Working during jury duty [closed]

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This is a question specific to the US.
In the US, we're required to serve jury duty once a year when we get a jury summons. Recently (or at least for me), instead of waiting at the courthouse all day, we can wait at home and be "on-call" and call the courthouse at a specified time to see if we need to go in. I didn't have to so I went to work.



One of my co-workers ran into me and asked why I was in the office since I had jury duty. I explained the same situation as I did above. She said I didn't have to go in since I had jury duty, even if I was dismissed early due to the courthouse not having a case for us to try.



Is this true? Even if we get dismissed early b/c there's no case to try, we don't have to go into the office afterwards?



Thanks in advance for your help/reply.



EDIT/CLARIFICATION: The day I'm supposed to report to the courthouse, I was told to call the courthouse at 12pm to see if I need to come in. The message said I didn't need to come in so I went to work afterwards.



Thanks for the comments/answers, I'll ask HR to see what they say but I also wanted to see what others have to say or see what other ppl know or have experienced.







share|improve this question














closed as off-topic by Jim G., Monica Cellio♦, Rhys, CMW, jmac Mar 26 '14 at 6:49


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Questions seeking legal advice are off-topic as they require answers by legal professionals. See: What is asking for legal advice?" – Jim G., Rhys
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.








  • 5




    Ask your company's HR department. This is a matter of company policy, not law, and practices may vary.
    – keshlam
    Mar 22 '14 at 3:14






  • 1




    This question appears to be off-topic because it is about either law or your employer's policies. Either way, we can't answer that, sorry.
    – Monica Cellio♦
    Mar 23 '14 at 2:58






  • 1




    Its really simple. If you were released from jury duty then you can show up at work. You also don't have to show up, depending on company policy, you would be paid for the day either way.
    – Ramhound
    Mar 24 '14 at 12:54










  • @JoeStrazzere, thx, i hope my manager thinks/feels the same as you do. =)
    – Classified
    Mar 29 '14 at 19:39










  • thx for everyone's comments and feedback. sorry this ended up being an off topic question. i thought this was a good question everyone could benefit from, or at least workers in the U.S. could benefit from. if i need to delete or close it, please let me know.
    – Classified
    Mar 29 '14 at 19:44
















up vote
1
down vote

favorite












This is a question specific to the US.
In the US, we're required to serve jury duty once a year when we get a jury summons. Recently (or at least for me), instead of waiting at the courthouse all day, we can wait at home and be "on-call" and call the courthouse at a specified time to see if we need to go in. I didn't have to so I went to work.



One of my co-workers ran into me and asked why I was in the office since I had jury duty. I explained the same situation as I did above. She said I didn't have to go in since I had jury duty, even if I was dismissed early due to the courthouse not having a case for us to try.



Is this true? Even if we get dismissed early b/c there's no case to try, we don't have to go into the office afterwards?



Thanks in advance for your help/reply.



EDIT/CLARIFICATION: The day I'm supposed to report to the courthouse, I was told to call the courthouse at 12pm to see if I need to come in. The message said I didn't need to come in so I went to work afterwards.



Thanks for the comments/answers, I'll ask HR to see what they say but I also wanted to see what others have to say or see what other ppl know or have experienced.







share|improve this question














closed as off-topic by Jim G., Monica Cellio♦, Rhys, CMW, jmac Mar 26 '14 at 6:49


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Questions seeking legal advice are off-topic as they require answers by legal professionals. See: What is asking for legal advice?" – Jim G., Rhys
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.








  • 5




    Ask your company's HR department. This is a matter of company policy, not law, and practices may vary.
    – keshlam
    Mar 22 '14 at 3:14






  • 1




    This question appears to be off-topic because it is about either law or your employer's policies. Either way, we can't answer that, sorry.
    – Monica Cellio♦
    Mar 23 '14 at 2:58






  • 1




    Its really simple. If you were released from jury duty then you can show up at work. You also don't have to show up, depending on company policy, you would be paid for the day either way.
    – Ramhound
    Mar 24 '14 at 12:54










  • @JoeStrazzere, thx, i hope my manager thinks/feels the same as you do. =)
    – Classified
    Mar 29 '14 at 19:39










  • thx for everyone's comments and feedback. sorry this ended up being an off topic question. i thought this was a good question everyone could benefit from, or at least workers in the U.S. could benefit from. if i need to delete or close it, please let me know.
    – Classified
    Mar 29 '14 at 19:44












up vote
1
down vote

favorite









up vote
1
down vote

favorite











This is a question specific to the US.
In the US, we're required to serve jury duty once a year when we get a jury summons. Recently (or at least for me), instead of waiting at the courthouse all day, we can wait at home and be "on-call" and call the courthouse at a specified time to see if we need to go in. I didn't have to so I went to work.



