This question is for official court reporters, especially California ones. I'm a student who is interested in working as an official once I obtain my license. When new hires begin working in court, do reporters always start off as per diem or do they get assigned as a permanent official? I know some job annoucements that I look through, from time to time, mention applicants are put on an eligibility list. Some of these lists are for counties dying for court reporters

Thanks,

Tricia

Views: 9

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

In my county they hire they officials from the per diem pool. I've never heard of someone getting an officialship straight out of school, but I do know some people who started working daily in court right out of school. It took them about a year to get the officialship with benefits. They had to pass a "readability test" which is like a realtime test.
Are you looking at Federal or Superior? I think it's different for each. But for both, I think they want you to have at least a couple of years of experience.

Federal is looking for reporters who do realtime for the judges. So if you're prepared to do realtime, you'll have a leg up, so to speak.
Thank you, everyone, for the insight

RSS

© 2024   Created by Kelli Combs (admin).   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service