On a cool Saturday in early June, the department hosted "Women In Law Enforcement Career Day" at its Whittier headquarters. The tag line, "Women Empowering Women," was reflected in the crowds of potential applicants speaking to current deputies, who answered questions about pay scale, an 18-week training academy and starting duties in the court system or county jail.
In a pamphlet handed out at the event, Sheriff Lee Baca, who also spoke to the candidates, mentioned that women serve "at virtually every rank and position throughout the department."
The recruitment is an effort to provide more opportunity for qualified female deputies and comply with a consent decree that arose out of a 1980 sexual discrimination lawsuit.
Almost 1,400 potential recruits attended the career fair. Of those, 1,100 took a written exam that measures reading interpretation and asks no law enforcement questions. The 750 candidates who passed the test have been invited back for oral interviews Jun 19 and 26, according to Sgt. Angela Walton.
The department set a goal, a year ago, to reach a 20.11 percent threshold of female deputies of the 10,016 sworn personnel, according to its website.