Rule 45. COURT SECURITY AND EMERGENCY OPERATIONS · Last amended 2018 · Last verified July 17, 2026
In one sentenceRule 45 requires every judicial circuit to maintain both a confidential courthouse security plan, developed by the sheriff in consultation with the chief judge, and an emergency operations plan covering staff contacts, relocation sites, essential functions, and vital-record protection, while authorizing the chief judge to issue a time-limited emergency order suspending deadlines during an actual crisis.
Full Text of Rule 45
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Courts within a judicial circuit shall prepare for emergencies by developing both a security plan to address the safety of the public and employees and a judicial emergency operations plan to provide for an immediate response to any type of crisis and provide for continuity of operations during such crisis.
(A) Courthouse Security Plan. The Sheriff, in consultation with the Chief Judge of the Superior Court of the circuit, shall develop and implement a comprehensive plan for the security of the county courthouse and any courthouse annex. A comprehensive plan for courthouse security shall be considered a confidential matter of public security and shall not be disseminated except as in accordance with OCGA § 15-16-10(a)(10). The plan shall be reviewed and updated annually, and employees shall be educated annually on their role, if any, in said plan.
(B) Emergency Operations Plan. The Chief Judge, or his/her designee, shall develop and implement an Emergency Operations Plan for each county courthouse and/or courthouse annex in the jurisdiction. The plan shall at a minimum include:
(1)A method for collecting and maintaining contact information for all employees to be utilized during an emergency; (2) Identification of relocation sites and provisions for preparing such sites; (3) Identification of essential activities and functions to be performed; (4) Identification of employees designated to perform essential activities and method for training of said employees at least annually; (5) A person designated to provide information to the public and the press, during and immediately following an emergency; (6) Identification of vital records and equipment and provisions for their protection or back-up.
The Council of Superior Court Judges shall maintain and make available materials to assist Chief Judges in complying with this rule.
(C) Judicial Operations Emergency Order. Pursuant to OCGA § 38-3-60 et seq., upon his/her own motion or after consideration of a request from another judge or court official, the Chief Judge of the circuit experiencing an emergency or disruption in operations may issue an order authorizing relief from time deadlines imposed by statutes, rules, regulations, or court orders until the restoration of normal court operations or as specified.
The emergency order may also designate one or more facilities as temporary courthouses that shall be suitable for court business and located as near as possible to the county seat.
The order shall contain (1) the identity and position of the judge, (2) the date, time, and place executed, (3) the jurisdiction affected, (4) the nature of the emergency, (5) the period of duration, and (6) other information relevant to the suspension or restoration of court operations. The duration of a court emergency order is limited to a maximum of 30 days. The order may only be extended twice by the issuing judge for additional 30-day periods, and any extension must contain the information required in the original order.
Plain-English Summary
Rule 45 asks every judicial circuit to plan for trouble before it arrives, through two separate documents. The courthouse security plan is developed by the Sheriff in consultation with the Chief Judge, covers the physical safety of the courthouse and any annex, and is treated as confidential under OCGA § 15-16-10 (a) (10). It has to be reviewed and updated every year, with employees educated annually on their part in it.
The emergency operations plan is broader. Developed by the Chief Judge or a designee, it has to address at least six things: how to collect and maintain employee contact information, where the court would relocate, which activities and functions are essential to keep running, who is trained to perform those essential functions, who speaks to the public and press during a crisis, and how vital records and equipment are protected or backed up. The Council of Superior Court Judges maintains materials to help Chief Judges put this plan together.
Subsection (C) gives the plan teeth. When a circuit is experiencing an emergency, the Chief Judge — on his or her own motion or after a request from another judge or official — may issue an order suspending statutory, rule, or court-ordered deadlines, and may designate a temporary courthouse near the county seat. That order has to identify the judge, the time and place it was issued, the affected jurisdiction, the nature of the emergency, and how long it lasts. No single order can run longer than thirty days, though the issuing judge can extend it twice, in additional thirty-day increments, each time restating the required information.
Frequently Asked Questions
Who develops the courthouse security plan under Rule 45?
The Sheriff, in consultation with the Chief Judge of the Superior Court of the circuit.
Is the courthouse security plan available to the public?
No — it’s treated as a confidential matter of public security and isn’t disseminated except as permitted by OCGA § 15-16-10 (a) (10).
What must an emergency operations plan cover at minimum?
A method for maintaining employee contact information, identification of relocation sites, identification of essential activities and functions, designated and trained employees to perform those functions, a designated spokesperson for the public and press, and protection or backup of vital records and equipment.
How long can a judicial emergency order suspend deadlines?
A maximum of thirty days, though the issuing judge may extend it twice for additional thirty-day periods.
Can an emergency order move court proceedings to a different building?
Yes — the order may designate one or more facilities as temporary courthouses, located as near as possible to the county seat.
Amendment History
Adopted effective December 2, 2004; amended effective March 22, 2018.
Source & verification. Rule text and amendment history are
reproduced verbatim from the Uniform Superior Court Rules, published by the
Council of Superior Court Judges of Georgia. Last verified July 17, 2026.
· Official source
Also known as:USCR 45Georgia courthouse security plan rulejudicial emergency order Georgia deadlinescourt emergency operations plan requirementstemporary courthouse Georgia ruleOCGA 38-3-60 emergency order