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Resources,
Budget and Finance
What
This Core Competency Is and Why It Is Important
Curriculum
Guidelines
Court
Purposes and Vision
Fundamentals Leadership
Teams and Interpersonal Effectiveness Problem
Diagnosis and Change Technology
Budget
Controls and Performance Monitoring
The
allocation, acquisition, and management of the court’s budget impacts
every court operation and, arguably, determines how well, and even
whether, courts achieve their mission.
Allocating,
acquiring, and managing financial resources are core court management
functions carried out by court leaders, both judicial and administrative,
and other court staff in concert with executive and legislative branch
leaders and their staffs. Effective
court performance requires that court leaders -- the court executive
leadership team -- have the ability:
-
To
set priorities and to manage competing demands on existing court
resources in ways that deliver justice and service and build
credibility, both internally and externally;
-
To
link resource allocations and requests to fundamental court purposes;
-
To
communicate court purposes, objectives, and budget needs clearly and
compellingly; and
-
To
ensure judicial independence and essential court functions while
constructively negotiating with executive and legislative leaders and
staff.
Resources
are rarely sufficient to fund everything of value that courts or any other
organization might do. Because
spending in one area necessarily precludes expenditure in others,
effective court performance requires skillful allocation of available
resources. Like other
organizations, both public and private, courts can cut some expenditures
and reallocate those funds to their top performance goals.
When
resource allocation and resource acquisition are skillful, courts preserve
their independence, ensure their accountability, both internally and
externally, improve their performance, and build and maintain public trust
and confidence. Court
executive leadership teams that effectively allocate existing resources
enhance the court’s reputation and persuasiveness with funding
authorities.
Resource
allocation and resource acquisition are inextricably linked.
The practical implications of this linkage include:
-
Finance
and budget must command the court manager’s attention throughout the
year, not just when the court budget is being prepared or presented;
-
Effective
budget planning and management require consideration of: available
resources and funding sources; the goals to be advanced by court
expenditures; and the people, work or activity to be funded;
-
Effective
budgeting and financial management mandate continuous change in what a
court does and how it does it, given the court’s purposes,
priorities, and performance. Court
leaders must adjust court spending and programs to respond to
court-determined priorities and external pressures, including external
funding authorities, and available funding and revenue sources;
-
Change
is incremental. To manage
change rather than to be managed by change and to improve court
performance over time, the court executive leadership team must have
vision, will, strategy, a multi-year budget plan, and long-term
commitment.
The
ability to be persuasive when presenting court needs and budgets requires
leadership and interpersonal skill, but cannot be effective unless
required and technically sound supporting data has been assembled. Proposed budgets should take into account the courts
executive and legislative branch counterparts as well as court purposes
and priorities.
Technical
budget and finance fundamentals that support competent court leaders
include: cost accounting; cost benefit analysis; work measurement and
weighted caseload analysis; problem diagnosis; resource and performance
auditing; computer software for planning, analyzing spending, modeling
alternatives, accounting, and reporting.
These tools support, but are not
the core of the Resources, Budget, and Financial Core Competency.
Rather, this core competency requires knowledge, skill, and ability
in linking resource allocation and acquisition decisions to fundamental
court purposes, and leading and adjusting the way courts carry out their
work and deliver justice.
View
the Summary of Resources, Budget and Finance Curriculum Guidelines or click on each of the
six Curriculum Guidelines to see the
associated Knowledge, Skills and Abilities:
Court
Purposes and Vision
Fundamentals Leadership
Teams and Interpersonal Effectiveness Problem
Diagnosis and Change Technology
Budget
Controls and Performance Monitoring
Resources,
Budget and Finance MSWord version for printing.
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