Hardin County Ohio Government: Structure and Services

Hardin County occupies approximately 470 square miles in northwest-central Ohio and operates under the same constitutional framework governing all 88 Ohio counties. The county seat is Kenton, Ohio, which hosts the primary administrative facilities for elected officials and county agencies. This page covers the structural composition of Hardin County's government, the services it delivers to residents, and the regulatory and jurisdictional boundaries that define its authority.

Definition and scope

Hardin County government is a unit of local government established under Ohio Revised Code Title 3 (Counties), which defines the formation, powers, and responsibilities of Ohio's county governments. As one of Ohio's 88 counties, Hardin County does not operate as an independent municipality but as an administrative subdivision of the state, delegated specific functions by the Ohio General Assembly.

The county's governing framework applies to unincorporated areas of Hardin County and to functions that span municipal boundaries, such as county-level courts, property records, and public health services. Kenton, Ada, Forest, Dunkirk, and McGuffey each operate as municipalities with their own charters or statutory authority under Ohio law, separate from county administration. Ohio township government units within Hardin County — including Blanchard, Buck, Cessna, and 14 other townships — maintain independent fiscal and road maintenance functions, though they coordinate with county offices on certain services.

For broader context on how Hardin County fits within Ohio's layered government structure, the Ohio county government structure reference outlines the constitutional and statutory framework applicable to all 88 counties.

Scope limitations: This page covers Hardin County's governmental structure and services under Ohio law. Federal programs operating within Hardin County — including USDA Rural Development offices, Social Security Administration field services, and federal court jurisdiction — fall outside county government authority and are not covered here. Municipal governments within the county operate under separate statutory authority and are not governed by the Board of County Commissioners.

How it works

Hardin County government operates through elected officials and appointed department heads structured as follows:

  1. Board of County Commissioners — Three commissioners elected to staggered 4-year terms under Ohio Revised Code §305.01. The Board functions as the county's primary legislative and executive body, adopting the annual budget, authorizing contracts, and overseeing most county departments.
  2. County Auditor — Administers property assessment and taxation, maintains the county's financial records, and issues warrants for payment. The Hardin County Auditor's office maintains the county's real property database, which reflects assessed values for approximately 20,000 parcels countywide.
  3. County Sheriff — Provides law enforcement services to unincorporated areas and operates the county jail. The Hardin County Sheriff's Office is the primary law enforcement agency for areas outside Kenton and other municipal police jurisdictions.
  4. County Prosecutor — Serves as the county's chief legal officer, prosecuting criminal cases in Hardin County Common Pleas Court and advising county offices on legal matters.
  5. County Recorder — Maintains official records of deeds, mortgages, and liens. Recording fees and indexing standards follow those set in Ohio Revised Code Chapter 317.
  6. County Treasurer — Collects real estate taxes, invests county funds, and manages tax settlements between the county, townships, municipalities, and school districts.
  7. County Engineer — Manages county roads and bridges; Hardin County maintains approximately 400 miles of county-maintained roadway under the Engineer's jurisdiction.
  8. Hardin County Common Pleas Court — The court of general jurisdiction handling felony criminal cases, civil disputes above $15,000, domestic relations, and juvenile matters under Ohio Revised Code §2305.01.
  9. Hardin County Court of Common Pleas — Probate Division — Handles estate administration, guardianships, and adoptions.
  10. Hardin County Municipal Court — Serves Kenton and exercises jurisdiction over misdemeanor criminal matters and civil cases up to $15,000.

The Ohio executive branch oversees state agencies that operate field offices or deliver programs within Hardin County, including the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services, Ohio Department of Health, and Ohio Department of Transportation District 1 (which covers northwest Ohio including Hardin County).

Common scenarios

Residents and businesses interact with Hardin County government through predictable service pathways:

Decision boundaries

Understanding which level of government handles a given function prevents misdirected service requests:

County authority vs. municipal authority: Within the city of Kenton or the village of Ada, zoning enforcement, municipal utilities, and local ordinances fall under those municipalities' jurisdiction — not the Board of County Commissioners. County authority in incorporated areas is generally limited to tax collection, court services, and recording functions.

County authority vs. state agency authority: The Ohio Department of Transportation — not the county — maintains US Route 68 and State Route 309 within Hardin County. The county engineer maintains only county-designated roads. Similarly, environmental permits for facilities in Hardin County are issued by the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency, not by the county.

County authority vs. township authority: Hardin County's 16 townships each maintain independent road budgets, zoning authority (where adopted), and cemetery operations. The Board of County Commissioners cannot override township trustee decisions on road maintenance or local zoning within unincorporated township territory.

Hardin County government, as a state subdivision, cannot enact laws that conflict with Ohio Revised Code or Ohio Administrative Code. All county ordinances and resolutions are subordinate to state statute. The full index of Ohio government resources, including statewide agency contacts and constitutional references, is available at the Ohio government authority home.

References