Delco re:View Winter 2021/22

Page 9

www.DelcoBar.org

Successfully Retained in 2021! The Court of Common Pleas of Delaware County!

Retention Election

Qualifications

All judges except those of the magisterial districts face retention elections following their initial term. After a judge has won an initial election, subsequent terms are attained through retention elections. In retention elections, judges do not compete against another candidate, but voters are given a “yes” or “no” choice whether to keep the justice in office for another term. If the candidate receives more yes votes than no votes, he or she is successfully retained. If not, the candidate is not retained, and there will be a vacancy in that court upon the expiration of that term. This applies to all judges except magisterial district judges, who are always elected in partisan elections.

To serve on an appellate or general jurisdiction court, a judge must: have state residence for at least one year; be a district resident for at least one year (for Common Pleas judges); be a member of the state bar; and be under the age of 75. While retirement at 75 is mandatory, judges may apply for senior judge status. Senior judges may serve as such until the last day of the calendar year in which they turn 78.

Selection Method Judges of the Court of Common Pleas are elected to 10-year terms in elections. Candidates may cross-file with both political parties for the partisan primaries, which are followed by general elections where the primary winners from each party compete. Judges must run in yes-no retention elections if they wish to continue serving after their first term. A separate part of the ballot is designated for these elections, and judges’ names appear without respect to party affiliation.

Successfully Retained in 2021 for the Court of Common Pleas of Delaware County! Hon. Spiros E. Angelos Hon. John P. Capuzzi, Sr. Hon. Kathrynann W. Durham Hon. G. Michael Green Hon. Kevin F. Kelly Joseph T. Mattson, Esquire, and Lyn B. Schoenfeld, Esquire Co-Chairs of the Judicial Retention Committee •

The president judge of each Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas is chosen by either peer vote or seniority, depending on the size of the court. Statewide, all courts composed of more than seven individuals must select their chief judge by peer vote. Those with seven or fewer members select their chief by seniority.

Winter 2021/22

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SALUTE to Delco Hometown Heroes & Pioneers, both on the field & off!

6min
pages 34-36

The Inn is Golden

2min
page 33

“We’ll take ‘Best Town’ for $500, Bill!”

2min
page 32

“New Custodians of the Dream!”

1min
page 30

A New Chapter... May you be proud of the work you have done, the person you are, and the difference you have made

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page 28

Cheers to a Happy & Healthy New Year

2min
page 29

Dr. Sandra Weiss: 45 Years in the Classroom

2min
page 31

Before Watergate, there was Media

2min
page 26

Phoenix Training - Addiction and Connection to Treatment

2min
page 27

LASP... Coordinating Efforts and Meeting Community Needs in the Face of Disaster

4min
pages 24-25

Live & In-Person at the 48th Bench Bar Conference!

4min
pages 22-23

Where Dedication to the Practice of Family Law is Tradition!

4min
pages 20-21

Greatness... We have you covered

3min
page 11

Nominating Committee Report – For The Year 2022

1min
page 6

Service, Sacrifice & Appreciation

8min
pages 18-19

DCBA 150th Anniversary

2min
page 8

Number 86 in 2021

2min
page 5

“Advancing the Rule of Law, Now!” Law Day 2021

5min
pages 14-15

Successfully Retained in 2021! The Court of Common Pleas of Delaware County!

2min
page 9

Four Trout Now Swim at 3rd & Jackson Streets in Media!

2min
page 4
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