OPINION
Plaintiffs, twenty-seven black residents of the City of Richmond, California, filed these civil rights actions 1 in May, 1979, alleging that Richmond police officers were routinely beating and harassing black Richmond residents and then filing groundless charges, usually resisting arrest or interfering with an officer, against the victims of the beatings; they sought damages and broad injunctive relief. 2 In an effort to settle these cases, the Court suggested that the Community Relations Service of the Department of Justice assist the parties in their efforts to come to an agreement. Over the next eleven months, mediators Edward Howden and Frederick Gray and the parties had twenty-four formal meetings. Proposals for reform and modifications of Richmond police practices and procedures, to be embodied in final consent decrees, were drafted, rejected, revised, and then discussed again. During this time counsel, in addition to their efforts to achieve settlement, were forced simultaneously to prepare their cases for trial, because despite conscientious and well-intentioned efforts on the part of attorneys for both plaintiffs and defendants, settlement was far from assured. In August, 1981, however; the parties were able to reach final agreement on the terms of the decrees, and on September 18,1981, the Court approved the consent decrees.
Counsel for plaintiffs are now before this Court seeking attorneys’ fees for their efforts in these cases. The Court has held that plaintiffs were the “prevailing party” within the meaning of the Civil Rights Attorney’s Fees Awards Act of 1976, 42 U.S.C. § 1988, having achieved in these consent decrees a substantial part of the relief sought when the cases were filed,
see Maher v. Gagne,
In determining the amount of attorneys’ fees to award to a prevailing party under § 1988, courts in the Ninth Circuit have, following the approach taken by the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit in
Lindy Bros. Builders, Inc. v. American Radiator & Standard Sanitary Corp.,
Plaintiffs’ three attorneys in this case, Messrs. Oliver Jones, John Scott, and Rufus Cole, claim a combined total of 3800.65 3 hours: 2104.35 for Jones, 1581.10 for Scott, and 115.20 for Cole. Although these hours are for the most part reasonable, the Court has found it necessary to exclude certain hours.
First, on many occasions phone calls between Messrs. Jones and Scott were recorded as having continued for different periods of time on each attorney’s time sheets, or in some instances were never recorded at all. When this occurred, the Court reduced the hours for the call to the lower of the two time periods recorded; or, where the call was not recorded by one attorney, to zero. On this basis, 15.2 hours were deducted from Mr. Jones’ hours, 20.6 hours were deducted from Mr. Scott’s hours, and .6 hours were deducted, from Mr. Cole’s hours.
Second, because the consent decrees in these cases reserved the issue of attorneys’ fees relating only to the nonmonetary portions of the decrees, see ¶ 15(c) of the Evans and White decree, and ¶ 8 of the Royal decree, the Court has deducted from the requested hours 8.9 hours spent by Mr. Jones and 5.6 hours spent by Mr. Scott on the damage claims of individual plaintiffs, e.g. time spent reviewing medical evidence and interviewing potential expert medical witnesses. Hours spent pursuing individual damage awards, i.e., the monetary portion of relief, pursuant to the arbitration procedure set out in the September 8,1981, stipulation re monetary claims entered into between the parties, may, where appropriate, be compensated at a later date; they are not compensable here.
Third, both Messrs. Jones and Scott have included in their hours time spent pursuing attorneys’ fees in this ease. While the law is clear that an attorney is entitled to compensation for time reasonably spent in pursuit of his fee under 42 U.S.C. § 1988,
Manhart, supra,
Finally, although the Court considers the large majority of the " hours claimed by plaintiffs’ attorneys to have been reasonably expended, both Messrs. Jones and Scott’s time sheets reveal certain hours to have been expended unreasonably for purposes of an award of attorneys’ fees under § 1988. Mr. Scott included much of his travel time between San Francisco and Richmond, as well as time spent discussing business over lunch, time which, common *132 experience instructs, is never spent in an entirely efficient manner. Mr. Jones also includes certain unnecessary hours in his time sheets, including a luncheon meeting, some travel time, and certain general meetings of the NAACP which appear to have been spent reporting on, rather than working on, this litigation. Accordingly, the Court has deducted 21.75 hours from Mr. Scott’s total claimed hours, leaving, when combined with other reductions, a total of 1511.75 compensable hours; 8.9 hours from Mr. Jones’ total claimed hours, leaving a total of 2043 compensable hours; and .6 hours from Mr. Cole’s claimed hours, leaving a total of 114.6 compensable hours.