One of my co-workers ran into me and asked why I was in the office since I had jury duty. I explained the same situation as I did above. She said I didn't have to go in since I had jury duty, even if I was dismissed early due to the courthouse not having a case for us to try.



Is this true? Even if we get dismissed early b/c there's no case to try, we don't have to go into the office afterwards?



Thanks in advance for your help/reply.



EDIT/CLARIFICATION: The day I'm supposed to report to the courthouse, I was told to call the courthouse at 12pm to see if I need to come in. The message said I didn't need to come in so I went to work afterwards.



Thanks for the comments/answers, I'll ask HR to see what they say but I also wanted to see what others have to say or see what other ppl know or have experienced.







share|improve this question














This is a question specific to the US.
In the US, we're required to serve jury duty once a year when we get a jury summons. Recently (or at least for me), instead of waiting at the courthouse all day, we can wait at home and be "on-call" and call the courthouse at a specified time to see if we need to go in. I didn't have to so I went to work.



One of my co-workers ran into me and asked why I was in the office since I had jury duty. I explained the same situation as I did above. She said I didn't have to go in since I had jury duty, even if I was dismissed early due to the courthouse not having a case for us to try.



Is this true? Even if we get dismissed early b/c there's no case to try, we don't have to go into the office afterwards?



Thanks in advance for your help/reply.



EDIT/CLARIFICATION: The day I'm supposed to report to the courthouse, I was told to call the courthouse at 12pm to see if I need to come in. The message said I didn't need to come in so I went to work afterwards.



Thanks for the comments/answers, I'll ask HR to see what they say but I also wanted to see what others have to say or see what other ppl know or have experienced.









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 22 '14 at 17:10

























asked Mar 22 '14 at 1:20









Classified

37331224




37331224




closed as off-topic by Jim G., Monica Cellio♦, Rhys, CMW, jmac Mar 26 '14 at 6:49


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Questions seeking legal advice are off-topic as they require answers by legal professionals. See: What is asking for legal advice?" – Jim G., Rhys
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.




closed as off-topic by Jim G., Monica Cellio♦, Rhys, CMW, jmac Mar 26 '14 at 6:49


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Questions seeking legal advice are off-topic as they require answers by legal professionals. See: What is asking for legal advice?" – Jim G., Rhys
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.







  • 5




    Ask your company's HR department. This is a matter of company policy, not law, and practices may vary.
    – keshlam
    Mar 22 '14 at 3:14






  • 1




    This question appears to be off-topic because it is about either law or your employer's policies. Either way, we can't answer that, sorry.
    – Monica Cellio♦
    Mar 23 '14 at 2:58






  • 1




    Its really simple. If you were released from jury duty then you can show up at work. You also don't have to show up, depending on company policy, you would be paid for the day either way.
    – Ramhound
    Mar 24 '14 at 12:54










  • @JoeStrazzere, thx, i hope my manager thinks/feels the same as you do. =)
    – Classified
    Mar 29 '14 at 19:39










  • thx for everyone's comments and feedback. sorry this ended up being an off topic question. i thought this was a good question everyone could benefit from, or at least workers in the U.S. could benefit from. if i need to delete or close it, please let me know.
    – Classified
    Mar 29 '14 at 19:44












  • 5




    Ask your company's HR department. This is a matter of company policy, not law, and practices may vary.
    – keshlam
    Mar 22 '14 at 3:14






  • 1




    This question appears to be off-topic because it is about either law or your employer's policies. Either way, we can't answer that, sorry.
    – Monica Cellio♦
    Mar 23 '14 at 2:58






  • 1




    Its really simple. If you were released from jury duty then you can show up at work. You also don't have to show up, depending on company policy, you would be paid for the day either way.
    – Ramhound
    Mar 24 '14 at 12:54










  • @JoeStrazzere, thx, i hope my manager thinks/feels the same as you do. =)
    – Classified
    Mar 29 '14 at 19:39










