Kimberly Atkins//April 11, 2013//
With no solution in sight to end the automatic federal budget cuts that began in March, federal judiciary officials are announcing plans to close courthouses, limit trials and hearings and furlough federal prosecutors, defenders and U.S. Marshals Service officers, all while warning that the move will compromise the federal court system.
Chief executives from federal courthouses around the country are announcing plans to temporarily lay off workers and to close courthouses to all but essential hearings at least one day per week. Plans differ from district to district, but this month many trial level federal courts will be closed to all but essential criminal proceedings on Fridays, civil trial and hearing schedules will be reduced, and Federal Defender, U.S. Attorneys, and U.S. Marshals Service will face furloughs.
Other courts, such as the Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York, will stop hearings at 5 p.m. sharp rather than eliminate a day of holding court.
Meanwhile, federal judiciary officials warned members of Congress that the judiciary has already spent years cutting its costs, so there is little room remaining for sequester-related cuts.