SEC. 3.1-295. JUVENILE PROBATION COMMISSION.
§ 3.1-295
This section sets disclosure requirements for positions within the Juvenile Probation Department. Commissioners must disclose financial interests in any business providing or potentially providing equipment, supplies, or services to the department; other senior positions must disclose broader financial information.
People in certain jobs at the Juvenile Probation Department must tell the city about their money and property. Commissioners have to report if they own or invest in any business that sells or could sell things to the department. Other top officials (like the Chief Probation Officer and Chief Financial Officer) must disclose even more—all their property, investments, and income from any source.
- Complex:The disclosure rule references a separate 'Disclosure Category 1' (implied but not defined in this section), making it difficult to understand what the Commissioner must disclose compared to other positions without consulting related Code sections.
AI-generated · claude-haiku-4-5 · informational only, not legal advice.
Official text
Disclosure Category 2. Persons in this disclosure category shall disclose all interests in real property, investments, and business positions in any business entity, and income from any source, that provides or contracts to provide to the Juvenile Probation Department, any equipment, supplies, machinery, materials, or services, or has done so within two years prior to the filing of any statement of economic interest, or may foreseeably do so in the future.
Designated Positions
Disclosure Categories
Commissioner
2
Chief Probation Officer
1
Assistant Chief Probation Officer
1
Deputy Director of Administrative Services
1
Director of Research & Planning
1
Chief Financial Officer
1
(Added by Ord. 71-00, File No. 000358, App. 4/28/2000; amended by Ord. 278-18, File No. 180934, App. 11/20/2018, Eff. 12/21/2018; Ord. 13-23, File No. 221025, App. 2/9/2023, Eff. 3/12/2023)
(Derivation: Former Administrative Code Section 58.250)