CALIFORNIA SUPREME COURT – BEGINS LIVE WEBCASTING

The Supreme Court of California will begin live webcasting of its early-May three-day oral argument calendar session in San Francisco, beginning May 3. The decision to webcast the court’s oral argument calendar sessions was announced by Chief Justice Tani G. Cantil-Sakauye in her 2016 State of the Judiciary Address to a joint session of the California Legislature in March:

…and, borrowing a page from your playbook, we now live web-stream our Judicial Council meetings. And, I’m excited to say, that soon we will live stream our oral arguments at the Supreme Court.

The webcasting of all oral arguments is a natural evolution for the broadcasting and streaming partnership with The California Channel that began in 1991. Initially it involved cases of heightened public and media interest and included the court’s annual outreach and special sessions from 2002.

The Supreme Court of California will also add real-time captioning in English and Spanish to the video and audio livestream to expand accessibility to the court’s proceedings. A companion document to the livestream will identify the justices as seated on the bench, the cases in each session, the counsel representing the parties in each case, and the issue(s) under review by the court. It will also link to the case Docket and the Briefs filed for each case.

“The court’s decision to live-stream its regular oral argument sessions is a logical progression for its outreach efforts—using technology to open the courtroom doors to students, practitioners, and the public throughout the state and the nation. It promises to create a greater understanding of the integral role of the court in our constitutional democracy, deciding matters of statewide importance and maintaining uniformity in the law,” commented Frank A. McGuire, Court Administrator and Clerk of the Supreme Court of California.

“The Chief Justice constantly reminds us all through her civic learning and civic engagement initiative that ‘It’s important that all Californians understand not only how democracy works, but how their participation in the democratic process guarantees that their voices will be heard. The future of our democracy depends on the civic engagement of its people.’”

The webcast can be accessed through website buttons posted at the time of oral argument on the California Courts website (the home page, the court’s home page and calendar page). There will be buttons that link to the live video stream and the captioning in English and Spanish.

http://newsroom.courts.ca.gov/news/supreme-court-begins-live-webcasting

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