Deputy Probation Officer I - Field

County of Placer

Auburn, CA

JOB DETAILS
SKILLS
Analysis Skills, CPR Certification, Case Management, Communication Skills, Conflict Resolution, Course Administration, Crime Prevention, Criminal Justice, Crisis Intervention, Customer Relations, Customer Support/Service, Data Entry, Driver's License, English Language, Firearms Experience, First Aid, Heavy Lifting, Human Resources, Insurance, Investigative Reports, Keyboards, Law Enforcement, Legal, Lift/Move 25 Pounds, Materials Analysis, Multitasking, Office Equipment, Perform Arrests, Probation/Parole, Project/Program Coordination, Regulations, Reporting Skills, Risk, Risk Analysis, Team Player, Technical Leadership
LOCATION
Auburn, CA
POSTED
30+ days ago

Introduction

Placer County is comprised of over 1400 square miles of beautiful and diverse geography ranging from the residential and commercial areas of South Placer through the historic foothill areas of Auburn Foresthill and Colfax and to the Countys jewel of the North Lake Tahoe basin. Placer is a great place to live, work, play, and learn. For more information about Placer County, please visit www.placer.ca.gov.

Qualified applications received by March 3, 2026, at 5:00 pm will be invited to participate in the written examination the week of March 30, 2026.

POSITION INFORMATION

The Placer County Probation Department is currently hiring for Deputy Probation Officer I - Field. The eligible list created by this recruitment may be used to fill future County-wide vacancies for permanent positions.

BENEFITS

Placer County offers a comprehensive benefits package to employees. Applicants should inquire as to the most current benefit package during hiring interviews or by contacting the Human Resources Department.

DEFINITION

To investigate cases of youth or adult applicants for probation and to supervise and counsel youth and adults on probation.

DISTINGUISHING CHARACTERISTICS

This is the entry-level class in the Deputy Probation Officer - Field series. Employees at this level are not expected to perform with the same independence of direction and judgment on matters allocated to the journey level. This class is typically used as a training class for Probation Department field assignments. Employees may have only limited or no directly related work experience. Employees work under immediate supervision while learning job tasks. This class is distinguished from the Probation Assistant by performance of the full scope of sworn probation duties such as search and arrest and is distinguished from the journey level by the performance of the more routine tasks and duties in both court and field supervision of adults or youth. This class is flexibly allocated with Deputy Probation Officer II - Field.

SUPERVISION RECEIVED AND EXERCISED

Receives immediate to general supervision from a Supervising Deputy Probation Officer or Probation Manager. May receive technical and functional supervision from a Senior Deputy Probation Officer - Field.

EXAMPLES OF ESSENTIAL DUTIES

Duties may include but are not limited to the following:

• Interview adults or youth, their families, and interested individuals, read police reports, and other psychological and medical evaluations. • Interview victims, make recommendations about advisability of probation when probation is indicated, formulate plans of probation, and make recommendations to the court on plans for the adjustment and rehabilitation of the offender. • Conduct investigations in all youth matters referred to the Probation Department, analyze information, and act in accordance with State law and Departmental policy, draw affidavits for referral to the District Attorney. • Represent the Probation Department in the various pre-adjudicatory hearings, prepare court reports, making recommendations for dispositions, make reports to the courts on probationers progress, recommending modification, dismissal, or revocation where necessary. • Investigate adult referrals from the courts, conduct pre-sentence investigations, and prepare written reports and recommendations for the courts, appear in court to represent the Probation Department at various hearings. • Act as Intake Officer and Citation Hearing Officer, investigate and confer with the District Attorney, make recommendations to the court regarding release or detention pending further court actions, conduct probationary citation hearings for youth cited for misdemeanors with no prior record. • Conduct risk assessment on probationers and recommend level of supervision, screen probationers for appropriate program and services referrals, supervise adults and youth in the field, in the office, and through review of reports, monitor the activities and treatment programs of youth and adult probationers, identify and monitor behavioral changes, and use motivational interviewing strategies to support client success. • Enforce court orders and conditions of probation, conduct drug and alcohol testing, perform home, vehicle, and electronic searches, file violations of probation when probation conditions are not met, implement conflict resolution and de-escalation techniques, and execute arrests. • Provide ongoing counseling and case management to assigned caseload, maintain an intensive caseload with high-risk youth, and engage in a therapeutic relationship with clients. • Establish contacts and work in close association with community agencies in developing and coordinating treatment programs for youth and adult probationers. • Present youth crime prevention programs to schools and community groups. • Serve as home supervision officer or diversion officer, working closely with allied agencies. • Perform related duties as assigned.

MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS

It is the responsibility of applicants to identify in their application materials how they meet the minimum qualifications listed below.

