Pennsylvania Code
Title 37 - LAW
Part III - Agencies and Offices
Subpart N - Juvenile Court Judges' Commission
Chapter 200 - JUVENILE COURT JUDGES' COMMISSION
Subchapter K - STANDARDS GOVERNING THE OPERATION OF A JUVENILE PROBATION MERIT SYSTEM
Section 200.1002 - Juvenile probation officer employment qualifications
Current through Register Vol. 54, No. 44, November 2, 2024
(a) The minimum requirement for employment as a juvenile probation officer shall be a bachelor's degree, with a background of at least 18 credits in the behavioral or social sciences from an accredited college or university.
(b) Other tests of aptitude, attitude, abilities, skills or knowledge, may be required as found appropriate at the county level, provided that the additional tests are announced in advance and are the same for all candidates. The Juvenile Court Judges' Commission will provide a testing program which courts may use for screening applicants.
(c) The qualifications for a vacant juvenile probation officer position shall be announced prior to commencing the recruitment process and must be directly related to the expectations for that position as outlined in the job description. No other qualifications may be considered.
(d) A personnel transaction form and a college transcript shall be filed with the Juvenile Court Judges' Commission by the Chief Juvenile Probation Officer within 10 working days of the filling of any juvenile probation officer position. An exception to the college transcript requirement may apply where the new employee was granted exceptional person status under subsection (a).
(e) A job description for each position shall be maintained and adhered to in the juvenile probation office. A clear job description provides employees with an understanding of their positions and forms the basis for evaluation of employee job performance.
(f) New employees shall be required to complete a 12-month probationary period during which they shall receive more intensive supervision and training than permanent juvenile probation officers. Their performance shall be evaluated semiannually and employees receiving unsatisfactory evaluations shall be terminated at, or before, the end of the probationary period. An exception to this standard applies only when a probationary period of a different length is part of a collective bargaining agreement.
(g) The minimum annual training requirement for continuing employment as a juvenile probation officer shall be the successful completion of 40 hours of approved training per year.
(h) Juvenile probation officers shall have a written performance evaluation completed at least annually by their supervisors. This evaluation shall become part of their personnel files and shall be available for inspection by representatives of the Juvenile Court Judges' Commission.