The next step in determining the “lodestar” under
Lindy
is to set a reasonable hourly rate for each of plaintiffs’ attorneys! The hourly rate to be awarded in cases under § 1988 should be that which private counsel of similar experience, reputation, and skill can . command in cases of similar complexity in the community.
4
Dennis, supra,
Thus, multiplying each attorney’s hours by the hourly rate at which they will be compensated, Mr. Scott’s lodestar figure is $173,851.25; Mr. Jones’ is $245,160; and Mr. Cole’s is $13,680. These lodestar figures represent base amounts, and do not take into account the extraordinary nature of the relief achieved in these cases, the contingent character of the fee award, or many of the other factors which Kerr instructs the district court to consider in reaching a final fee award. 5 The Court has considered the Kerr factors, 6 however, and *133 for the reasons set forth below, finds that the application of a positive multiplier is appropriate in this case. 7
As noted by the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit in
Lindy,
one extremely important factor which a court must consider in determining an award of attorneys’ fees is the contingent nature of success; for every successful civil rights action brought, several more may be lost, and in these no fee will be received.
Lindy, supra,
When the first of these cases was filed in 1979, the chances of obtaining sweeping injunctive relief of the kind contained in the consent decrees ultimately agreed to must have appeared to be remote. The Supreme Court’s decision in
Rizzo v. Goode,
*134 Another factor which militates strongly in favor of awarding plaintiffs’ attorneys a multiplier for their efforts in these cases is the extent of the relief they obtained in the consent decrees. In spite of the stringent requirements imposed in Rizzo for obtaining injunctive relief against municipal police department practices, the consent decrees achieved in these cases require significant changes in Richmond Police Department procedures. The decrees require the Department, among other things, to revise: its policies on the use of deadly and nondeadly force; its internal affairs procedures; its training programs and requirements for training rookie police officers, and for providing psychological counseling to all officers; and its personnel evaluation procedures. The monitoring provisions of the decrees, which require the Department to permit an independent monitor to inspect the Department’s internal affairs and citizen complaint files, and to discuss individual cases with Department officials or with the City Attorney, are in and of themselves significant, as the declarations of experts David Rudovsky, Michael Avery, and Robert Gnaizda, offered in support of plaintiffs’ motion for attorneys’ fees, attest. Finally, the affirmative action program contained in the Royal decree sets high hiring and promotion goals for minorities in the Department. From January 1, 1981, onward, the Department must, under the terms of the decree, make every effort to ensure that 66 percent of the individuals appointed as police officers shall be minorities, and that 50 percent of the appointments to supervisory positions shall be minority police officers.. The results obtained by these decrees thus represent a significant achievement, and support the application of a multiplier to plaintiffs’ fee award.