Experience and Training

Any combination of experience and training that would provide the required knowledge and abilities is qualifying. A typical way to obtain the required knowledge and abilities would be:

• Experience: No experience is required. • Training: Equivalent to a bachelors degree from an accredited four-year college or university with major course work in the behavioral sciences, administration of justice, criminal justice, corrections, or a closely related field.

Required License or Certificate

May need to possess a valid drivers license as required by the position. Proof of adequate vehicle insurance and medical clearance may also be required. Must successfully complete the minimum required hours of instruction in the Basic Probation Officers Core Course as certified by the Board of State and Community Corrections within one year from the date of hire. Must successfully complete Section 832 Penal Code Training Search and Seizure within one year from the date of hire. Must successfully complete the minimum number of hours of annual training as certified by the Board of State and Community Corrections in any year in which the incumbent is not enrolled in basic supervisory management or administrators course. The annual training is designed as continuing education to update knowledge and improve skills. Must maintain a valid First Aid and CPR Certificate.

Special Requirements

Employees in this classification are peace officers as defined by section 830.5 of the Penal Code and must satisfy the State of California criteria for peace officer status. Must be at least 21 years of age upon appointment. Must meet minimum standards required for Peace Officers as set forth in Section 1029 and 1031 of the Government Code. Must meet the Board of State and Community Corrections standards in Title 15 Sections 1320-1322. Must pass a background investigation. Must meet physical standards established for County Safety employees, including a psychological examination. Must qualify for use of a firearm.

NOTE

Relevant equivalent experience performing the same or similar job requiring similar knowledge, skills, and abilities may be substituted for the required education as determined by the Human Resources Department. Applicants receiving their degree outside the United States must submit proof of accreditation by a recognized evaluation agency.

KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS, AND ABILITIES

Knowledge of:

• Principles and theory of criminal justice and rehabilitation as applied to criminal offenders, including youth. • Principles and theories of human behavior. • Problems involved in handling youth and adult probationers under restraint. • Principles of de-escalation and conflict resolution. • English usage, spelling, grammar, and punctuation. • Modern office procedures, methods, and computer equipment. • Computer software applications and systems, including word processing and spreadsheet applications.

Ability to:

• On a continuous basis, know and understand all aspects of the job, analyze individual behavior and situations to determine proper course of action, remember accounts given by witnesses, observe individuals behaviors, situations, and activities, and remember past behavior, identify situations of potential altercation, interpret and understand human behavior, read, identify, recall, analyze, interpret, understand, apply, and explain technical and numerical information, work papers, reports, procedures, and policies, and applicable rules, laws, codes, and regulations, maintain awareness of safety at all times, work under time pressure, and complete a high volume of tasks with frequent interruptions, focus on a single task for long periods of time, manage multiple tasks and projects simultaneously, and quickly switch between tasks, manage a high volume of cases, stand, walk, or sit at a desk while in meetings, while in a vehicle, or in the field, bend, twist, squat, stoop, crouch, kneel, reach, push, and pull while in the field and when working with youth or adults, and to reach office equipment, climb while in pursuit or to observe youth in the institution, manage physical confrontations when individuals resist arrest, perform simple and power grasping and fine hand manipulation, speak, use a telephone, write, and use a keyboard to communicate and/or enter, retrieve data from a computer, see, hear, and smell with sufficient acuity to perform essential job functions, wear utility belt, vest, and/or other law enforcement equipment weighing approximately 25 pounds, and lift very heavy weights.

Work as part of a team and in close proximity to probationers. Work assigned shift, including weekends, holidays, and odd or irregular hours, work unusual work schedules, including rotating shifts and overtime.

Learn the principles, practices, and techniques of modern adult and youth probation work. Learn state and local laws and ordinances and Departmental policy and procedures affecting probation work. Learn causes, control, and treatment of youth and adult crime. Drive County-issued vehicles to perform field contacts. Understand and deal effectively with probation applicants and probationers. Analyze investigation materials to determine proper actions, determine truth of statements, exercise good judgment, and make sound decisions under a variety of conditions, work effectively in stressful situations, perform crisis intervention, give individual counseling, and understand counseling techniques and methods, perform arrest, search, and seizure activities safely and within the confines of the law, learn to apply restraints, handcuffs, and shackles, understand court processes, synthesize information into a formal recommendation to the court, write clear and concise court reports to inform the court of probationer progress, coordinate efforts with other County departments and local law enforcement agencies as appropriate, communicate effectively both verbally and in writing, read, understand, and apply court orders, prepare clear and accurate detailed reports and other written materials, maintain good physical, emotional, and mental condition to satisfactorily perform the functions of the position, use and care for small firearms and other

About the Company

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County of Placer