Christy N. Vitola, Governor Meyer’s nominee for Commissioner of Family Court, outlined her background and described how she manages a busy family-court calendar during a Senate Executive Committee confirmation hearing.
Vitola said she has worked in the Family Division of the Department of Justice and has handled a high volume of cases, often involving pro se parties. "I have about 15 minutes to do that per case," she told the committee when describing pre-hearing efforts to narrow issues and focus litigants on what is relevant for that day's proceeding. She estimated the court handled roughly "about 16,000" petitions in a recent year.
Members pressed Vitola on applying the Melson formula and deciding what is in the "best interest of the child" when parents disagree. Vitola said family-court commissioners follow statutory rules and formulas and that she encourages parties to resolve matters between themselves when appropriate, but ultimately "the best interest is what the law says the outcome should be." She described practical steps—clarifying pay schedules, filing motions for reargument when errors occur, and working with administration to correct mathematical mistakes—to reduce follow-up disputes.
Vitola emphasized civility, efficiency and empathy, and described frequent work with pro se litigants and child-support matters, PFA petitions, juvenile delinquency and divorce cases. Committee members thanked her for her time; the transcript does not record a confirmation vote in this session.