Parks & Recreation
Parks Supervisor
Posting Expires: February 20, 2026
Salary: $25.97 hourly
General Description and Classification Standards:
This position oversees and directs staff to maintain parks and amenities within the COA, ensuring maintenance services are scheduled, planned, and recorded to meet performance standards. They lead training efforts to enforce safety precautions when operating equipment efficiently. Responsibilities include maintaining high standards, preparing internal memoranda, inspection reports, evaluations, and accident reports. Additionally, they supervise general ground maintenance activities, conduct park inspections, and complete work orders promptly. Duties involve performing maintenance tasks such as removing tree limbs and debris, mowing grass, pruning, and fixing benches. They ensure park cleanliness and safety by removing trash, emptying garbage cans, and inspecting playgrounds. The supervisor ensures the crew is equipped and ready for daily tasks, including landscape work and special projects. They lead by example, instructing team members, holding them accountable for assignments, and handling paperwork with computer proficiency.
Supervision Received:
Works under very general supervision. May work independently or collaborate with other workers to complete assigned tasks.
Essential Duties and Responsibilities: These are typical responsibilities for this position and should not be construed as exclusive or all inclusive.
The above statements reflect the general duties, responsibilities and competencies considered necessary to perform the essential duties and responsibilities of the job and should not be considered as a detailed description of all the work requirements of the position. COA may change the specific job duties with or without prior notice based on the needs of the organization.
Knowledge Skills and Abilities: This is a partial listing of necessary knowledge, skills, and abilities required to perform the job successfully, it is not an exhaustive list.
The City of Atlanta remains a transportation hub, not just for the country but also for the world: Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport is one of the nations busiest in daily passenger flights. Direct flights to Europe, South America, and Asia have made metro Atlanta easily accessible to the more than 1,000 international businesses that operate here and the more than 50 countries that have representation in the city through consulates, trade offices, and chambers of commerce. The city has emerged as a banking center and is the world headquarters for 13 Fortune 500 companies.
Atlanta is the Capital city of the southeast, a city of the future with strong ties to its past. The old in new Atlanta is the soul of the city, the heritage that enhances the quality of life in a contemporary city. In the turbulent 60's, Atlanta was "the city too busy to hate." And today, in the 21st Century, Atlanta is the "city not too busy to care".
For more than four decades Atlanta has been linked to the civil rights movement. Civil Rights leaders moved forward, they were the visionaries who saw a new south, a new Atlanta. They believed in peace. They made monumental sacrifices for that peace. And because of them Atlanta became a fast-pace modern city which opened its doors to the 1996 Olympics.
Die-hard Southerners view Atlanta as the heart of the Old Confederacy; Atlanta has become the best example of the New South, a fast-paced modern city proud of its heritage.
In the past two decades Atlanta has experienced unprecedented growth -- the official city population remains steady, at about 420,000, but the metro population has grown in the past decade by nearly 40%, from 2.9 million to 4.1 million people. A good measure of this growth is the ever-changing downtown skyline, along with skyscrapers constructed in the Midtown, Buckhead, and outer perimeter (fringing I-285) business districts.
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