  • thx for everyone's comments and feedback. sorry this ended up being an off topic question. i thought this was a good question everyone could benefit from, or at least workers in the U.S. could benefit from. if i need to delete or close it, please let me know.
    – Classified
    Mar 29 '14 at 19:44







5




5




Ask your company's HR department. This is a matter of company policy, not law, and practices may vary.
– keshlam
Mar 22 '14 at 3:14




Ask your company's HR department. This is a matter of company policy, not law, and practices may vary.
– keshlam
Mar 22 '14 at 3:14




1




1




This question appears to be off-topic because it is about either law or your employer's policies. Either way, we can't answer that, sorry.
– Monica Cellio♦
Mar 23 '14 at 2:58




This question appears to be off-topic because it is about either law or your employer's policies. Either way, we can't answer that, sorry.
– Monica Cellio♦
Mar 23 '14 at 2:58




1




1




Its really simple. If you were released from jury duty then you can show up at work. You also don't have to show up, depending on company policy, you would be paid for the day either way.
– Ramhound
Mar 24 '14 at 12:54




Its really simple. If you were released from jury duty then you can show up at work. You also don't have to show up, depending on company policy, you would be paid for the day either way.
– Ramhound
Mar 24 '14 at 12:54












@JoeStrazzere, thx, i hope my manager thinks/feels the same as you do. =)
– Classified
Mar 29 '14 at 19:39




@JoeStrazzere, thx, i hope my manager thinks/feels the same as you do. =)
– Classified
Mar 29 '14 at 19:39












thx for everyone's comments and feedback. sorry this ended up being an off topic question. i thought this was a good question everyone could benefit from, or at least workers in the U.S. could benefit from. if i need to delete or close it, please let me know.
– Classified
Mar 29 '14 at 19:44




thx for everyone's comments and feedback. sorry this ended up being an off topic question. i thought this was a good question everyone could benefit from, or at least workers in the U.S. could benefit from. if i need to delete or close it, please let me know.
– Classified
Mar 29 '14 at 19:44










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
5
down vote



accepted










I suspect your co-worker was suggesting either a policy issue you are not aware of OR suggesting that you take advantage of the system.



No, you should not have to go into the office on the days you serve or the same day you are released. Usually an American company will pay for some number of days of actual jury duty (includes the waiting for them to call you up). Also, most courts release you near the end of the day, and most will provide a letter of your serve duration upon request. If you were asked to stand by on, say, Monday and then released during a phone call after 3,4 or 5pm Monday then you are no longer serving jury duty on Tuesday.



You would not be expected to return on Monday and returning on Tuesday (or whatever day after you were released) is reasonable.



The thing is that most companies might not ask for the clerk letter with your begin / end dates on it. Trusting you to let them know.






share|improve this answer



























    up vote
    3
    down vote













    OK, so this is an interesting mix of law and ethics.



    According to the law - no, you are not required to go to the office on a day you have jury duty. There's a process for documenting that you've been and providing it to your employer. The rules are described here - Juror Pay in the US Courts site. The bottom line, however, is that Jurors are promised $40/day ($50 if it's 10 days or more). Companies often have policies, however, that cover the Jury Duty at your normal pay range, so that if you make more than $40/day ($40 day is $5/hour), you will get your full salary. This is subject to the rules and policies of your company and can't be answered here.



    You can probably guess how much the value and mileage vary here - a waitress may go to work anyway, because the tips are not covered by her employer. A federal employee, however, may not go at all, as the full salary is covered as part of the job.



    Then there's an unspoken set of expectations regarding being a working professional. Most professionals are typically expected to work 40 hours a week, but the real requirement is to meet long term deadlines and keep working at a certain pace that is expected to be not directly translatable to an absolutely specific set of hours. Most professionals can get a reprieve from some work obligations due to jury duty - for example, it's fine to cancel meetings, not put in a full day, be somewhat delayed in a response, and (if actually called to duty) be slow in getting work done.



    However, there's an unspoken expectation that things like "timely responses", and overall project deadlines won't be substantially delayed by 1 day of jury duty. As a manager, I didn't feel so comfortable blowing off every email, text message and request for information when I had jury duty - I got the highest priority responses going, working remotely from the jury selection room.



