Picture this: You open your mailbox, and sandwiched between the bills and flyers is a postcard addressed to you. Cue the warm and fuzzy feeling of getting snail mail. Fewer things make that nostalgia fade faster than discovering the postcard is actually a jury duty summons. Each year, some 11 million Americans report for in-person for jury duty. The majority will only spend a few days in court, or even less if they’re dismissed during voir dire. But the prospect of missing any amount of work can be a major stressor, particularly if their employer doesn’t offer paid jury duty leave. In fact, of the 9.2% of Americans who admit to lying to get out of jury duty, half said they did so to avoid financial inconvenience, while one-fifth fibbed because they feared consequences from their employer, a 2023 Bar Prep Hero survey found. While 57% of private sector workers reported having access to paid jury duty leave in 2018, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, it’s unclear how many employers currently provide paid jury duty leave beyond what’s required of the jurisdictions in which they operate. The legal landscape around jury duty leave is complex. For more on what HR needs to know about jury duty compliance, keep reading here.—PM |