Madam Chair, I can tell you that the accountability rests first and foremost with the judges and also with their chief justice.
I'd like to explain, too, what happens when judges are appointed. First of all, I write to them and I remind them of their new ethical obligations, their professional development obligations. I tell them about the new judges' seminar, and I tell them they should attend. They then get a letter from the director of the National Judicial Institute that provides the dates and the registration information, and an offer to work with them to develop a personal education plan.
Finally, and very importantly, that chief justice will clear that judge's calendar to attend the program, will assign a mentor, as Justice Kent mentioned, and will make sure that the judge in question is not going to take a criminal jury trial as a first assignment if he or she has never participated in that as a lawyer.
The accountability rests, as it properly should, with the chief justices and the judges themselves.