Assigned to JUDE FOR COMMITTEE ARIZONA STATE SENATE Fifty-Seventh Legislature, First Regular Session FACT SHEET FOR S.B. 1063 juror summons; election worker option Purpose Allows the jury commissioner to give a qualified juror the option to serve as a temporary election worker in the appropriate county in place of fulfilling a jury service obligation. Background Statute requires the jury commissioner or manager to summon persons for a particular juror pool by either: 1) summoning a specific number of qualified jurors, at random, for either a trial jury or grand jury panel; or 2) determining a specific number of persons to be summoned for a court location and date. In counties with multiple superior court locations, a juror must not be summoned to more than one court location on the same date and is not required to serve in more than one court location on any specific date. Summons must be delivered by personal notice to each person, written notice at the person's place of residence or by telephone or mail. A person who fails to appear in response to a notice sent by mail must be resummoned by a notice sent by mail and must not be subject to a body attachment or fine unless the juror fails to appear in response to the second summons (A.R.S. § 21-331). If a person fails to respond to a second summons, the court may issue a body attachment finding the person in contempt of the court. The person may also be fined in an amount not to exceed $500 and may be compelled to attend jury service on another date (A.R.S. § 21-223). Jury commissioner means the clerk of the superior court, except in any county having a population of more than 500,000 persons, the presiding judge of the superior court may appoint a jury commissioner. Jury manager means the person who is responsible for jury management in a justice of the peace court or a municipal court (A.R.S. § 21-101). There is no anticipated fiscal impact to the state General Fund associated with this legislation. Provisions 1. Allows the jury commissioner to give a qualified juror the option to serve as a temporary election worker in the appropriate county, instead of fulfilling a jury service obligation, during the 30-day period immediately preceding the date of the regular general election and until the last ballot has been counted. 2. Makes technical changes. 3. Becomes effective on the general effective date. Prepared by Senate Research February 3, 2025 ZD/AW/ci