Although the contingent nature of the plaintiffs’ cases and the extent of the success achieved are the factors that most strongly persuade this Court to increase plaintiffs’ award of attorneys’ fees through the application of a multiplier, several of the remaining Kerr factors also are relevant, if somewhat less significant. The legal questions involved in these cases were not complex, but, as noted earlier, the extent of the proof needed to obtain injunctive relief after the Supreme Court’s decision in Rizzo was very great. These were not “undesirable” cases in the political sense of the word. Nevertheless, as the declarations of Amitai Schwartz, staff counsel of the Northern California Branch of the American Civil Liberties Union, and Michael Avery, adjunct professor of law at Northeastern University Law School, attest, it is difficult to find counsel willing to undertake large-scale police abuse cases such as these, largely due to the great expenditure of time necessary to prosecute such cases, and the rather slim possibility of success. Finally, two-and-a-half years passed between the filing of the initial complaints in these cases and settlement. During that period, both Messrs. Jones and Scott devoted a large portion of their time to this litigation, thus limiting their capacity to take on other, paying work. 10
Thus, for all of the foregoing reasons, a multiplier of 1.5 will be applied to plaintiffs’ lodestar attorneys’ fees award figures to determine the final fee awards. Mr. Scott is, therefore, awarded $260,776.87 in attorney’s fees; Mr. Jones is awarded $367,-740 in attorney’s fees; and Mr. Cole is awarded $20,520 in attorney’s fees. Plaintiffs’ attorneys are also awarded costs of $5,893, because expenses reasonably incurred incident to litigation are payable by defendant under 42 U.S.C. § 1988,
Thornberry, supra,
Notwithstanding defendants’ unsupported assertions to the contrary, it is settled that time spent litigating the issue
*135
of attorneys’ fees is compensable under 42 U.S.C. § 1988.
Manhart, supra,
Under a fee arrangement between plaintiffs’ counsel and the Altshuler and Berzon firm, plaintiffs’ counsel agreed to compensate Mr. Berzon at the rate of $125 per hour, and to compensate Ms. Grillo and Mr. M. Rubin at the rate of $100 per hour. Although special counsel contend that they customarily receive higher hourly fees than this, and agreed to these rates only due to the public interest nature of the cases, these rates appear to the Court to be reasonable under the circumstances, when considered in light of the relevant Kerr factors. Special counsel’s fee in this case was not, unlike plaintiffs’ counsel’s, contingent; Altshuler & Berzon was guaranteed payment from the start. As noted earlier, the legal issues involved in preparing the motion for attorneys’ fees were not difficult, but had all previously been decided by higher courts. Special counsel certainly performed with skill in preparing and arguing the. motion, and obtained a positive result. It should be noted, however, that the Court’s award to plaintiffs’ counsel is far less than the $1.2 million requested. No particularly stringent time limits were imposed by the Court in its consideration of the motion, nor were these “undesirable” cases, or ones which required special counsel to forego other employment. Under these circumstances, the Court awards special counsel attorneys’ fees at the following rates: Mr. Berzon — $125 per hour; Ms. Grillo and Mr. M. Rubin— $100 per hour; Ms. Johnson and Mr. J. Rubin — $30 per hour; and Mr. Kaplan — $25 per hour. Special counsel have not requested that the Court apply a multiplier, and the Court does not find the use of one appropriate. Thus, based on special counsel’s hours and rates, as determined by the Court, the firm of Altshuler & Berzon is awarded attorneys’ fees in the sum of $37,-254.50.
Special counsel have also requested that they be awarded costs in the amount of $2,067.19. As itemized by special counsel, this figure includes $1,940.65 for photocopying costs. This item, for a single motion, is excessive. Therefore, the Court reduces it by $1,200. The remaining cost items appear to be reasonable. Special counsel are awarded costs in the sum of $867.65.
Accordingly, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that:
*136 1. Plaintiffs’ counsel are awarded attorneys’ fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988 in the following amounts: Mr. Oliver Jones— $367,740; Mr. John Scott — $260,776.87; and Mr. Rufus Cole — $20,520.
2. Plaintiffs’ counsel are awarded costs in the amount of $5,893.
3. The firm of Altshuler & Berzon, special counsel for plaintiffs’, are awarded attorneys’ fees in the amount of $37,254.50.
4. Altshuler & Berzon are awarded costs in the amount of $867.65.
Notes
. Three separate actions were filed against the City of Richmond: White v. City of Richmond, No. C-79-1184 WHO; Royal v. City of Richmond, No. C-80-0433 WHO; and Evans v. City of Richmond, No. C-80-4022 WHO; the claims of the twenty-seven individual plaintiffs were consolidated for discovery (but not for trial) on April 24, 1981. Consent decrees were achieved in all three cases, and the present motion for attorneys’ fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988 relates to work done on all three cases.
