Hamilton Herald Masthead

Editorial


Front Page - Friday, April 27, 2018

TN Supreme Court awards county court kiosks




Self-represented litigants in Hamilton County and seven other Tennessee counties will soon be able to take advantage of convenient access to valuable legal information and resources thanks to a series of grants provided by the Tennessee Supreme Court and the Administrative Office of the Courts. The grants will cover the expense of purchasing and installing special kiosks in courthouses throughout the state.

The kiosks will connect self-represented civil litigants with a variety of tools they can use to better navigate the legal system, including information about legal aid offices, pro bono projects, court-approved documents and more. Courthouse visitors will access these resources via an onsite computer or tablet.

The initiative, piloted by the Tennessee Supreme Court Access to Justice Commission, seeks to address a prevalent issue in the state.

“A lack of legal representation is a problem that affects too many Tennesseans,” Tennessee Supreme Court Justice Cornelia Clark says. “While defendants in most criminal cases are guaranteed a lawyer, the same is not true for those who find themselves involved in civil cases.

“Often, these cases deal with serious issues related to a person’s health and well-being, which makes it especially important that litigants are aware of the legal resources available to them.”

So far, the AOC has announced eight counties that will receive funding to launch the kiosks over the next year. These counties were selected through an application process. Courthouses in Anderson County, Blount County, Dickson County, Hamilton County, Hawkins County, Knox County, Shelby County and Sullivan County will receive grants.

Each kiosk will be customized for the particular county. All kiosks, though, will provide information based on the Help4TN.org (www.help4tn.org/) platform, which was developed by the Tennessee Alliance for Legal Services and West Tennessee Legal Services. Help4TN.org serves as a storehouse of legal resources for self-represented litigants, offering educational materials related to a variety of subjects such as renters’ rights and child support, to name a few.

The inspiration for the kiosk project came from the Access to Justice Public Awareness Subcommittee.

A member of that committee, General Sessions Judge Lee Bussart, had grown concerned about the number of people she regularly saw in her courthouse in Marshall County who needed legal advice but were not represented by an attorney. On some days, as many as 400 people stream into the courthouse.

“They ask the clerks so many questions, and I get a lot of questions in court,” Judge Bussart adds. “And, I think it’s a bad advertisement for our system to say to those people, ‘I can’t help you.’”

As a judge, she’s not allowed to give legal advice to pro se litigants, and clerks can’t offer advice either because they’re not attorneys.

Judge Bussart decided to try to help those litigants find free, reliable information online that could be of use to them.

Building off that idea, she convinced the Marshall County Bar Association to purchase a Chromebook for self-represented litigants to consult when they came to the courthouse. The Chromebook opens to a page designed to resemble Help4TN.org. From that page, litigants can find links to a number of free resources offering legal aid.

The Marshall County Bar Association won a “most innovative program” award from the American Bar Association for its efforts.

The money for the kiosk grants came from both the AOC’s technology fund and from excess funding collected as a part of the Supreme Court’s continuing legal education efforts.

The Tennessee Supreme Court’s Access to Justice Commission was formed in 2009 as part of the Court’s Access to Justice Initiative. That initiative is dedicated to meeting the legal needs of the many Tennesseans each year who are confronted with legal problems that they might not have the expertise or the means to adequately address.

Source: Tennessee Supreme Court