Hancock County, Indiana: Government Structure and Services

Hancock County is one of Indiana's 92 counties, situated directly east of Marion County and forming part of the Indianapolis metropolitan statistical area. Its government operates under the constitutional and statutory framework established by the Indiana Code, administered through elected county officers and appointed departments. This page describes the structural organization of Hancock County government, the services it delivers, the boundaries of county authority, and the points at which county jurisdiction intersects with or yields to state and municipal governance.

Definition and scope

Hancock County was established by the Indiana General Assembly in 1828 and covers approximately 306 square miles (U.S. Census Bureau, Hancock County QuickFacts). The county seat is Greenfield. County government in Indiana functions as a political subdivision of the state — not an independent sovereign — meaning its powers are granted by, and subject to, the Indiana Code (Title 36, Article 2) (Indiana General Assembly, IC 36-2).

The county serves a resident population that the Census Bureau estimated at approximately 82,000 persons as of 2022. County government does not subsume municipalities: the City of Greenfield and towns such as Fortville, McCordsville, New Palestine, and Shirley operate as legally distinct municipal governments within county boundaries. County authority applies countywide, including within incorporated areas, for certain functions (recording, elections, courts), while for others — zoning, local ordinances, road maintenance — authority is divided between county and municipal jurisdictions.

Scope limitations: This page covers Hancock County's governmental structure under Indiana state law. Federal law, federal agencies, and federal courts operate independently of and concurrently with county and state government. Matters governed exclusively by federal statute — immigration, federal taxation, federal benefits programs — fall outside county authority. Operations of the Greenfield-Central Community School Corporation and other school corporations within the county are governed separately under Indiana school corporations statutory framework.

How it works

Hancock County government is organized around a board of commissioners and a county council, a structural division that applies across Indiana's non-charter counties (IC 36-2-2 and IC 36-2-3).

The structural breakdown of county governance includes:

  1. Board of County Commissioners — A 3-member executive and administrative body. Commissioners manage county property, execute contracts, oversee county roads and bridges, and administer county departments. Each commissioner represents one of 3 geographic districts and serves a 4-year term.
  2. County Council — A 7-member fiscal body (4 district seats, 3 at-large seats). The council sets tax rates, appropriates funds, and must approve expenditures beyond established departmental budgets. Council members serve 4-year terms.
  3. Elected County Officers — Indiana statute mandates election of the county auditor, treasurer, recorder, assessor, surveyor, coroner, sheriff, clerk of circuit court, and prosecutor. Each office carries distinct statutory duties defined in IC Title 36.
  4. County Courts — Hancock County operates a Circuit Court and a Superior Court. The Circuit Court has general jurisdiction; the Superior Court handles civil, criminal, and family matters under concurrent jurisdiction established by the Indiana General Assembly.
  5. Appointed Departments and Boards — Including the county plan commission, board of zoning appeals, health department, highway department, and emergency management. These bodies are created by statute or commissioner ordinance and are accountable to the commissioners or to state agencies.

The county highway department maintains county roads distinct from state routes managed by the Indiana Department of Transportation and from municipal streets maintained by city or town public works departments. Property assessment is conducted under standards set by the Indiana Department of Local Government Finance, which also reviews county budget submissions.

Common scenarios

Residents and professionals interact with Hancock County government across a predictable set of administrative and legal contexts:

Decision boundaries

The division of authority among county, municipal, township, and state entities determines which office has jurisdiction over a given matter. Contrasting county versus municipal authority clarifies the most common points of confusion:

County authority extends to unincorporated territory for zoning and planning, applies countywide for recording and courts, and handles property tax administration for all parcels regardless of municipal incorporation status.

Municipal authority (City of Greenfield; towns of Fortville, McCordsville, New Palestine) governs local ordinances, municipal utilities, city/town streets, and local licensing within incorporated boundaries. Municipalities are not subordinate to the county commissioners for their internal operations.

Township authority — Hancock County contains 14 townships, each with a trustee and board. Township government handles local poor relief (township assistance), fire protection in unincorporated areas, and cemetery maintenance (IC 36-6). Township operations are distinct from both county and municipal government. Full structural context for this layer is covered under Indiana township government.

State agency jurisdiction supersedes or preempts county action in regulated sectors. Environmental permits in Hancock County are issued and enforced by the Indiana Department of Environmental Management. Professional licensing — contractors, health professionals, financial services — falls under state licensing boards rather than county government.

For a comprehensive overview of how all these structures fit within Indiana's governmental framework, the Indiana Government Authority index provides the full county-by-county and agency-by-agency reference structure. Adjacent county government profiles, including Hamilton County to the north and Shelby County to the south, document comparable structural patterns where county boundaries intersect with Hancock County's service area.

References