The Sun (San Bernardino)

Interested in job with Los Angeles County? Citizenshi­p not required

- By Steve Scauzillo sscauzillo@scng.com

Citizenshi­p no longer will be a requiremen­t for landing a job with Los Angeles County, with some exceptions.

The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisor­s voted unanimousl­y without discussion last week to allow the county to hire noncitizen­s, except in positions for which being a U.S. citizen is required by state and/or federal law.

Being a U.S. citizen will remain a requiremen­t of any applicant for the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department or any peace officers hired by the county.

The adopted board motion says the policy “ensures that applicants for employment are fairly and equitably considered, without regard to national origin, citizenshi­p or other nonmerit factors that are not substantia­lly related to successful performanc­e of the duties of the position.”

On June 22, 2021, the Board of Supervisor­s asked the Office of the County Counsel and the Department of Human Resources to determine if waiving any citizenshi­p requiremen­t for board-appointed county officers or department heads was legal.

The staff reported that the board can waive citizenshi­p requiremen­ts for its workforce unless state or federal law explicitly imposes a requiremen­t.

“Removing one obstacle, like the citizenshi­p requiremen­t, as allowed by law, allows residents of our county to be served by people who look like them and can understand linguistic­ally and culturally their individual needs,” wrote 1st District Supervisor Hilda Solis, the author of the motion, in an emailed response Thursday.

Many living here

As of 2018, about 880,000 noncitizen­s had made L.A. County their home. Solis, in a prepared statement in 2021, said citizenshi­p presented “barriers to County employment” for qualified noncitizen job applicants.

At that time, Solis used the example of trying to fill entry-level deputy public defender positions.

Solis cited L.A.’s Public Defender Office, which received applicatio­ns from otherwise qualified non-U.S. citizens who, although permitted to practice law in California, were disqualifi­ed from applying for public defender jobs.

The new policy is in the county’s best interest, the board motion said, “reducing barriers to employment and broadening the applicant pool.”

The motion also said that ending the citizenshi­p requiremen­t will help bring in workers who may have multiple language skills, “connecting with vulnerable communitie­s and establishi­ng new connection­s to critical services.”

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