whatever is necessary to fulfill my professional obligations. Sometimes this means heroic efforts against daunting odds. Last week was such an experience

The last leg of a 3-part flight from my home in Eureka to Traverse City, MI was cancelled and I was stranded at the Chicago International Airport just across Lake Michigan from my intended destination. The good news was that I hopped an earlier flight on standby status so I could get to Chicago earlier and get some work done before my relatively short 5:30pm flight to Michigan. The cause was weather delay, oddly from the previous day because the current weather was overcast but pleasant, dry and not windy.

After exploring the flight options to Grand Rapids, Lansing, Detroit and Saginaw, I was wary because each showed delays on the status board, each would get me in pretty late, and from there I would still have to rent a car one-way and drive a respectable distance. Since it was only 2:30pm, I chose to drive to Traverse City from O’Hare and the games began from there.

Problem 1 = no baggage. Although I faithfully pack light and carry my own bag rather than check it, the earlier flight from San Francisco was packed so they lifted by small roll-aboard and checked it to Michigan. Despite my best effort, I couldn’t get the baggage gods in Chicago to release it, even though the folks in front of me at the baggage claim convinced the clerk to let them walk their dog who they recognized from his barks in the baggage storage warehouse.

Problem 2 = the bad weather the day before and residual delays meant that rental cars were scarce, especially for one-way bookings to obscure destinations. It took some time to find a rental car company willing to comply with my needs, and when I arrived to retrieve my prize, the line was gi-normous. 45 minutes later, I got the car, but I was still reeling from the cost $300 when everything was totaled, for one day!! One of those expenses was a GPS, which I was sure I needed. Even though my Blackberry has navigation, I expected to make and receive several calls during the trip and the Garmin add-on software on it was acting cranky of late. I left at 3:30pm.

Problem 3 = during the nearly 300 mile joyride, I had to find a clothing store to purchase some slacks, a dress shirt and tie so I didn’t show up in jeans and a t-shirt. The only sure-thing I could find en route was either a Sears or JC Penney in Michigan City, Indiana. I chose the JC Penney, although the last time I was in one was when I was 12 years old and used my own money to purchase a package of tighty-whities and a blue work shirt. I bought chinos and blue dress shirt on sale, but not only were the ties hideous, they were $30 each. After I complained, the sales lady advised that I buy two, since the 2nd was half off, and then return it immediately afterward. Huh? I dutifully complied and now own a $21 stain resistant tie of unknown material and questionable design. I purchased a meal to go from Applebees and got back on the road.

Unanticipated problem 4 = detours. While much of the route was on 70 mph expressway, things soon changed into highways, which changed into country roads because of detours. Despite having a compact car, I was soon on empty and had to refill, which gave me the opportunity to confirm the directions.

Unanticipated problem 5 = deer. I dutifully phoned my destination host to inform her that I would be late and bringing additional travel charges, and she sympathized with my cause. However, as she signed off she said to drive carefully and be sure to watch out for the deer. WHAT?? An hour later on a lonely stretch of back road with me barreling at 65 mph, sure as crap a group of four deer appeared out of nowhere. One crossed the road, the others were halfway across, I was in full brake mode and hit the horn. The others stopped; I swerved and narrowly missed a collision that would have put me in an even worse predicament (if that was possible). I said a silent prayer and moved on.

I arrived at midnight, in time to order two beers to go from the bar, get to my room, start ironing my new clothes and eventually catch some sleep. The rest, as they say, is history. The engagement went well, and they enjoyed the My Cousin Vinny story I told them about the ridiculous outfit I was wearing (I forgot to tell you that I refused to purchase dress shoes, so I was still wearing tennis shoes).

The good news is that I have amassed a ton of credits in travel karma, which I will put to good use. It began on the return trip where I was upgraded to first class for the longest leg of the journey and had a wonderful meal, newspaper and nap.

OK, so I’m missing the train in my graphic for this story, but the experience is still reminiscent of the classic movie with Steve Martin and John Candy trying to travel home for Thanksgiving. I feel their pain.

Chris Crawford
www.justiceserved.com

Photo credit = Green Bay Press Gazette blog

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It’s hard to escape the social media madness. I have acquaintances wanting to “friend” me, I get barraged with updates from LinkedIn, and my court administration trade news is clogged with stories about jurors-gone-wild Googling research during trials. So please allow me a quick rundown on some quick solutions and encapsulated news on the topic.

JURIES

I’ve blogged on this before and there are plenty of news stories relating the extent of jury tainting through Internet access, mobile computing devices and social media. One answer is relatively simple, as covered by retired Orange County (FL) Judge Steven Wallace in the January/February 2010 edition of the Judicature magazine published by the American Judicature Society … craft a jury instruction that is explicit and goes into the reasons why jurors must be isolated from undue influence while hearing trial evidence and testimony. According to Judge Stevens, some courts now even require that jurors sign a declaration pledging to refrain from this activity.

IT DEPARTMENT

While some court IT departments are shutting down network access to social media for reasons of lost worker productivity, inappropriate “socializing,” and just plain bandwidth conservation, TechRepublic’s CIO Jury advises against it. Even though 7% or so of Internet traffic is attributable to Facebook and 87% of the users of this service admit that there is no business purpose for doing so, a majority (but by no means universal) opinion of these CIOs choose selected access by targeting those who may have a legitimate reason to surf these sites, rather than barring them outright.

COURT P.I.O.s

The Conference of Court Public Information Officers is hip deep in this controversy through its New Media Project with the stated aims to:

  1. Clearly define the current new media technology.
  2. Systematically examine the ways that courts are using new media
  3. Empirically measure the perceptions and approaches of judges and top court administrators toward the technology
  4. Collect and analyze the literature on new media, public perceptions of the judiciary and court public outreach programs
  5. Offer a framework and analysis for judges and court administrators to utilize when making decisions about the appropriate use of new media.

As for me, I use LinkedIn as a business-related communications and networking tool and dabble in Twitter only because I was shamed into it. Now that Twitter is connected through LinkedIn, I use it a little more frequently to tout these blog postings. Although I doubt that my new following of predominantly women who have no followers or tweets of their own but seem content following others like me, find my postings to be of particular interest. I know there must be something unsavory about it, but I can yet figure it out. Perhaps there is a fledgling, would-be court management career effort brewing in Eastern Europe, or wherever these folks originate.

Meanwhile, I am content avoiding Facebook just to be another face in the crowd of even more people looking for social interaction. I have enough time bandits in my life already.

Chris Crawford
www.justiceserved.com

Photo credit = Winderblog (Real Estate)

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