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E. Docket /Calendar: a grouping of filings where a public defense attorney is designated to <br />represent indigent defendants without an expectation of further or continuing representation. <br />Examples include, but are not limited to, first appearance calendars and arraignment calendars. <br />F. Full Time: working approximately forty hours per week. It is presumed that a "full-time" public <br />defense attorney spends approximately 1,800 hours annually on case representation. ft is <br />expected that other work time is spent on administrative activities, attending CLEs, participating <br />in professional associations or committees, and spending time on vacation, holiday, or sick <br />leave. <br />G. Local Factors: practices, characteristics, or challenges that are unique to the delivery of public <br />defense in a given jurisdiction, and that substantially impact the time required for effective <br />delivery of public defense services. <br />H. Non-Charge Representations: matters where public defense attorneys represent clients who <br />are eligible for public defense representation for matters that do not involve the filing of new <br />criminal charges . Examples include, but are not limited to, sentence violations, extraditions, and <br />representations of material witnesses. <br />I. Partial Representations: situations where clients are charged with crimes, but representation is <br />either cut short at early stages of the case, or begins significantly later. Such situations include, <br />but are not limited to, client failures to appear, preliminary appointments in cases in which no <br />charges are filed, withdrawals or transfers for any reason, or limited appearances for a specific <br />purpose. <br />J. Public Defense Attorney: a licensed attorney who is employed or contracted to represent <br />indigent defendants. "Public Defense Attorney" also refers to a licensed attorney who is list- <br />appointed to represent indigent defendants on a case-by-ca.se basis. <br />K. Weighted Credit: one weighted credit represents a type of case which, on average, requires six <br />hours of attorney time. <br />4. Misdemeanor Caseload Limits <br />As provided in the Washington Supreme Court Standards for Indigent Defense, the caseload of a <br />full-time public defense attorney should not exceed 300 misdemeanor weighted credits per year, <br />which is equivalent to the time spent on 400 average misdemeanor cases per year. The caseload of <br />a full-time Rule 9 intern who has not graduated from law school may not exceed 75 misdemeanor <br />weighted credits per year. <br />5. General Considerations <br />A. Caseload limits reflect the maximum caseloads for fully supported full-time defense attorneys <br />for cases of average complexity and effort. <br />OPD Model Public Defense Misdemeanor Cose Weighting Policy -2019