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CT Probate Judges Fight for Their Right to Party

Is working 4 hours per day too much to ask? If you ask a probate judge in Connecticut to do it, maybe it is…

The CT legislature enacted a requirement this last session that Connecticut Probate Courts remain open at least 20 hours each week. The legislature did not address how to accommodate the 20 hour requirement. So, who decides when the courts should be open to satisfy this new requirement?

In July Connecticut’s Probate Court Administrator, James Lawlor, notified the probate judges that their courts should be open 4 hours each day. Judge Lawlor also provided that a court could ask for a waiver from the daily requirement if they had good cause.

The Probate Judge’s Association was not happy with being told to show up for work every day even if it is only for 4 hours. The President of the Association, Brookfield’s Judge Joseph Secola, has threatened legal action to avoid this draconian work order from the Probate Court Administrator. One of his more amusing comments is [Lawlor's] “position is not king. The judges aren’t serfs that have to go to him on their knees to request a waiver from a standard that the law does not require.”

Hey Probate Judges, this is not the way to improve your image and enhance the respectability of a court system that has been under regular attack for the last five or so years. Go to work, serve the public, and stop the grand-standing over someone expecting you to show up to your job for 4 hours every day. If it is really that horrible, you can find another job. Oh wait, you might have to work 8 hours a day somewhere else.

A lot of people have to show up for work at a lot tougher jobs than yours for 8 or more hours ever day, remember that.

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Index Tags: estate planning, living trust, probate

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