Las Vegas Review-Journal

‘Bounty Hunter’ co-star Beth Chapman dies Frontier adds Reno flights RJ brings back lawyers’ judge survey

New poll asks about 89 jurists, high court justices

- By Rachel Crosby Las Vegas Review-journal

The Las Vegas Reviewjour­nal is resurrecti­ng its Judicial Performanc­e Evaluation, last conducted in 2013.

Launched Tuesday, the anonymous survey marks the 13th time since 1992 that the Review-journal has invited Clark County lawyers to evaluate judges. This year’s survey looks at 89 judges, including Nevada Supreme Court justices. Newly appointed judges were excluded.

The survey’s results — which will be published this fall — stand to provide voters with a wealth of informatio­n about judges, who can be tough to assess.

Review-journal Executive Editor Glenn Cook said the survey was revived because all of the county’s District Court and Family Court races will be on the ballot in 2020.

“Voters need all the informatio­n they can get on

judicial races,” Cook said. “Deciding dozens of judgeships is a daunting challenge for even the most dedicated voter. Our survey has a strong track record of rating judicial performanc­e — especially when it comes to identifyin­g poor judges.”

Confidenti­al personal identifica­tion numbers and passwords for the online survey have been mailed to more than 5,000 lawyers across the valley. The Review-journal will neither know nor disclose the identities of participan­ts, who have until

Aug. 12 to complete their evaluation­s.

Cook said the fall publicatio­n of results is intended to give attorneys adequate time before the candidate filing period to decide whether they want to challenge specific judges.

Rebecca Gill, a UNLV professor who is directing the project, said the survey does not include political or issue-related questions. Instead, it asks lawyers who have case-related experience with judges about those judges’ ability to manage the courtroom or make reasonable decisions about the law, weighing those answers against judicial performanc­e standards.

“This is good for judges, too,” Gill said, “because they can look at this informatio­n and say, ‘Wow, there is something about the way I communicat­e in the courtroom that doesn’t seem to be landing. This is something I need to be focusing on.’”

She noted that the survey questions were reworded this year in an effort to combat bias, specifical­ly for female judges or judges of color. For instance, they ask about a judge’s actions instead of his or her personalit­y characteri­stics to avoid stereotypi­cal answers.

“I think we’re taking a really scientific and careful approach this time to make sure that we can provide one more piece of informatio­n to the voters as they’re making their decision,” Gill said.

The Review-journal is partnering with the Women’s Research Institute of Nevada, which Gill heads, and the UNLV Cannon Survey Center to process the results.

Questions about survey procedures or methods may be directed to project manager Nancy Downey of Downey Research Consultant­s at nancy@downeyrese­arch.com.

Contact Rachel Crosby at rcrosby@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-477-3801. Follow @rachelacro­sby on Twitter.

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