    Whether to be physically present, electronically present, or present at all has a lot to do with the context of your work, your commute and your work culture. So if the question is "jury duty was canceled at 9 AM - do I go to work or go to the beach?" - I'm not sure the "go to the beach" is the right answer in every circumstance. But if the question is "leave jury duty at noon and then work a full 8 hour day?" - the answer is "absolutely not".






    share|improve this answer






















    • @bethlakshimi, thx for your answer. yeah, i was concerned with meeting my deadlines like you said. Luckily, i didn't work a full 8 hr day after going in, although, working on wkends or at night probably pushed me over that limit/hump.
      – Classified
      Mar 29 '14 at 19:36

















    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    5
    down vote



    accepted










    I suspect your co-worker was suggesting either a policy issue you are not aware of OR suggesting that you take advantage of the system.



    No, you should not have to go into the office on the days you serve or the same day you are released. Usually an American company will pay for some number of days of actual jury duty (includes the waiting for them to call you up). Also, most courts release you near the end of the day, and most will provide a letter of your serve duration upon request. If you were asked to stand by on, say, Monday and then released during a phone call after 3,4 or 5pm Monday then you are no longer serving jury duty on Tuesday.



    You would not be expected to return on Monday and returning on Tuesday (or whatever day after you were released) is reasonable.



    The thing is that most companies might not ask for the clerk letter with your begin / end dates on it. Trusting you to let them know.






    share|improve this answer
























      up vote
      5
      down vote



      accepted










      I suspect your co-worker was suggesting either a policy issue you are not aware of OR suggesting that you take advantage of the system.



      No, you should not have to go into the office on the days you serve or the same day you are released. Usually an American company will pay for some number of days of actual jury duty (includes the waiting for them to call you up). Also, most courts release you near the end of the day, and most will provide a letter of your serve duration upon request. If you were asked to stand by on, say, Monday and then released during a phone call after 3,4 or 5pm Monday then you are no longer serving jury duty on Tuesday.



      You would not be expected to return on Monday and returning on Tuesday (or whatever day after you were released) is reasonable.



      The thing is that most companies might not ask for the clerk letter with your begin / end dates on it. Trusting you to let them know.






      share|improve this answer






















        up vote
        5
        down vote



        accepted







        up vote
        5
        down vote



        accepted






        I suspect your co-worker was suggesting either a policy issue you are not aware of OR suggesting that you take advantage of the system.



        No, you should not have to go into the office on the days you serve or the same day you are released. Usually an American company will pay for some number of days of actual jury duty (includes the waiting for them to call you up). Also, most courts release you near the end of the day, and most will provide a letter of your serve duration upon request. If you were asked to stand by on, say, Monday and then released during a phone call after 3,4 or 5pm Monday then you are no longer serving jury duty on Tuesday.



        You would not be expected to return on Monday and returning on Tuesday (or whatever day after you were released) is reasonable.



        The thing is that most companies might not ask for the clerk letter with your begin / end dates on it. Trusting you to let them know.






        share|improve this answer












        I suspect your co-worker was suggesting either a policy issue you are not aware of OR suggesting that you take advantage of the system.



        No, you should not have to go into the office on the days you serve or the same day you are released. Usually an American company will pay for some number of days of actual jury duty (includes the waiting for them to call you up). Also, most courts release you near the end of the day, and most will provide a letter of your serve duration upon request. If you were asked to stand by on, say, Monday and then released during a phone call after 3,4 or 5pm Monday then you are no longer serving jury duty on Tuesday.



        You would not be expected to return on Monday and returning on Tuesday (or whatever day after you were released) is reasonable.



        The thing is that most companies might not ask for the clerk letter with your begin / end dates on it. Trusting you to let them know.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Mar 22 '14 at 6:52









        Kevan Sheridan

        922911




        922911






















            up vote
            3
            down vote













            OK, so this is an interesting mix of law and ethics.



            According to the law - no, you are not required to go to the office on a day you have jury duty. There's a process for documenting that you've been and providing it to your employer. The rules are described here - Juror Pay in the US Courts site. The bottom line, however, is that Jurors are promised $40/day ($50 if it's 10 days or more). Companies often have policies, however, that cover the Jury Duty at your normal pay range, so that if you make more than $40/day ($40 day is $5/hour), you will get your full salary. This is subject to the rules and policies of your company and can't be answered here.



