My wife works benifits for a large company. Last night she asked me how much I got paid when I had jury duty a few months ago because her company pays you for the time you’re on jury duty. However, they can take out of your paycheck if you get paid for more then lunch, gas, and parking.
So, how much do you get paid in different places? I got $15 a day, plus and extra $5 for staying after 5pm.
I get $15 and that barely covers parking at the nearest garage.
Also, my company doesn’t pay it, so I need to use a vacation day, too. Next time I get jury duty, I’m thinking about calling in sick. I’m struggling with the moral implications of this.
Either way, you can consider that I’m out a few hunge by going to jury duty.
I think it was $25.00, perhaps $30.00.
I parked on a meter and didn’t get a ticket; the county would supposedly pay for it if I had.
Now I have to declare that on my income tax, and can’t remember how much it was. :smack:
In Kentucky it’s $12.50 a day, and has been for at least the last 20 years. I don’t know about before that. Where I work, you get paid the same as if you were here, so it’s like a big fat free 12 bucks for your trouble. Whee!
I don’t know how much one gets paid around here by the state/county, but at my last job, if you had jury duty, you got paid the whole day at your normal rate, and it didn’t use vacation or sick days. They were great about things like that. Hell, if you were a volunteer emergency service member (firefighter or EMT,) you could leave your job to go on a call and the time you spent on the call you’d get paid for and again, it wouldn’t use sick or vacation time.
$40/day + $8/parking max + .445/mile. All this has to be turned over to my employer because they pay me my regular salary while I’m doing my civic duty.
I get full pay, because I work for a government agency that continues to pay me while I’m on jury duty, including all benefits and overtime. For folks whose employers don’t pay, they will get paid a rate which I don’t remember off the top of my head, but it’s reasonable daily blue collar pay.
The problems arise for those in higher income brackets, or the self-employed. The latter group, however, can often apply to be excused based on potential harm to their business if there is going to be a long trial.