
Ensures order and security during normal nighttime sleeping hours in a facility maintained for the custody, care, treatment or rehabilitation of probation youth. Officers must be able to physically restrain probation youth.
Essential Job Functions
Ensures for the care and safety of probation youth during normal nighttime sleeping hours.
Makes periodic rounds of the living unit to verify the presence of all probation youth assigned and to guard against problems such as fires.
Maintains order and security in the living unit and investigates unusual sounds and occurrences.
Takes appropriate action to prevent escapes, rule infractions, or other disturbances and observes and records the behavior and actions of individual probation youth and comforts or disciplines as necessary.
Inspects bedding to prevent misuse and ensure safety, and monitors ventilation and heating levels in the living unit to maintain a comfortable environment.
Ensures that injured or ill probation youth obtain nursing or medical attention.
Carries out standard procedures for the admission or release of probation youth including orientation to the facility and assignment to living quarters.
Supervises probation youth on awakening, in dressing, and in preparing their sleeping area for the day.
Restrains or assists in restraining combative or emotionally disturbed probation youth.
Keeps records, makes reports, and performs other clerical duties as assigned.
Transports or prepares probation youth for transportation to medical care facilities, courts or other locations.
Provides leaders with communication tools to build and maintain Airman morale and readiness. Ensures the strategic, timely release of accurate information. Conducts public engagement to connect with the American people, showcase combat power, demonstrate readiness and help preserve the all-volunteer force. It’s the job of Public Affairs to shape the Air Force’s public image by building relationships with the community and managing relationships with a variety of media organizations. These Airmen develop scripts and graphics, serve as on-camera announcers, and document both ground and aerial missions to ensure information is captured for current and future generations to see.
The POST-certified Regular Basic Course (basic academy) is the training standard for police officers, deputy sheriffs, school district police officers, district attorney investigators, as well as a few other classifications of peace officers.
Appointees will be required to meet the State mandated CORE training requirements as defined by Standards for Training in Corrections.
Graduate of the Defense Information School (DINFOS) in 1987, then located af Ft. Benjamin Harrison Indiana..
Yearly training for Basic First Aid and CPR
The POST-certified Regular Basic Course (basic academy) is the training standard for police officers, deputy sheriffs, school district police officers, district attorney investigators, as well as a few other classifications of peace officers.
Appointees will be required to meet the State mandated CORE training requirements as defined by Standards for Training in Corrections.
Graduate of the Defense Information School (DINFOS) in 1987, then located af Ft. Benjamin Harrison Indiana..
Yearly training for Basic First Aid and CPR