Nearly 4,000 Oregonians Still Awaiting a Public Defender, New Catch Up Plan Outlined

When Gov. Tina Kotek fired the head of Oregon’s embattled public defense commission in April, she gave its new director until June 1 to come up with a strategy to end the state’s ongoing public defender shortage.

On Monday, Interim Executive Director Ken Sanchagrin announced just that: A 12-month-long, seven-point plan by the agency that seeks to expand contracts with lawyers and nonprofits across the state, increase voluntary caseloads for available attorneys and onboard law students who can be supervised while providing a defense for those accused of crimes.

The response marks the commission’s first attempt at addressing the shortage since Kotek overhauled its leadership two months ago. It doesn’t provide a timeline for exactly when the crisis should end, as Kotek requested in April, but Sanchagrin told reporters Monday that he estimates that counties most affected by the issue could see relief as early as mid-fall.

“We can make significant progress over the next 12 months, but I think that coming up with a date, as somebody who really lives in the data, that’s not something that is really possible at this point,” he said during a Monday media briefing. “Given the increases in filings, and then given also some of these new proposals that we’ve put out that may or may not also be impacted by some legislative decisions that are being made, that makes it extremely difficult.”

A Kotek press secretary said she is reviewing the plan and advocating for the Legislature to put funding towards additional trial lawyers to resolve the issue.

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