Title 42, Chapter 8, Section 101
( 42-8-101)
(a) There is created the County and Municipal Probation Advisory Council, to be composed of one superior court judge designated by The Council of Superior Court Judges of Georgia, one state court judge designated by The Council of State Court Judges of Georgia, one municipal court judge designated by the Council of Municipal Court Judges of Georgia, one sheriff appointed by the Governor, one probate court judge designated by The Council of Probate Court Judges of Georgia, one magistrate designated by the Council of Magistrate Court Judges, the commissioner of corrections or his or her designee, one public probation officer appointed by the Governor, one private probation officer or individual with expertise in private probation services by virtue of his or her training or employment appointed by the Governor, one mayor or member of a municipal governing authority appointed by the Governor, and one county commissioner appointed by the Governor. Members of the council appointed by the Governor shall be appointed for terms of office of four years. With the exceptions of the public probation officer, the county commissioner, the sheriff, the mayor or member of a municipal governing authority, and the commissioner of corrections, each designee or representative shall be employed in their representative capacity in a judicial circuit operating under a contract with a private corporation, enterprise, or agency as provided under Code Section 42-8-100. No person shall serve beyond the time he or she holds the office or employment by reason of which he or she was initially eligible for appointment. In the event of death, resignation, disqualification, or removal for any reason of any member of the council, the vacancy shall be filled in the same manner as the original appointment and any successor shall serve for the unexpired term. Such council shall promulgate rules and regulations regarding contracts or agreements for probation services and the conduct of business by private entities providing probation services as authorized by this article. (b) The business of the council shall be conducted in the following
manner: (1) The council shall annually elect a chairperson and a vice
chairperson from among its membership. The offices of chairperson
and vice chairperson shall be filled in such a manner that they
are not held in succeeding years by representatives of the same
component (law enforcement, courts, corrections) of the criminal
justice system; (2) The council shall meet at such times and places as it shall
determine necessary or convenient to perform its duties. The
council shall also meet on the call of the chairperson or at the
written request of three of its members; (3) The council shall maintain minutes of its meetings and such
other records as it deems necessary; and (4) The council shall adopt such rules for the transaction of its
business as it shall desire and may appoint such committees as it
considers necessary to carry out its business and duties. (c) Members of the council shall serve without compensation but
shall receive the same expense allowance per day as that received by
a member of the General Assembly for each day such member of the
council is in attendance at a meeting of such council, plus either
reimbursement for actual transportation costs while traveling by
public carrier or the same mileage allowance for use of a personal
motor vehicle in connection with such attendance as members of the
General Assembly receive. Payment of such expense and travel
allowance shall be subject to availability of funds and shall be in
lieu of any per diem, allowance, or other remuneration now received
by any such member for such attendance. (d) The council is assigned to the Administrative Office of the
Courts for administrative purposes only. The funds necessary to
carry out the provisions of this article shall come from funds
appropriated to or otherwise available to the council. The council
is authorized to accept and use grants of funds for the purpose of
carrying out the provisions of this article. (e) The council shall have the following powers and duties: (1) To promulgate rules and regulations for the administration of
the council, including rules of procedure for its internal
management and control; (2) To review the uniform professional standards for private probation officers and uniform contract standards for private probation contracts established in Code Section 42-8-102 and submit a report with its recommendations to the General Assembly; (3) To promulgate rules and regulations establishing a 40 hour
initial orientation for newly hired private probation officers and
for 20 hours per annum of continuing education for private
probation officers, provided that the 40 hour initial orientation
shall not be required of any person who has successfully completed
a probation or parole officer basic course of training certified
by the Georgia Peace Officer Standards and Training Council or any
private probation officer who has been employed by a private
probation corporation, enterprise, or agency for at least six
months as of July 1, 1996; (4) To promulgate rules and regulations relative to the
enforcement of the provisions of this article, which enforcement
mechanisms may include, but are not limited to, the imposition of
sanctions and fines and the voiding of contracts; (5) To promulgate rules and regulations establishing registration for any private corporation, enterprise, or agency providing probation services under the provisions of this article, subject to the provisions of subsection (a) of Code Section 42-8-107; (6) To produce an annual summary report. Such report shall not
contain information identifying individual private corporations,
nonprofit corporations, or enterprises or their contracts; and (7) To promulgate rules and regulations requiring criminal record checks of private probation officers and establishing procedures for such criminal record checks. Such rules and regulations shall require a private probation entity to conduct a criminal history records check, as provided in Code Section 35-3-34, for all private probation officers employed by that entity; and to certify the results of such criminal history records check to the council, in such detail as the council may require. Notwithstanding Code Section 35-3-38 or any other provision of law, a private probation entity shall, upon request, communicate criminal history record information on a private probation officer to the Administrative Office of the Courts and the County and Municipal Probation Advisory Council. (f) The initial standards, rules, and regulations of the County and
Municipal Probation Advisory Council promulgated under this article
shall become effective on January 1, 1996. |