Connecticut 2021 2021 Regular Session

Connecticut House Bill HB06548 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 05/20/2021

                     
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OLR Bill Analysis 
sHB 6548 (as amended by House “A”)*  
 
AN ACT CONCERNING THE RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE JURY 
SELECTION TASK FORCE.  
 
SUMMARY 
This bill adjusts the method for summoning jurors from each town 
to reflect how many complied with the summons in the past year. 
Beginning October 1, 2022, the bill requires the jury administrator to 
compile the number of jurors summoned from each town who 
complied with the summons. And beginning July 1, 2023, the number 
of jurors chosen from each town must reflect the proportional 
representation of each town’s population within the judicial district, 
based on the data collected and a specified formula.  
The bill establishes temporary procedures for before the data is 
collected. From July 1, 2022, to June 30, 2023, whenever there is an 
undeliverable jury summons, a replacement summons must be sent to 
the same zip code. 
The bill also (1) expands eligibility for jury service (e.g., to certain 
permanent residents and shortens the time frame barring certain 
convicted felons from serving) and (2) requires additional questions on 
the juror questionnaire and the judicial branch to compile 
demographic information on those who participate in the jury process.  
*House Amendment “A” (1) shortens the time frame for barring 
someone with a felony conviction from jury service, (2) eliminates the 
underlying bill’s provisions on (a) allowing felony case defendants and 
certain convicted felons to serve on a jury and (b) compensating and 
reimbursing jurors, and (3) changes the one-year time frame for 
proportional jury selection from a calendar year to a court year. 
EFFECTIVE DATE: October 1, 2021, for the eligibility expansion 
provision; July 1, 2022, for the zip code replacement summons  2021HB-06548-R010706-BA.DOCX 
 
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provision; October 1, 2022, for the juror data compilation and 
questionnaire provisions; and July 1, 2023, for the proportional 
representation provision. 
§ 1 — EXPANDED JURY POOL 
The bill expands jury service eligibility by (1) including permanent 
residents, as allowed under federal law (8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(20)) and (2) 
shortening, from seven to three years, the time frame for barring 
someone with a felony conviction from serving on a jury.  
The bill also increases the minimum age, from 70 to 75, for when 
someone may claim an exemption from being summoned and makes a 
conforming change to the lists the jury administrator must keep.  
§§ 2-4 — JUROR SUMMONS 
The bill adjusts the method for summoning jurors from each town 
to reflect each town’s juror summons compliance rate in the past year.   
Beginning October 1, 2022, the bill requires the jury administrator to 
annually compile the number of jurors summoned from each town 
who complied with the summons and appeared for jury service. 
Beginning July 1, 2023, the bill requires the number of jurors chosen 
from each town to reflect the proportional representation of each 
town’s population within the judicial district modified by the 
percentage of jurors who complied with summonses in the prior year. 
This is calculated by dividing each town’s proportional share of the 
judicial district’s population by the town’s “yield ratio.” Under the bill, 
the “yield ratio” is the (1) number of jurors from the town who were 
summoned the previous court year and complied and appeared for 
jury service, divided by (2) product of the town’s proportional share of 
the judicial district’s population and the total number of jurors 
summoned in the judicial district in the previous court year. A “court 
year” is the one-year period beginning on September 1 and ending on 
August 31 the following year. 
As under existing law, the jury administrator must use population 
data from the most recent decennial census.  2021HB-06548-R010706-BA.DOCX 
 
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The bill also establishes temporary procedures before the data is 
collected. From July 1, 2022, to June 30, 2023, for each undeliverable 
jury summons, the jury administrator must send an additional 
randomly generated summons to a juror with the same zip code as the 
undeliverable summons. 
§ 5 — JURY QUESTIONNAIRE 
Under current law, the jury administrator must send a prospective 
juror a confidential questionnaire with certain questions about his or 
her personal information (e.g., age, race, occupation). The bill requires 
the questionnaire to also have questions on gender and other 
demographic information the judicial branch deems appropriate. It 
requires the administrator to provide, rather than send, the 
questionnaire. 
The bill requires the judicial branch to compile a record of the 
demographic characteristics of all individuals who (1) are summoned 
for jury service; (2) participated in a panel; (3) are subject to a 
preemptory challenge (i.e., objection to a prospective juror without 
needing a reason); (4) are subject to challenge for cause (i.e., objection 
to a prospective juror for a stated reason, such as bias); and (5) serve on 
a jury. The record must exclude personally identifiable information 
(i.e., identifying information linked or linkable to a specific person) 
and be maintained in a way that provides free and open access to the 
information on the Internet.  
COMMITTEE ACTION 
Judiciary Committee 
Joint Favorable Substitute 
Yea 25 Nay 13 (04/06/2021) 
 
Appropriations Committee 
Joint Favorable 
Yea 32 Nay 16 (05/10/2021)