Opinion No. 2026-02.

The Ohio Attorney General issued its second formal opinion of the year on April 1, 2026, holding that an individual generally cannot serve simultaneously as a member of a school district board of education and a juvenile court probation officer. A link to the full opinion has been provided above.

This opinion came at the request of a County Prosecutor in response to a probation officer expressing a desire to serve on the board of education of a local school district that was within the county that they served. Accordingly, the Attorney General determined that there were sufficient conflicts of interest between the two positions that render them incompatible. A seven-part test is used when determining whether two public offices are compatible with one another, and all seven factors must point to compatibility in order for an individual to serve in both roles simultaneously.

One of these factors is whether there is “an impermissible conflict of interest between the two positions.” A conflict of interest exists “when an individual’s responsibilities in one position are such as to influence the performance of their duties in the other position” which subject them to “influences which may prevent their decisions from being completely objective.” 1989 Ohio Atty. Gen. Ops. No. 89-052.

Juvenile probation officers often have regular communication with school officials. These officers can conduct home and school visits to check on probationers, administer drug tests, and advise and testify in juvenile court when necessary. Chief probation officers are also responsible for procuring grant money from the Ohio Department of Youth Services, which can then be distributed to schools in the county to provide school resources officers and fund counseling service. O.R.C. 5139.34.

A person holding both positions would be subject to overlapping influences, making it difficult for them to exercise independent judgment. The Attorney General highlighted several potential conflicts, including:

  • Access to confidential records: as a probation officer, the individual would have access to a wide variety of records from law-enforcement and children’s services. A school board may seek to obtain those records in order to take disciplinary action against a student. School officials have a duty to protect student information under FERPA, but they must comply with records requests from juvenile probation departments. A person serving in both positions would have access to confidential information from each position that normally would not be available to the other.
  • Competition among schools for grant funds: Chief probation officers are responsible for writing and submitting grant applications to acquire funding for school districts. The Attorney General argues that a person serving both positions may be tempted to influence grant awards to the greater benefit of their own school district.
  • Questions surrounding the individual’s investigative duties and authorities: Juvenile probation officers possess the powers of regular police officers, including the authority to make arrests. O.R.C. 2301.27(A). The capacity in which the probation officer is acting (i.e. as a board member or as an officer) could confuse parents, teachers, or other school board members. And if the officer’s conduct is challenged in court, issues of liability and qualified immunity could result in the district and the probation department on opposite sides of potential litigation.

If conflicts of interest can be appropriately mitigated, an individual may be permitted to serve in both positions simultaneously. Here the potential conflicts relate to the primary responsibilities of both positions. While it is possible for the school board member to recuse themselves from potential conflicts, the Attorney General cautioned that “constant abstentions” would “prevent a board member form competently fulfilling their duties in that position.” Absent a juvenile court judge’s discretion to reassign, alter, or shift the responsibilities of the probation officer at issue, the two positions are incompatible, and an individual should not be serving in both roles at the same time.

What does this mean for your district? A juvenile court probation officer should not be permitted to simultaneously serve as a public-school board member in the county in which they work, because the two positions are generally incompatible with one another.

Although it is unlikely that the exact scenario addressed in this opinion will occur in your district, the opinion is nonetheless important for all public-school districts in Ohio. School board members are public officials, and there are some restrictions against public officials holding multiple positions. If you have an individual that is interested in running for school board, but they hold another public office or position, consider following factors:

  1. Is either position considered classified employment?
  2. Whether the empowering statutes of either position limit employment in another public position?
  3. Whether one position would be subordinate to the other in any way?
  4. Whether it is physically possible for one person to discharge the duties of both positions?
  5. Are there any impermissible conflicts of interest between the two positions?
  6. Are there any local charter provisions, resolutions, or ordinance that are controlling?
  7. Whether a federal, state, or local departmental regulation is applicable?

The attorney general has argued that all seven of these factors must be resolved in favor of compatibility in order for an individual to hold two offices simultaneously. The fact that someone already holds another public position doesn’t automatically disqualify them, but it should trigger some alarm bells. Work with the individual to determine what serving in both roles would look like in practice and whether any potential issues could arise that would justify keeping the two positions separate.