            You can probably guess how much the value and mileage vary here - a waitress may go to work anyway, because the tips are not covered by her employer. A federal employee, however, may not go at all, as the full salary is covered as part of the job.



            Then there's an unspoken set of expectations regarding being a working professional. Most professionals are typically expected to work 40 hours a week, but the real requirement is to meet long term deadlines and keep working at a certain pace that is expected to be not directly translatable to an absolutely specific set of hours. Most professionals can get a reprieve from some work obligations due to jury duty - for example, it's fine to cancel meetings, not put in a full day, be somewhat delayed in a response, and (if actually called to duty) be slow in getting work done.



            However, there's an unspoken expectation that things like "timely responses", and overall project deadlines won't be substantially delayed by 1 day of jury duty. As a manager, I didn't feel so comfortable blowing off every email, text message and request for information when I had jury duty - I got the highest priority responses going, working remotely from the jury selection room.



            Whether to be physically present, electronically present, or present at all has a lot to do with the context of your work, your commute and your work culture. So if the question is "jury duty was canceled at 9 AM - do I go to work or go to the beach?" - I'm not sure the "go to the beach" is the right answer in every circumstance. But if the question is "leave jury duty at noon and then work a full 8 hour day?" - the answer is "absolutely not".






            share|improve this answer






















            • @bethlakshimi, thx for your answer. yeah, i was concerned with meeting my deadlines like you said. Luckily, i didn't work a full 8 hr day after going in, although, working on wkends or at night probably pushed me over that limit/hump.
              – Classified
              Mar 29 '14 at 19:36














            up vote
            3
            down vote













            OK, so this is an interesting mix of law and ethics.



            According to the law - no, you are not required to go to the office on a day you have jury duty. There's a process for documenting that you've been and providing it to your employer. The rules are described here - Juror Pay in the US Courts site. The bottom line, however, is that Jurors are promised $40/day ($50 if it's 10 days or more). Companies often have policies, however, that cover the Jury Duty at your normal pay range, so that if you make more than $40/day ($40 day is $5/hour), you will get your full salary. This is subject to the rules and policies of your company and can't be answered here.



            You can probably guess how much the value and mileage vary here - a waitress may go to work anyway, because the tips are not covered by her employer. A federal employee, however, may not go at all, as the full salary is covered as part of the job.



            Then there's an unspoken set of expectations regarding being a working professional. Most professionals are typically expected to work 40 hours a week, but the real requirement is to meet long term deadlines and keep working at a certain pace that is expected to be not directly translatable to an absolutely specific set of hours. Most professionals can get a reprieve from some work obligations due to jury duty - for example, it's fine to cancel meetings, not put in a full day, be somewhat delayed in a response, and (if actually called to duty) be slow in getting work done.



            However, there's an unspoken expectation that things like "timely responses", and overall project deadlines won't be substantially delayed by 1 day of jury duty. As a manager, I didn't feel so comfortable blowing off every email, text message and request for information when I had jury duty - I got the highest priority responses going, working remotely from the jury selection room.



            Whether to be physically present, electronically present, or present at all has a lot to do with the context of your work, your commute and your work culture. So if the question is "jury duty was canceled at 9 AM - do I go to work or go to the beach?" - I'm not sure the "go to the beach" is the right answer in every circumstance. But if the question is "leave jury duty at noon and then work a full 8 hour day?" - the answer is "absolutely not".






            share|improve this answer






















            • @bethlakshimi, thx for your answer. yeah, i was concerned with meeting my deadlines like you said. Luckily, i didn't work a full 8 hr day after going in, although, working on wkends or at night probably pushed me over that limit/hump.
              – Classified
              Mar 29 '14 at 19:36












            up vote
            3
            down vote










            up vote
            3
            down vote









            OK, so this is an interesting mix of law and ethics.



            According to the law - no, you are not required to go to the office on a day you have jury duty. There's a process for documenting that you've been and providing it to your employer. The rules are described here - Juror Pay in the US Courts site. The bottom line, however, is that Jurors are promised $40/day ($50 if it's 10 days or more). Companies often have policies, however, that cover the Jury Duty at your normal pay range, so that if you make more than $40/day ($40 day is $5/hour), you will get your full salary. This is subject to the rules and policies of your company and can't be answered here.



