
County Sheriff Keith Clark says he isn’t renewing a courthouse security contract because the state’s offer for fiscal year 2017 doesn’t cover his costs. Clark agreed to a two-month extension covering July and August, and state officials say they are seeking security providers who are interested in taking over after that.
โWhile we are disappointed that the two sides could not come to terms, we respect the sheriff’s business decision,โ said Matt Riven, chief of finance and administration for the Vermont Court Administrator’s Office. โWe have always had a good relationship with the sheriff.โ
Beyond the question of who will be guarding front doors and courtrooms at the Brattleboro and Newfane courthouses, the contractual dispute also highlights a debate about court security statewide. The Court Administrator’s office has asked lawmakers for more resources to protect Vermont’s courthouses, and Clark believes the situation may be getting dangerous.
โIt’s going to keep going in the wrong direction until someone gets seriously hurt in one of the courthouses,โ Clark said.
Vermont’s Judicial Branch is in charge of 25 courthouses in the state’s 14 counties. The state Court Administrator is responsible for security operations, which include screening at courthouse entrances, officers stationed in courtrooms and roving patrols.
State-employed court officers and private contractors provide supplemental security at some locations. But sheriff’s deputies make up the vast majority of Vermont’s courthouse-security workforce.
No matter their affiliation, officials say court security officers are fairly busy. In addition to managing courtrooms and screening for weapons and other contraband, officers reported 174 โsecurity operational incidentsโ at Vermont courthouses in calendar year 2015, according to the state Court Administrator’s Office.
Those incidents included two stabbings, five assaults, five bomb threats, 21 disorderly conduct complaints and two escapes. Also, โthe number of threats against judicial officers, court staff and stakeholders continues to increase,โ the court administrator says.
Sheriff’s departments are not statutorily mandated to provide court security in Vermont, but they do so on a contractual basis. And Clark said he’s been unhappy for some time with the state’s security contract, which he said totaled $250,914 last fiscal year.
โOver two years ago, I told the state Court Administrator’s Office that I was subsidizing more and more for court security, and it was getting unsustainable,โ Clark said.

Clark said the state’s security contract doesn’t take into account his department’s costs for benefits and equipment. Lately, he said, the contract doesn’t even cover all of the manpower needed at the county’s courthouses.
Vermont sheriff’s departments rely on contracts to fund budgets. Clark said his decision to end the state security contract โ like his recent decision to pull out of a Putney patrol contract โ reflects the need to run his department like a business.
โAll I’m asking for is to cover my costs,โ Clark said. โWe’re looking at all of our contracts.โ
Clark calculates that he needs a contractual increase of 10 percent to 12 percent in fiscal 2017 in order to break even on courthouse security. โI’ve given them a rate. I think it’s a fair rate,โ he said. โIf they can do better, good for them.โ
Riven said the state can’t grant Clark’s request.
โThe judiciary offered all sheriffs a 3.5 (percent) rate increase for fiscal year 2017, which in fact was slightly above the legislative funding provided for a 3 percent rate increase,โ Riven said. โThe Windham County Sheriff counter-offered with an amount that was significantly higher and beyond the Judiciaryโs ability to absorb in its budget.โ
So, while the Windham County sheriff will continue to transport prisoners to and from court under a separate agreement with the state, the Court Administrator’s Office has issued a request for proposals for someone else to handle courthouse security.
Riven said he could not discuss the selection process, as โwe have not come to terms with a vendorโ yet. He also said he couldn’t speculate on what future security setups might look like, and he could not say whether a private security contractor would be able to carry weapons in the county’s courthouses.
โAcross the state, we have a variety of models, with the sheriffโs deputies being armed, but our Judiciary state employee court officers are unarmed,โ Riven said. โGiven the ongoing (request for proposal) process in Windham, we are not in a position to describe how the future security will look in that regard.โ
The future of court security across the state is unclear. In late January, Vermont Court Administrator Patricia Gabel issued a report calling for an additional $1.8 million allocated over the next two years to boost court officer coverage.
Gabel’s report notes that a 2014 assessment by the National Center for State Courts found that, for Vermont to achieve โbest practicesโ security standards, it would need 155 full-time equivalent court officers. The state had just 64 such officers earlier this year.

In addition to the national organization’s conclusions, local assessments of each county’s courthouse security unanimously concluded that โcourt security operations and infrastructure suffer from significant deficiencies and needs,โ Gabel’s report says.
The court administrator’s report asked the Legislature for an additional $936,000 for court security staffing in fiscal 2017 and proposed another $884,000 boost in fiscal 2018. That would allow the court officer workforce to expand by 35, officials estimated.
โThe Judiciary strongly urges the Legislature to provide annual funding for reasonable cost increases for the sheriffs’ contracts,โ the report says. โAbsent such increases, it is unlikely that the sheriffs will be able or willing to recruit additional deputies to meet these expanded coverage needs.โ
The Legislature allocated an extra $615,000 in fiscal 2017 for court security infrastructure improvements โ in other words, physical changes like cameras, alarms and ballistic protection. Riven called that a โsignificant down paymentโ toward the court system’s capital budget needs, which exceed $2 million.
But there was no increased appropriation for court officers. That leads directly to the Windham County contract debate, and Riven wondered whether there could be ripple effects in other parts of the state.
โThe Windham situation raises a larger issue as to whether the Legislature will fund future rate increases for sheriffsโ security contracts at a level that will be acceptable to the sheriffs in other counties,โ Riven said.
Sen. Jeanette White, D-Windham and a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said she was not familiar with the details of the Windham County security contract. โBut I do believe that the state has underfunded security at the courthouses,โ White said, adding that โwe need to do better.โ
Sen. Becca Balint, D-Windham, said courthouse security expenditures were discussed at some length in the Senate Institutions Committee.
โPart of the issue of funding for courthouses around the state is complicated by the fact that some courthouses are not strictly state facilities,โ Balint said. โAnd there has not been a straightforward protocol for us to follow as to how the multi-jurisdiction courthouses are paid for both in terms of security and repairs and upkeep.โ
