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Courts plan gradual reopening during week of June 8

June 10, 2020

Delaware’s chief justice announced May 29 that he expects Delaware’s courts to gradually open for business during the week of June 8.

“The COVID-19 pandemic required the Delaware courts to limit public access to our judicial facilities ... As the governor starts to lift restrictions on the public, the judiciary is looking to increase its operations,” said Chief Justice Collins Seitz Jr.

“Like many of our sister courts, we will follow a phased approach as we increase our operations. The move from phase to phase will be guided by medical experts. If we find our procedures are not working or there is a second spike in COVID-19 cases, we might have to slow our progress or step back a phase. The safety of the public and judicial branch employees will be our guide.”

A Courts Reopening Committee recently recommended a phased approach to reopening court facilities and increasing court operations, and Seitz recently accepted the recommendations. He shared details with court employees and members of the Delaware Bar during back-to-back town hall-style videoconferences. Court business was scaled back and court facilities closed to the public in March because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The reopening plan, which is available on the Delaware Judiciary’s COVID-19 response page courts.delaware.gov/aoc/courtsreopeningplan.pdf, does not set any firm dates or deadlines to move from phase to phase, but leaves that determination to Seitz in consultation with the Supreme Court. Seitz will rely heavily on advice from Dr. Alfred Bacon, a Delaware infectious disease expert who is advising the Delaware Judiciary, officials said.

Details of the phased-in reopening are as follows: 

Phase 1 will be a “soft opening” allowing attorneys and a limited number of other professionals who have business with the courts to return to the building. As part of this phase, new safety protocols will be enforced such as heightened screening at courthouse entrances, temperature checks and COVID-19 questionnaires. Once inside, all visitors will be asked to use sanitizer at hand sanitizer stations, wear facial coverings for their mouth and nose, and observe social distancing rules. These rules will also provide a four-person limit per elevator in the courthouses. The number and type of proceedings held at the courthouses will increase, including a resumption of Delaware Supreme Court oral arguments, and courthouse staff will be increased. Court security will limit the total number of visitors to 25 percent of the building’s total occupancy. Non-courtroom public areas of the courthouse like the lunch area will remain closed. 

Phase 2 will reopen court facilities to the public with Phase 1 protocols in place. In addition, no more than 10 visitors will be allowed in a courtroom or in public areas adjacent to courtrooms. Non-courtroom public areas will remain closed. Proceedings involving nonincarcerated individuals will resume including non-jury civil and criminal trials. Jury trials will remain on hold. Grand jury proceedings will resume. Court staffing will continue to increase and building occupancy will be limited to 50 percent. 

Phase 3 will increase the number of people allowed in courtrooms and public areas adjacent to courtrooms to 50 and will allow the resumption of civil and criminal jury trials. New safety protocols, established in earlier phases, will remain in place. More in-person proceedings will resume, and incarcerated defendants will once again be brought to the courthouse rather than appearing only by video (though increased use of video proceedings will still be encouraged). Court staffing can increase to no more than 75 percent and building occupancy will be limited to 75 percent. 

Phase 4 will mark a return to full operations, though under “new normal” that may include maintaining certain safety procedures and an increased use of technology as established during the emergency and phased reopening period. Court staffing and building occupancy will return to 100 percent. 

In addition to the phased reopening framework, the report also included a number of other recommended operational changes including: adopting contact tracing procedures in the event any visitor or employee at the courthouse contracts or is exposed to COVID-19, making changes to court employee workspaces to comply with social distancing, adding floor markings in public areas of courthouse offices to indicate 6-foot separation, installing plastic shields in offices where employees interact with the public and in certain courtroom areas, and coordination of court calendars to minimize traffic at the courthouses. 

For the latest information about the Delaware Judiciary’s response to COVID-19, visit courts.delaware.gov/aoc/covid-19. For the latest information on COVID-19, visit www.de.gov/coronavirus, call 1-866-408-1899 or email DPHCall@delaware.gov

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