Depends on which Dept. (US) youre considering. Some recruit review boards wont even talk to you if you have a certain number or type of moving violation.
sweare at the police officer!!!!!!
As long as you've paid the tickets, there is nothing in such offenses to disqualify a person from working as a Corrections Officer-- although rules regarding these matters vary from state to state. What's most important, of course, is the types of traffic offenses for which the tickets were issued. Driving under the influence (DUI) or driving while intoxicated (DWI) are pretty serious traffic tickets and can have an adverse effect on some employment opportunities. Provided that any tickets of this sort are isolated, they are not likely to prevent your occupational pursuit, but your best course of action would be to enroll in any "traffic school" courses offered by your State Police.
Parking or other traffic infringement tickets are issued by a police officer or other authorized person, depending on local legislation. The title of the issuing officer might be Parking (or Traffic) Officer; this again depends on the locality.
One can become a traffic police officer by applying at the police station of your choice. Traffic police officer are not required to have a degree other than a high school diploma.
Yes they are traffic police
It depends on where they are. In the U.S. very generally speaking, police officers enforce laws, investigate crime, serve warrants, answer emergency calls, and write traffic tickets.
In most places in the U.S. it's 21 or older. Locally to me, you can be a police service tech, which is a person that works traffic accidents and writes tickets, but is not a commissioned officer, at 19, and then once you are 21, you can be become a commissioned officer.
In most places in the U.S. it's 21 or older. Locally to me, you can be a police service tech, which is a person that works traffic accidents and writes tickets, but is not a commissioned officer, at 19, and then once you are 21, you can be become a commissioned officer.
Yes code enforcement officers have all the rights of writing tickets of a police officer do.
stop... A police officer assuming control of that intersection will have precedence over a traffic signal. If their signals are contrary to the traffic signal, you'll follow their signal.
to be a police officer you need to attend a state approved police academy and be state certified in the state you live in.
If the officer is directing traffic, regardless of the sign or signal, the officer's signals take precedence.