. The complaint in White v. City of Richmond sought an order requiring defendants to:
“adopt an affirmative program of compliance with the provisions of the Federal Civil Rights Acts in order to insure that in the future all complaints of police brutality are investigated by an independent monitor, to be appointed by the court, to insure that future complaints of police misconduct are thoroughly and properly investigated, and that appropriate disciplinary actions is imposed when complaints are substantiated.”
Complaint at 20.
. Although plaintiffs’ memorandum in support of the motion for attorneys’ fees states that plaintiffs are seeking compensation for 3797.15 hours (memorandum at 15), the time sheets provided in support of the motion disclose that the correct number of hours for which fees are being sought is 3800.65.
. Mr. Jones received his juris doctor degree from the School of Law (Boalt Hall) at the University of California at Berkeley in 1973, and received a masters degree in City Planning from the University of California at Berkeley in 1975. He has served as counsel for the Western Division of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) since 1976.
Mr. Scott graduated from Golden Gate University School of Law in 1976, and has been a partner in the firm of Cole & Scott since 1978, specializing in civil rights litigation in the federal courts.
Mr. Cole received his juris doctor degree from the University of Michigan School of Law in 1973. He has been a partner in the firm of Scott & Cole since 1978.
. The twelve factors to be considered under
Kerr
are: (1) the time and labor required; (2) the novelty and difficulty of the questions; (3) the skill requisite to perform the legal service properly; (4) the preclusion of other employment by the attorney due
to
acceptance of the case; (5) the customary fee; (6) whether the fee is fixed or contingent; (7) time limitations imposed by the client or the circumstances; (8) the amount involved and the results obtained; (9) the experience, reputation, and ability of the attorneys; (10) the “undesirability” of the case; (11) the nature and length of the professional relationship with the client; and (12) awards in similar cases.
Kerr v. Screen Extras Guild, Inc.,
. As this Court recognized in
In re Capital Underwriters Securities Litigation,
. Defendants have argued that 42 U.S.C. § 1988 does not provide for the application of a multiplier in civil rights cases.
Manhart v. City of Los Angeles,
. As the district court for the Northern District of Indiana noted in
Chrapliwy v. Uniroyal, Inc.,
“The congressional intent in allowing attorney’s fees was, in part, to encourage individuals injured by discrimination to seek judicial review and to deter discrimination. Congress recognized, however, that this system would work only if the fee provided an incentive for competent lawyers to undertake such employment and to receive adequate compensation for the time they expend.”
. The settlement in this case was brought about, in part, through the diligent and skillful efforts of mediators Edward Howden and Richard Gray of the Community Relations Service of the Justice Department, who over the course of several months managed to temper the parties’ positions to a point at which final agreement was possible. Defendants, however, now assert that plaintiffs’ award of attorneys’ fees should be reduced because the mediators played such a significant role in forging these consent decrees. Such a reduction is necessary, they argue, because otherwise no defendant will ever agree to mediation. This argument is, of course, specious: a party to litigation settles a case because he feels settlement will be in his best interests; the vehicle by which that settlement is achieved is irrelevant to the ultimate, usually economic decision of whether to settle.
Plaintiffs, on the other hand, seems to suggest that their fee should be increased at least in part because of their “trailblazing” use of mediation in reaching settlement in these cases. As noted above, the use of mediation is irrelevant to the decision as to whether a settlement proposal reached by any means should be accepted. To consider the role played by a mediator in determining an award of attorneys’ fees would serve only to discourage the use of mediation, and the Court, wishing to encourage me *134 diation in cases such as these that are particularly well-suited to a negotiated settlement, declines to consider the fact that mediation was used in settling the cases in determining the fee award.
. See declaration of John Scott in support of plaintiffs’ motion for attorneys’ fées and costs at 5.
