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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Boitano
DATE TYPED 2/9/05
HB
SHORT TITLE Expand Jury Service Exemption
SB 288
ANALYST Wilson
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation Contained Estimated Additional Impact Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
FY05
FY06
See Narrative
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Administrative Office of the Courts (AGO)
Attorney General’s Office (AGO)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 288 adds three excusals from jury service to the existing statute when the excusal is
requested and properly documented. The excusals are:
Expectant mothers,
Parent or guardian who is not employed full-time and has custody of a child under six
years of age and
Caregiver for elderly or disabled persons who is scheduled or expected to provide care at
the time of required jury service.
Significant Issues
The AOC provided the following:
1. The current jury statute allows courts to excuse any person who has a financial or health-
care hardship without creating specific groups who have an automatic excusal. Our trial
pg_0002
Senate Bill 288 -- Page 2
system is based on a jury of one’s peers. Automatic excusals limit the diversity of the
jury based on a group of persons, not the person’s actual ability to serve.
2. An excusal of a parent or guardian who does not work full-time and has custody of a
child under six may be too broad. As drafted, any stay-at-home parent of a child under
six could be excused, even if care is readily available.
3. Excusals for a caregiver of the elderly or disabled who is scheduled or expected to pro-
vide care may also be too broad. As drafted, any healthcare employee who works with
the elderly or disabled could be excused from jury service.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
Automatic excusals may increase the total number of jury summonses that must be executed and
could increase the average cost per juror as fewer jurors summoned actually serve.
There will be a minimal administrative cost for statewide update, distribution, and documenta-
tion of statutory changes. This change to the jury statute has the potential to increase the work-
load of courts, thus requiring additional resources to handle the increase.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
The courts will have a smaller percentage of jury summonses successfully executed and more
will need to be sent.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
Conflicts with exemption provisions in SB 64, Create Lengthy Trial Fund.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
The AGO states the following:
The bill will reduce the total number of people available for local jury pools. Many dis-
tricts have low turnout rates for jury pools. By further reducing the number of available
jurors even, for such justifiable reasons, it may place an added burden on the remainder
of the pool.
The process currently gives discretion to local judges to excuse prospective jurors and to
examine them. In reality, jurors are often excused for the reasons stated in this bill.
DW/yr