Radio Dispatcher
City of Seattle
Posted: January 7, 2026 (8 days ago)
This job has been posted for 1-2 weeks. Still a good time to apply.
National Park Service
Department of the Interior
Location
Boulder City, Nevada
Salary
$63,046 - $81,964
per year
Type
Closes
Base salary range: $46,479 - $60,424
Typical requirements: 1 year specialized experience at GS-7. Graduate study or significant experience.
Note: Actual salary includes locality pay (15-40%+ depending on location).
This job involves leading a team of dispatchers in a national park setting, coordinating emergency responses, and ensuring public safety for visitors and resources at Lake Mead National Recreation Area.
It suits someone with experience in high-pressure communication roles, strong leadership skills, and a passion for protecting natural environments.
Ideal candidates are reliable team players who can handle shift work and occasional travel.
Positions are located in Lake Mead National Recreation Area, in the Visitor and Resource Protection Division. All applications submitted by 11:59 (EST) on the closing day will receive consideration.
Requirements Continued... You may be required to travel overnight away from home up to 2 nights per month. You must obtain a government charge card for travel purposes.
You may be required to complete training and obtain/maintain a government charge card with travel and/or purchase authority.
Applicants must be at least (1)18 years old or (2) at least 16 years old and: (a) Have graduated from high school or been awarded a certificate equivalent to graduating from high school; or (b) Have completed a formal vocational training program; or (c) Have received a statement from school authorities agreeing with their preference for employment rather than continuing their education; or (d) Be currently enrolled in a secondary school and either work only during school vacation periods or work part-time during the school year under a formal student employment program.
Probationary Period: As a condition of employment for accepting this position, you will be required to serve a 1-year probationary period during which your fitness and whether your continued employment advances the public interest will be evaluated.
This probationary period is an extension of the appointment process and therefore requires the agency to determine if continued employment would advance the public interest, meet the organization goals and mission of the agency, and/or otherwise promote the efficiency of the service.
In determining if your employment advances the public interest, the agency will consider: your performance and conduct; the needs and interests of the agency; whether your continued employment would advance organizational goals of the agency or the Government; and whether your continued employment would advance the efficiency of the Federal service.
Under applicable law, the employment of an individual serving a probationary or trial period automatically terminates when that period ends unless the agency affirmatively certifies, in writing, that the individual's employment should continue and that their appointment should be finalized.
In the absence of agency action to affirmatively certify continued employment beyond the probationary or trial period, such appointments are terminated.
Upon completion of your probationary period your employment will be terminated unless you receive certification, in writing, that your continued employment advances the public interest.
*End of Requirements* All qualifications must be met by the closing date of this announcement-01/21/2026-unless otherwise stated in this vacancy announcement.
Credit will be given for all appropriate qualifying experience.
For current Federal employees, if hours worked per week are not included on your resume, you must submit a non-award SF-50 for each federal position listed as part of your application to be used to validate your work schedule and determine the amount of qualifying experience that you will be granted.
An award SF-50 will not be acceptable documentation for which to consider your amount of qualifying experience.
For all other applicants who are not current federal employees, your resume must state either "full-time" (or "40 hours a week") or "part-time" with the number of hours worked per week to ensure proper crediting of specialized experience.
Failure to adequately provide information needed to determine number of hours worked in each position may result in that time not being credited when evaluating qualifying experience.
For periods of time that reflect military service, the DD-214 or Statement of Service is sufficient to meet the full and/or part-time hours requirement as the service dates will be reflected.
EXPERIENCE: At least one full year of specialized experience comparable in scope and responsibility to the GS-08 grade level in the Federal service (obtained in either the public or private sectors).
Examples of specialized experience include: Using in-depth knowledge of dispatch operating systems, databases, and equipment, resolving unusual and difficult technical problems with various radio/telephone systems, computer databases/systems, and technical equipment used in a dispatch center; handling 9-1-1 telephone, fire, law enforcement, medical, search and rescue, maintenance and other emergency service calls; assisting other dispatchers in resolving both emergency and non-emergency calls for service and the appropriate response to emergency incidents or reports of criminal activity; coordinating responses for a wide variety of complex public safety related incidents and operations which can involve multiple units, competing jurisdictions, remoteness/highly urbanized, and high visibility/media interest.
You must include hours per week worked.
Volunteer Experience: Experience refers to paid and unpaid experience, including volunteer work done through National Service programs (e.g., Peace Corps, AmeriCorps) and other organizations (e.g., professional; philanthropic; religious; spiritual; community, student, social).
Volunteer work helps build critical competencies, knowledge, and skills and can provide valuable training and experience that translates directly to paid employment.
You will receive credit for all qualifying experience, including volunteer experience.
CTAP/ICTAP Statement: Current surplus and current or former displaced Federal individuals who have special priority selection rights under the Agency Career Transition Assistance Program (CTAP) or the Interagency Career Transition Assistance Program (ICTAP) must be well qualified for the position to receive consideration for special priority selection.
Well qualified means that the applicant meets the following: OPM qualification standards for the position; all selective placement factors, where applicable; special qualifying conditions that OPM has approved for the position, where applicable; is physically qualified with reasonable accommodation, where appropriate to satisfactorily perform the duties of the position upon entry; and is rated by the organization at least at the well qualified level on all competencies.
Federal employees seeking CTAP/ICTAP eligibility must submit proof that they meet the requirements of 5 CFR 330.605(2) for CTAP and 5 CFR 330.704 for ICTAP.
This includes a copy of the agency notice, a copy of their most recent Performance Rating, and a copy of their most recent SF-50 noting current position, grade level, and duty location.
Documentation for Interagency/Career Transition Assistance Plan consideration if you are a displaced Federal employee within the local commuting area.
You must include: 1) Proof you are a displaced Federal employee, e.g., RIF Separation Notice, Notice of Proposed Removal, etc; 2) SF-50s (Notifications of Personnel Action) showing career/conditional tenure competitive status, promotion potential and duty location; and 3) your most recent performance appraisal.
To exercise selection priority, displaced or surplus Federal employees must be rated well-qualified or above 85 on the rating criteria for this position. Major Duties:
Major Duties Include: Leads day to day operations in the Interagency Communications Center, which provides logistical support for non-emergency communications and complex all-risk emergency incidents including search and rescue, structural fire, wildland fire, and aviation/vessel tracking and uses knowledge to focus on law enforcement and emergency medical dispatch.
Oversees full on-site (query and input) to National Criminal Information Network (NCIC), National Law Enforcement Telecommunications System (NLETS), and Nevada Criminal Justice Information Systems (NCJIS), and Arizona Criminal Justice Information Systems (ACJIS).
As a certified APCO (Association of Public-Safety Communications Officials) or equivalent Communications Training Officer instructs all dispatch staff personnel for Public Safety Dispatcher certification and serve as a subject matter expert during training course development.
Assists in creating and developing the training program for dispatchers and identifies development and training needs of employees to provide career development opportunities.
Training includes utilizing the Incident Management Analysis and Reporting System (IMARS) and Computer Aided Dispatch (CAD) to process records requests.
Implements and revises plans, guidelines, and procedures used in the daily operation of an emergency communications center and assists in establishing and accomplishing program priorities for the dispatch operation.
Provides technical leadership in telecommunications support, database management, and investigative analysis functions.
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