Pubdate: Mon, 04 Feb 2002 Source: Greenville News (SC) Copyright: 2002 The Greenville News Contact: http://greenvillenews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/877 Author: Tim Smith, Capital Bureau Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) CRITICS CALL DRUG COURT JUDGE'S PAY UNFAIR COLUMBIA -- A lawyer who state Sen. John Land "fought hard" to get appointed is the only judge in the state to be paid a salary to run a drug court full time, state records show. This year, the judge, Bobbie Reaves, Land's former law partner, will be paid $110,000, a salary on par with the state's Circuit Court judges who handle criminal and civil cases. Land, who has represented the Clarendon and Sumter district in the General Assembly for 26 years and was Senate majority leader until the Republicans took control last year, said Reaves deserves the salary and that she did not win the job because of her professional connections to him. "I was proud to promote her because I thought she was well qualified and her interest is there," Land said. Reaves, who oversees drug court in Clarendon, Sumter, Lee and Williamsburg counties, said she has advocated for a drug court in her area for several years and was among a group that traveled to Kansas City in 1999 to view drug courts there. She said she got the job on merit. "It's certainly money well spent," she said. "It's a successful program. What we're doing is putting families back together." Five people have graduated from the program thus far in Williamsburg and Clarendon counties, and she is monitoring 15 to 20 other cases, she said. Judges in other drug courts around the state, including Judge Charles B. Simmons Jr. of Greenville County, volunteer their time, though they are paid between $55,000 and $113,000 for their work as regular judges in family, circuit, magistrate and probate courts. One county, York, pays a local defense attorney $20,000 a year to work part time as a drug court judge, according to the Solicitor's Office there. Drug courts were designed to help guide drug users back into a stable and productive family life through treatment and support, and charges are dropped when the defendant completes the program. Clarendon County pays for Reaves' office space and utilities, she said, and other agencies are assisting with support services for those in the program. Simmons, a master-in-equity judge who has worked three years in drug court without pay for those duties, holds court each Thursday at 5:30, after he finishes his other court work. "Would it be good to be compensated financially? Yes," he said. "Would it stop me from doing it if I wasn't? Obviously, no." Several lawmakers questioned Reaves' salary. They said judges in each of the state's 16 judicial circuits should be treated the same. "I think if there is money spent on drug courts, it should be spread in an even manner," said House Speaker David Wilkins of Greenville. State Rep. Al Robinson, an Easley Republican who has examined drug court costs as part of his work chairing a budget panel on criminal justice, said paying only one judge "appears to be inequitable." "I think those judges who do this out of their own good graces deserve to be commended," he said. "I am a little disturbed that we have one judge who is paid the salary of a Family Court judge." The money was allocated last year by the Prosecution Coordination Commission, a state board that acts as the administrative and lobbying arm of prosecutors. The Solicitors Association had asked the commission for $150,000 for Lexington County's longtime drug court and that the other 15 circuits split $850,000. Land appealed to the commission to allocate $150,000 to his area as well, according to minutes of the meeting. The state's other circuits got $50,000 each for drug programs. Land said he was happy to recommend Reaves, who began working for him 30 years ago as his legal secretary, then became his partner after she graduated from law school. Solicitor Walter Bailey of Summerville said he quit as president of the Solicitors Association last year because the prosecution commission did not honor the association's recommendation. He said he considers the decision to fund Reaves' office an affront to the association. South Carolina Supreme Court Chief Justice Jean Toal, who appointed Reaves a drug court judge, said the Prosecution Coordination Commission makes funding decisions. "I was asked to issue an order to allow the person who was operating as the head of that drug court to be the judge of that drug court," she said. Paying a salary to every judge in drug court would be ideal, she said, but the money has not been available. "It's all a matter of how much money you want to put in this type of alternative program," she said. "Whether this particular one works or it's the best way to do it, that's up to the Legislature." She said comprehensive drug court legislation has been introduced in recent years but has not passed because of a lack of funding. Bailey, in a letter to prosecutors explaining his resignation, said the commission ignored the vote of the solicitors and approved a funding plan that was inequitable at a time when budget shortfalls were hurting prosecutors. "I am concerned that money which should be earmarked for our primary mission, prosecuting criminal cases, is being diverted in one form or another to various programs and employees which benefit specific judicial circuits at the expense of the remainder," he wrote. Robinson said he wants lawmakers to examine the issue. "I think as long as the judges are willing to volunteer their time, they can't help but be effective," he said. "I'm a little concerned we have allowed one to be paid when everybody else is a volunteer." Bailey said his circuit, which includes Calhoun, Dorchester and Orangeburg counties, can't afford a drug court. "I think my primary obligation is to get prosecutors in court to put violent offenders away," he said. "We pretty much accomplish what a drug court accomplishes in pretrial intervention." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake