Early detection is very crucial, because once we're out that back door and we've done our civic duty, all other expenses are our expenses: the lost marriages, the broken relationships—that's all on us. When we have to go seek help, that's out of our pocket. The government is done with us. The province is done with us. Our civic duty is done. We've walked out the back door, but we're the ones pulling into our driveway to what was a nice home and a peaceful home.
I always explain jury duty as a scale. We all lives our lives. We have a balance; we try to balance our life. We have our personal life and we have our careers. We try to balance those things. We always believe that if those are balanced, we have a good life. You throw jury duty in there and that definitely tips the scales. We as individuals don't know how to get that balance again. That's where we need the government to help us with their early detection, so that doesn't happen—not only to us, but to jurors in the future.