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HomeGovernment CodeCh. 7Art. 5§ 71656 County Court Employee Rights

§ 71656 County Court Employee Rights

Government Code·California
AI Summary·Official Text·Key Terms·Related Statutes·References
AI SummaryVerified

§ 71656 County Court Employee Rights

Key Takeaways

  • •If you work for a trial court in a big county and were part of the county's civil service system, you can choose to stay in that system for certain hearings or switch to the trial court's protection system.
  • •You have one year after a certain date to decide. If you don't choose, you'll automatically switch to the trial court's system.
  • •Once you switch to the trial court's system, you can't go back.
  • •If you get promoted or move to a job that's not part of the county's civil service system, you'll have to use the trial court's protection system.

Example

Imagine you work at a courthouse in a big county and have been part of the county's civil service system. One day, you get a letter saying you did something wrong at work and might be punished.

Because of this law, you can't switch your protection system until after the problem is completely solved. You have to wait until everything is done and you've used all your chances to fix it.

AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 71656 County Court Employee Rights

Notwithstanding any other provision of this article, in a county of the first class as defined in Section 28022 as of January 1, 2001: (a) As of the implementation date provided in Section 71658, a trial court employee who was a member of a county civil service system shall remain in that system for the sole purposes of evidentiary due process hearings before the county civil service commission as an alternative to the due process hearings provided for in Sections 71653, 71654, and 71655, unless the employee elects, pursuant to subdivision (c), to be subject to the trial court employment protection system provided in this article. (b) One year after the implementation date provided in Section 71658, a trial court employee who was a member of a county civil service system shall be deemed to have elected, pursuant to subdivision (c), to be subject to the trial court employment protection system provided in this article unless the employee has, during that year, submitted to the trial court a signed writing expressly electing the county civil service commission solely for the purposes of evidentiary due process hearings in lieu of the hearings provided for in Sections 71653, 71654, and 71656. However, no election may be made after receiving notice of intended discipline until after the disciplinary action has been finally resolved and the employee has exhausted all remedies related to that action. The one-year period in which to elect the county civil service commission shall be tolled during the period of time when a trial court employee is disabled from making an election because of pending disciplinary action or proceedings. (c) A trial court employee who is subject to the county civil service system may elect at any time to be subject to the trial court employment protection system provided in this article, except that no election may be made after receiving notice of intended discipline until after the disciplinary action has been finally resolved and the employee has exhausted all remedies related to that action. An election to be subject to the trial court employment protection system may not be revoked. (d) A trial court employee who elects to remain in the county civil service system and who later is promoted or transferred into a position that is comparable to a position that is classified as exempt from the county civil service system shall be subject to the trial court employment protection system for all purposes. (e) Trial court employees in a county of the first class eligible for making an election pursuant to subdivisions (a) and (b) shall be deemed county employees for purposes of remaining eligible for evidentiary due process hearings before the county civil service commission. (f) A trial court shall adopt procedures, subject to meet and confer in good faith, that establish a process for election pursuant to this section. (Added by Stats. 2000, Ch. 1010, Sec. 14. Effective January 1, 2001.)

Last verified: January 22, 2026

Key Terms

employmentcounties of the first classprotectioncommissiontrialemployeehearingfine

Related Statutes

  • § 71657 Trial Court Employee Discipline
  • § 71650 Trial Court Employee Protections
  • § 71651 Trial Court Employee Discipline
  • § 71653 Court Employee Discipline Hearings
  • § 71654 Trial Court Review Process

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Government Code. Section 71656.
View Official Source