An infusion of $20 million has jump-started the state’s plans to replace its aging court management system, known as “CourtConnect,” which has been in use since its inception in 2001 but is scheduled to be replaced over the next three years by a new system to be designed from the ground up that will be wholly owned by the state.
An infusion of $20 million has jump-started the state’s plans to replace its aging court management system, known as “CourtConnect,” which has been in use since its inception in 2001 but is scheduled to be replaced over the next three years by a new system to be designed from the ground up that will be wholly owned by the state.