Hi Bruce,
Here are a few things I want to add to my response above.
I did not know if you were asking about a free-standing deck or a deck attached to the structure, there are different in their construction, with free-standing decks requiring more design and construction to attain the required stability.
I did not know if you were asking about a deck high enough to be walked under, such as a deck at second floor height, or a lower deck just a foot or two off the ground.
The higher the deck is, the taller the masonry piers are, the more problems which will be encountered, the more likely there will not be a prescriptive design for its construction, meaning that the deck would need to be engineered.
In the Prescriptive Residential Wood Deck Construction Guide referenced in my response above, on page 14, Figures 21 and 22, addresses free-standing decks and has additional requirements for footings, beams, posts, and stability.
Again, once the design and construction varies from this prescriptive guide, engineering would be required. Where wood posts can be braced against, masonry piers would not be braced against, not unless reinforced.
This is a plan showing masonry piers (note: place cursor over link, right click, select "Open in New Window" -
http://www.chesterfield.gov/CommunityDe ... etails.pdf - page 11 of 14 at bottom), however, it shows no details for the construction of those piers. The construction of those piers would then require engineering and which would specify the anchoring of the pier to the footing, the reinforcement within the pier, and the anchoring of the pier to the deck above.
Do you have any more specific information, such as height above grade, free standing or attached, etc.?