The Budget and Procurement Officer is an essential member of the U.S. Probation Office's leadership team, responsible for developing and managing the annual budget and spending plan. The incumbent prepares, justifies, and executes budget requests; assists with policy development regarding financial, budget, and procurement matters; and develops, maintains, and analyzes budget records and reports.
Duties
- Manage budgetary operations to ensure compliance with internal controls, policies, and procedures of the Federal Judiciary.
- Conduct planning, forecasting, and monitoring of spending, and ensure funds are used appropriately and within approved limits.
- Develop and maintain the annual spending plan; recommend adjustments and reallocations to address projected shortfalls and changing priorities.
- Monitor workload trends and correlated budget allocations to provide projections on budget surplus or shortfalls.
- Provide analysis and recommendations regarding budget and financial matters to executive leadership.
- Coordinate budget submissions and supporting documentation (e.g., annual budget requests, supplemental funding requests, and reallocations) and maintain required approvals and records.
- Track obligations and expenditures throughout the fiscal year to ensure spending aligns with the spending plan, internal controls, and applicable requirements.
- Use a wide variety of manual and automated accounting systems and management tools (e.g., Microsoft Excel or other tools) to develop financial reports based on historic and current data, including statistics on staffing, spending patterns, expense projections, and similar information.
- Prepare required financial reports and maintain organized supporting documentation; develop additional reports, expense projections, and analysis to support executive leadership decision making.
- Maintain and use staffing/pay projection tools to model hiring and promotion scenarios and advise leadership on personnel cost impacts.
- Develop, implement, and maintain financial and procurement policies, procedures, and internal controls, including appropriate separation of duties.
- Serve as project manager on special financial or budget related initiatives.
- Conduct compliance reviews and support internal and external audits; document findings, recommend improvements, and track corrective actions.
- Serve as the point of contact for travel and purchase card programs; review and process travel reimbursements and resolve submission issues as needed.
- Oversee purchasing and procurement activities to ensure the office has needed goods and services.
- Manage and assist with accounts payable and accounts receivable activities, support solicitations, conduct vendor evaluations, maintain purchase documentation, and provide advance review of major purchases.
- Serve as the primary contracting officer for treatment and other services. Lead and guide a team of U.S. Probation Officers or other with respect to timelines of procuring treatment and performing contract negotiations.
- Maintain relevant budget, accounting, and procurement training and certification records and ensure compliance with applicable purchasing standards.
- Actively pursue professional development to better assess workflows, solve problems, and adopt best practices and innovations in budgeting and accounting.
- Supervise and develop procurement staff through work assignments and prioritization, quality review, coaching and training, and performance evaluation.
- Perform other duties as assigned.
Salary
- $72,765 - $180,527/year
- Must be a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident seeking U.S. citizenship.
- The selected candidate will also be required to complete a 10-year background investigation, which includes a fingerprint check through the FBI, as well as a check of financial and credit records, and will then be subject to re-investigation every five years thereafter. Any position offer will be considered provisional until a full suitability determination can be made.
- Employees must use electronic funds transfer for payroll deposit.
- The Court requires employees to adhere to a Code of Conduct as well as specific employee policies and performance expectations.
For placement as a CL 28, the applicant must have a minimum of two years of specialized experience (defined below) OR the equivalent of two years of graduate study (27 semester or 54 quarter hours) at an accredited university in accounting, finance, business administration, or other field closely related to the subject matter of the position.
Additionally, to qualify for this supervisory position, the applicant must have specialized experience that included progressively responsible administrative, technical, professional, supervisory, OR managerial experience that provided an opportunity to gain:
- Skill in developing the interpersonal work relationships needed to lead a team of employees,
- The ability to exercise mature judgment, and
- Knowledge of the basic concepts, principles, and theories of management and the ability to understand the managerial policies applicable to the judiciary unit involved.
SPECIALIZED EXPERIENCE:
Progressively responsible experience in or closely related to the work of the position that has provided the specific knowledge, skills, and abilities necessary to successfully perform the duties of the position. This would include experience in the functional areas of financial management and administration, including budget, accounting, auditing, and/or financial reporting that provided knowledge of the rules, regulations, and terminology associated with financial administration.
Other Information WORK ENVIRONMENT AND PHYSICAL DEMANDS: Work is performed in an office setting; individuals with criminal histories may be present. Occasional, infrequent lifting of boxes up to 20 lbs. may be required. Work may occur at off-site locations or temporary duty stations; occasional travel to other offices may be required. Required Documents
- Application form AO78 (All applicants must complete the "Optional Background Information" section of the AO78 (page 5) for consideration.)
- A letter of interest which clearly outlines your professional qualifications, skills, and experience as it relates to the position
- Current resume
- Performance evaluations for the last two years (if unavailable, please indicate reason)
- College transcripts (if substituting for specialized experience)
Your application packet must be submitted as a single pdf document by email to: cod_hrd@cod.uscourts.gov. Please note "Vacancy Announcement: 2026-03-USPO" in the subject line of the email.
Incomplete applications may not be considered.