            You can probably guess how much the value and mileage vary here - a waitress may go to work anyway, because the tips are not covered by her employer. A federal employee, however, may not go at all, as the full salary is covered as part of the job.



            Then there's an unspoken set of expectations regarding being a working professional. Most professionals are typically expected to work 40 hours a week, but the real requirement is to meet long term deadlines and keep working at a certain pace that is expected to be not directly translatable to an absolutely specific set of hours. Most professionals can get a reprieve from some work obligations due to jury duty - for example, it's fine to cancel meetings, not put in a full day, be somewhat delayed in a response, and (if actually called to duty) be slow in getting work done.



            However, there's an unspoken expectation that things like "timely responses", and overall project deadlines won't be substantially delayed by 1 day of jury duty. As a manager, I didn't feel so comfortable blowing off every email, text message and request for information when I had jury duty - I got the highest priority responses going, working remotely from the jury selection room.



            Whether to be physically present, electronically present, or present at all has a lot to do with the context of your work, your commute and your work culture. So if the question is "jury duty was canceled at 9 AM - do I go to work or go to the beach?" - I'm not sure the "go to the beach" is the right answer in every circumstance. But if the question is "leave jury duty at noon and then work a full 8 hour day?" - the answer is "absolutely not".






            share|improve this answer














            OK, so this is an interesting mix of law and ethics.



            According to the law - no, you are not required to go to the office on a day you have jury duty. There's a process for documenting that you've been and providing it to your employer. The rules are described here - Juror Pay in the US Courts site. The bottom line, however, is that Jurors are promised $40/day ($50 if it's 10 days or more). Companies often have policies, however, that cover the Jury Duty at your normal pay range, so that if you make more than $40/day ($40 day is $5/hour), you will get your full salary. This is subject to the rules and policies of your company and can't be answered here.



            You can probably guess how much the value and mileage vary here - a waitress may go to work anyway, because the tips are not covered by her employer. A federal employee, however, may not go at all, as the full salary is covered as part of the job.



            Then there's an unspoken set of expectations regarding being a working professional. Most professionals are typically expected to work 40 hours a week, but the real requirement is to meet long term deadlines and keep working at a certain pace that is expected to be not directly translatable to an absolutely specific set of hours. Most professionals can get a reprieve from some work obligations due to jury duty - for example, it's fine to cancel meetings, not put in a full day, be somewhat delayed in a response, and (if actually called to duty) be slow in getting work done.



            However, there's an unspoken expectation that things like "timely responses", and overall project deadlines won't be substantially delayed by 1 day of jury duty. As a manager, I didn't feel so comfortable blowing off every email, text message and request for information when I had jury duty - I got the highest priority responses going, working remotely from the jury selection room.



            Whether to be physically present, electronically present, or present at all has a lot to do with the context of your work, your commute and your work culture. So if the question is "jury duty was canceled at 9 AM - do I go to work or go to the beach?" - I'm not sure the "go to the beach" is the right answer in every circumstance. But if the question is "leave jury duty at noon and then work a full 8 hour day?" - the answer is "absolutely not".







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Mar 25 '14 at 20:47









            mhoran_psprep

            40.3k463144




            40.3k463144










            answered Mar 25 '14 at 20:23









            bethlakshmi

            70.3k4136277




            70.3k4136277











            • @bethlakshimi, thx for your answer. yeah, i was concerned with meeting my deadlines like you said. Luckily, i didn't work a full 8 hr day after going in, although, working on wkends or at night probably pushed me over that limit/hump.
              – Classified
              Mar 29 '14 at 19:36
















            • @bethlakshimi, thx for your answer. yeah, i was concerned with meeting my deadlines like you said. Luckily, i didn't work a full 8 hr day after going in, although, working on wkends or at night probably pushed me over that limit/hump.
              – Classified
              Mar 29 '14 at 19:36















            @bethlakshimi, thx for your answer. yeah, i was concerned with meeting my deadlines like you said. Luckily, i didn't work a full 8 hr day after going in, although, working on wkends or at night probably pushed me over that limit/hump.
            – Classified
            Mar 29 '14 at 19:36




            @bethlakshimi, thx for your answer. yeah, i was concerned with meeting my deadlines like you said. Luckily, i didn't work a full 8 hr day after going in, although, working on wkends or at night probably pushed me over that limit/hump.
            – Classified
            Mar 29 '14 at 19:36


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