Alaska State Legislature
News From The House Majority
Ken Freeman, Press Secretary
State Capitol
Juneau, AK 99801
phone: (907) 465-3804
web site: http://www.akrepublicans.org
Actuality line: 1-800-478-6540
Legislature Seeks to Split Ninth Circuit Court
For Immediate Release: April 30, 1997 Contact: Rep. Joe Green (907) 465-4931
JUNEAU -- The Alaska State Senate on Wednesday approved a legislative resolution in support of federal legislation that would create a new 12th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. HJR 30 has been passed the House of Representatives.
Alaska Senators Frank Murkowski and Ted Stevens, together with a group of senators from Northwestern states, have introduced Senate bill 431 which would
split the federal Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, which meets in San Francisco, and create a new Twelfth Circuit Court with headquarters in Seattle.
The Ninth Circuit, the largest in the federal judiciary, encompasses a population between 40 and 50 million people in Washington, Montana, Oregon, Nevada, California, Arizona, Idaho, Alaska, and Hawaii, Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands. California cases alone represent over half of the Ninth Circuit's caseload.
"The Ninth Circuit is just too big. There are too many cases and too many issues before the court," said Representative Joe Green, (R-Anchorage), Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, which introduced HJR 30. "There are about 200 Alaska cases waiting to be heard now, and when our cases are heard, it takes far too long to get a decision."
The proposed Twelfth Circuit would consist of Alaska, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, and Montana.
"So many federal issues important to Alaska end up in court. It is critical for us to be able to plead our case before a judge who understands Alaska, and has the time to render a fair decision," said Green.
Speaker of the House Gail Phillips, a strong supporter of splitting the Ninth Circuit, noted that creating a Twelfth Circuit establishes a more responsive court system for Alaska.
"HJR 30 sends a very clear message to Congress that Alaska strongly supports the idea of dividing the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, and making the Court of Appeals much more workable for Alaska. It will make the decisions affecting our critical land issues heard in a much more timely manner," said Phillips.
HJR 30 will be up for reconsideration vote on Thursday.
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