Official Assignment Court Reporter - Superior Court of Orange County
Orange County Superior Court, CA
About the Job
OFFICIAL ASSIGNMENT COURT REPORTER
HOURLY RATE
$55.93 – Flat Rate
BENEFIT HIGHLIGHTS
Defined Benefit Retirement Plan (2.50% at 67 formula)
Health Reimbursement Arrangement (HRA)
Vacation and sick leave packages
14 paid holidays per year
Defined-benefit retirement/pension plan
Educational & professional reimbursement
Optional deferred compensation program (457 plan)
Official Assignment Court Reporters are scheduled based on the needs of the court and may work from one to five days per week as needed, and they are classified as a part-time limited term position.
*Deadline to apply for this recruitment: This recruitment will remain open on a continuous basis until the needs of the Court have been met and may close at any time.
Interested in learning more about the Official Court Reporter? click here.
ABOUT THE ORGANIZATION AND POSITION
The Orange County Superior Court is the third largest court of general jurisdiction in California. We have courthouses throughout the county, including locations in Orange, Westminster, Fullerton, Newport Beach, and Santa Ana. The Court offers a dynamic work environment, challenging projects, supportive and team-oriented colleagues with a customer-service focus, as well as outstanding employee benefits.
Under general supervision, the Official Assignment Court Reporter working on an intermittent basis, reports and transcribes verbatim stenographic record of official court proceedings. Stenographic record is defined as using the voice method or machine method. The Official Assignment Court Reporter prepares and certifies transcripts, and, at the direction of the Court, reads the report aloud in court, in accordance with applicable code sections; and performs related tasks within area of assignment.
The Official Assignment Court Reporter is distinguished from an Official Court Reporter in that the classification provides additional courtroom support from time to time on an as-needed basis. Incumbents will be expected to gradually perform a broader range of duties with increasing responsibility and independence as experience is gained. An Official Assignment Court Reporter is expected to qualify for advancement to Official Court Reporter by the end of a fifty-two (52) week probationary period. There is no permanent status in the Official Assignment Court Reporter classification. Upon advancement to Official Court Reporter, incumbents are placed on a six (6) month promotional probation period.