State of Maryland

AGRICULTURAL LABORATORY SCIENTIST II (#000079)

- Hourly / - BiWeekly /
- Monthly / $60,801.00-$101,897.00 Yearly


GRADE

0017

CLASS ATTRIBUTES

SKILLED SERVICE          BARGAINING UNIT: G          NCP        

NATURE OF WORK

An Agricultural Laboratory Scientist II is the intermediate level of work performing veterinary analytical, diagnostic, and epidemiological laboratory testing in compliance with applicable local, State and federal regulations and standards for the purpose of controlling and eradicating animal diseases.  Employees in this classification do not supervise other positions.  

Employees in this classification receive intermediate supervision from a Veterinarian or other designated official.  The work is performed in a laboratory setting.  Employees are required to observe infection control precautions in order to prevent contamination and the spread of disease.  The work may require the lifting and moving of laboratory equipment and materials.              

Positions in this classification are evaluated using the classification job evaluation methodology.  The use of this method involves comparing assigned duties and responsibilities of a position to the job criteria found in the Nature of Work and Examples of Work Sections of the class specification.  

The Agricultural Laboratory Scientist I, Agricultural Laboratory Scientist II, and Agricultural Laboratory Scientist III are differentiated on the basis of the degree of supervisory control exercised by the supervisor over these employees.  The Agricultural Laboratory Scientist I performs duties under close supervision.  The Agricultural Laboratory Scientist II performs duties under close supervision at times and under general supervision at other times depending upon the complexity of the specific duty being performed.   The Agricultural Laboratory Scientist III performs the full range of duties and responsibilities under general supervision.

EXAMPLES OF WORK

Performs biological or chemical testing and analyses of body fluids, tissues, feces, and other biological samples from animals for the purpose of diagnosing and identifying animal diseases;

Executes assays for a variety of animals, including farm animals, such as horses, cows and chickens; companion animals, such as birds, cats and dogs; and wild animals, such as deer, rabbits, squirrels, and bats;

Conducts tests in an assigned area, such as serology, virology, parasitology, mycology, hematology, or bacteriology;

Isolates and identifies endemic and exotic pathogens in animal specimens submitted by pathologists, practicing veterinarians, and allied animal health agencies by using techniques in bioanalysis, chemical, or microbiological analysis;

Isolates bacteria from urine samples and performs routine urinalysis including microscopic examination of urine sediment;

Performs virological diagnostic tests including virus isolation in cell culture and embryonated eggs, serum neutralization tests, enzyme linked immunosorbant assays, fluorescent antibody tests, and latex agglutination tests;

Isolates and identifies bacteria, fungi, and yeasts from tissues of live animals in order to make diagnoses of disease by identifying and determining growth of bacterial, fungal, or viral pathogens;

Ensures consumer confidence by culturing and identifying pathogenic microorganisms in animal tissues, body fluids, milk, and eggs submitted to the laboratory or collected from animals submitted for necropsy;

Carries out regulatory functions in compliance with local, State and federal regulations and standards by testing samples from horses for diseases including contagious Equine Metritis and Equine Infectious Anemia; Utilizes techniques, such as the Western Blot, to identify disease in animals;

Performs special tests and surveys and participates in special projects as required;

Prepares reports of findings and provides test results to veterinarians, animal owners or other submitters of specimens;

Requisitions laboratory supplies;

Operates specialized laboratory equipment and instruments, such as gas chromatographs, biological hoods, microprocessor analyzers, anaerobic systems, spectrophotometers, hemophotometers, pH meters, and microscopes;

Reviews scientific publications and professional journals and attends scientific seminars and workshops in order to stay abreast of current trends, research and technological developments;

Performs other related duties.

KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS AND ABILITIES

Knowledge of college-level biology or chemistry applicable to animal health laboratory practice in biochemistry, microbiology, virology, immunology, bacteriology, serology, parasitology, chromatology, and molecular biology;

Knowledge of laboratory procedures, practices, methods and instrumentation;

Knowledge of mathematics, including algebra and statistics;

Knowledge of computer software used for diagnostic tests;

Skill in understanding and following laboratory procedures and policies;

Skill in conducting analyses, analyzing test data, and drawing accurate conclusions;

Skill in the application of universal precautions in handling potentially infectious biological materials and hazardous chemicals;

Ability to maintain accurate records and prepare scientific reports;

Ability to operate and maintain specialized laboratory equipment;

Ability to streak and isolate cultures;

Ability to communicate effectively.

MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS

Experience: Five years of experience, one year of experience performing laboratory analysis work in a biological, chemical, food, commercial, animal health, medical or public health laboratory and an additional four years of experience performing veterinary analytical, diagnostic, and epidemiological laboratory testing work.

Notes:

1. Candidates may substitute the possession of a Bachelor's degree in the biological or chemical sciences from an accredited college or university including one course in general microbiology and one year of experience performing laboratory analysis work in a biological, chemical, food, commercial, animal health, medical or public health laboratory for the required experience.

2. Candidates may substitute the possession of a Master’s degree in the chemical or biological sciences from an accredited college or university for the required experience.

3. Candidates may substitute U.S. Armed Forces military  service experience as a commissioned officer in natural resources management and biological science classification or natural resources management and biological science specialty codes in the animal science field of work on a year-for-year basis for the required experience.  

LICENSES, REGISTRATIONS AND CERTIFICATIONS

NOT APPLICABLE.

SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS

1. Candidates for some positions may be given a medical examination to rule out color blindness.

2. Employees in this classification must be willing to undergo and maintain rabies immunization.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Class specifications are broad descriptions covering groups of positions used by various State departments and agencies. Position descriptions maintained by the using department or agency specifically address the essential job functions of each position.

This is a Skilled Service classification in the State Personnel Management System.  All positions in this classification are Skilled Service positions.  Some positions in Skilled Service classifications may be designated Special Appointment in accordance with the State Personnel and Pensions Article, Section 6-405, Annotated Code of Maryland.  

This classification is assigned to Bargaining Unit G, Engineering, Scientific and Administrative Professionals classes.  As provided by the State Personnel and Pensions Article, Section 3-102, special appointment, temporary, contractual, supervisory, managerial and confidential employees are excluded from collective bargaining.  Additionally, certain executive branch agencies are exempt from collective bargaining and all positions in those agencies are excluded from collective bargaining.  

This classification is one level in a Non-Competitive Promotion (NCP) series.  NCP promotions are promotions by which employees may advance in grade and class level from trainee to full performance level in a classification series.  In order to be non-competitively promoted to the next level in a NCP series, an    employee must: 1) perform the main purpose of the class, as defined by the Nature of Work section of the class specification; 2) receive the type of supervision defined in the class specification and 3) meet the minimum qualifications of the classification.

Date Revised

January 1, 2024

Approved By

Director, Division of Classification and Salary

CLASS: 000079; REV: 1/1/2024;

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