Is it just me or does it seem like every employee is having a bad day...everyday? Every time I walk through that door I'm greeted with some attitude. Simply no compassion for anyone whatsoever as well. I'll gladly give them a free class for the whole building on basic customer service skills that they teach at McDonald's or Goodwill. I'm sure the next time I arrive in that building it will be a grand old time. And to you fellow employees that work there...chill out...its not that bad.
served on a jury last year. case + deliberation lasted about 3 weeks. all things considered, the facility itself is fine. By government standards, I would say they're pretty efficient and there are no egregiously bad problems, which is more than you can hope for considering how disruptive serving on a jury can be. (Not sure how things look now with covid though!) three protips: - do NOT eat anything at the cafeteria on the top floor. This includes anything their staff prepares (disgusting food) as well as pre-packaged food (often very close to expiration). Go to any other cafe during your recess if you aren't packing a lunch; there are plenty within walking distance. - Bring your own toilet paper or sanitary wipes. The restrooms use the lowest-grade toilet paper imaginable and you will quickly develop hemmorhoids with continued use. - The IT department is a bit underfunded and as a result, the multimedia equipment (laptops, monitors) available for use during deliberation is very old and completely incapable of decoding most modern video formats. In our circumstance, the laptop available had 1GB of RAM and an ancient single-core processor and failed to playback a single frame of video evidence originating from a modern smartphone. They were able to provide a laptop capable of this playback after asking. This did cause a bit of a delay during deliberation, but it wasn't significant enough to add days to the process. Good Luck!
Clean, well kept, with lots of parking. You can't ask for more.