When I first embarked on the industry of court reporting working as a reporter, the payment was always by the page. Then I discovered that page rates could vary depending on the TAT (turnaround time), whether it be standard, expedited, daily copy, or same-day rush deliveries.
When I read inquiries about page rates today, I am always quick to point out that it is difficult to evaluate whether a page rate is sufficient unless you know the transcript FORMAT.
For some companies, the format is 28 lines per page, with wide margins of an inch all the way around, and 65 characters per line. In other companies, the format may be 21 lines per page, with a 2-inch margin on the left and a 1-inch margin on the right and 1.2 character spacing, allowing 45 characters per line. If you were paid the same page rate for each format, there would be quite a difference in how much you would actually make.
In my area, the court reporting companies do still charge the traditional page rates. I think that the page rate originates from the days of the typewriter, a typewritten page. In a way, because of the variety of transcript page formats, I wonder if the page rate is still a good measure of cost.
Fast forward to today. Gone are the typewriters from yesteryear. The advent of the CAT systems for stenotypy changed the way stenotypists produce transcripts. Reading notes on the computer using the Eclipse system sure seems more desirable than the old days of reading the paper notes and banging out the pages, one by one, with carbon paper or onion skin on a typewriter.
Would paying per audio minute be a good thing for the court reporting industry to consider for charging clients, or should it stay just the way it is with charging page rates?
I have thought long and hard about this topic for a few years now. I would love to hear what you professionals think about this, the pros and cons of page rates.