Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Clerk of court challenger tenders courteous concession

Click link for DBR story on Darrin McGillis concession:


Elections: Clerk of the Courts Miami-Dade veteran Ruvin draws opponents for first time

Daily Business Review
October 31, 2008 By: Billy Shields

Harvey Ruvin is facing opposition for the first time in his 16 years as Miami-Dade County’s Clerk of the Courts.

This time, he has plenty of opponents vying for his job, which pays $173,000 a year. The four-way race to be decided Tuesday includes Alfredo Perez, a minor-league baseball player turned lawyer; Darrin McGillis, the former promoter of the Hispanic boy band Menudo.

"This is an elected office, and I honor anyone who’d put their hat in the ring to run," Ruvin said. Let’s hope the best man wins."

Perez is an attorney who was a catcher in the Houston Astros organization for four years in the 1980s before he was sidelined by a knee injury. He became a Miami solo practitioner after going back to school and hanging up his baseball career.
Perez is running on a green platform - he wants to make the courts paperless with electronic filing and mandatory recycling throughout the courts system.

Ruvin said courts already recycle with the exception of sensitive sealed documents that can’t be recycled for confidentiality reasons.
Perez also advocates the elimination of outsourced collection efforts for traffic citations and other court debts. Firms in Texas and California currently handle that function.
"Why can’t we have our own departments here that collect our own traffic citations?" he asked.

Ruvin said his office is collecting debts left for dead in the range of "tens of millions of dollars" annually.

McGillis’s signature issue is electronic filing and putting all court documents online as so-called portable document format files.

"You can’t access an order, you can’t access a motion, you can’t access any document filed by a litigant," he said. "Even appellate courts have documents in PDFs."

McGillis wants to create a countywide database modeled on the federal PACER system and hopes to turn it into a template for other Florida courts.

At the moment, few court documents - usually final orders, judgments or notices of appeal - can be downloaded. In contrast, the Florida Supreme Court and the five state district courts of appeal offer same-day opinions online.

Ruvin notes the available documents are in PDF format, but he said the kinds of documents available on a court’s Web site are limited by Florida statute.

The clerk’s post is one of the most unsung but important positions in the court system. Miami-Dade is the largest circuit in the state, and its clerk’s office is the fourth-largest in the nation with 1,500 employees.

The clerk is responsible for keeping court records, securing evidence, collecting fines, summoning jurors and recording deeds. Its influence extends to the use and receipt of county funds. The office generates about $100 million in annual revenue outside the court system and processes about $1 billion in annual revenue.

Ruvin reached the general election by handily defeating David Nelson in the Aug. 26 primary. He has name recognition built up through the years, said Miami campaign consultant Steven Ferreiro, who is not working on Ruvin’s race.

Daily Business Review
Reporter Billy Shields

Saturday, April 26, 2008

Why courts are vitally important to everyone in Florida

Our courts protect democracy
by upholding the law, protecting
individual rights and liberties, enforcing
public order, and providing for a
peaceful resolution of disputes. More
than 4 million new cases are filed
each year impacting every aspect of
society.

Our courts safeguard victims’
rights, determine guilt or innocence
of the accused, and impose appropriate
punishment. Crime hurts everyone.
It results in physical and emotional
injury, loss of life, lost wages,
higher insurance premiums, higher
business expenses, and degradation
of quality of life within our communities.
Last year, more than 1.3 million
criminal cases were filed. Everyone in
our state is affected.

Our courts resolve personal,
business, and property disputes.
The business community is a major
user of the justice system. Last year
there were more than 2.2 million civil
cases filed.

Our courts protect families,
children, the elderly and the infirm.
Nearly 462,000 cases are filed each
year involving the young, the old, and
the frail.

Monday, January 14, 2008

Elect Darrin E. McGillis Clerk of the Circuit Court for Miami Dade County Florida

Welcome to the first post for the Official Blog of the Campaign to Elect Darrin E. McGillis Clerk of the Circuit Court for Miami Dade County, Florida.

If you have not yet visited the Campaign web site just CLICK HERE. The Campaign web site has a vast amount of information for the voters of Miami Dade County.

Get Informed, Get Involved, Get Active. Volunteer! Make change happen on Tuesday, November 4, 2008.

FOR THE OFFICIAL CAMPAIGN YOUTUBE PAGE CLICK HERE

Countdown to Change for Miami Dade County.

Very truly yours,
Darrin E. McGillis,
Candidate for Clerk of the Circuit
Court Miami-Dade County, Florida.

Political advertisement paid for and approved by Darrin E. McGillis, for Clerk of the Circuit Court of Miami-Dade County Florida P.O. Box 56-6091, Miami, Florida 33256-6091