Franklin County Iowa Government: Structure, Services, and Administration

Franklin County is one of Iowa's 99 counties, located in north-central Iowa with Hampton serving as the county seat. This page covers the administrative structure of Franklin County's government, the primary public services it delivers, the operational mechanisms governing those services, and the boundaries separating county jurisdiction from state and municipal authority. Accurate navigation of Franklin County's services requires understanding how county-level governance fits within Iowa's broader intergovernmental framework.

Definition and scope

Franklin County operates under the Iowa Code framework that governs all Iowa county governments (Iowa Code Chapter 331), which establishes counties as political subdivisions of the state. The county covers approximately 582 square miles and had a population of approximately 10,070 residents according to the U.S. Census Bureau 2020 decennial count.

Governance is vested in a 3-member Board of Supervisors, elected to 4-year staggered terms. This body holds authority over the county budget, land use zoning in unincorporated areas, secondary road administration, and general county administration. The Board of Supervisors does not govern municipalities within the county — Hampton, Sheffield, Hampton, Coulter, Geneva, Hansell, Latimer, Popejoy, and Rowan each retain independent municipal governments under Iowa Code Chapter 364.

Elected county officers include the County Auditor, County Treasurer, County Recorder, County Sheriff, and County Attorney. Each of these offices holds constitutionally or statutorily defined functions independent of the Board of Supervisors. The County Auditor, for instance, administers elections, maintains financial records, and processes property tax records in coordination with the County Assessor.

Scope limitations: This page addresses Franklin County's county-level governmental functions. Municipal ordinances, school district governance, and state agency field operations conducted within Franklin County are not covered here. Iowa state law — not Franklin County ordinance — governs all criminal statutes, state licensing, and regulatory enforcement conducted by state agencies operating in the county. For the broader Iowa county government structure, a separate reference covers the statutory framework common to all 99 counties.

How it works

Franklin County government operates through 5 primary service departments and several elected offices, each with distinct statutory mandates:

  1. Board of Supervisors — Legislative and administrative authority over county budgets, secondary roads, zoning (unincorporated areas), and contracts. Meetings are open to the public under Iowa Code Chapter 21 (Open Meetings Law).
  2. County Sheriff's Office — Law enforcement jurisdiction in unincorporated county territory, county jail operation, civil process service, and court security.
  3. County Auditor — Election administration, financial accounting, property transfer records, and budget preparation support.
  4. County Treasurer — Property tax collection, motor vehicle registration and titling, and investment of county funds.
  5. County Recorder — Recording of deeds, mortgages, liens, vital records, and military discharge documents.
  6. Secondary Roads Department — Maintenance and construction of the county road network, which in Iowa totals an average of over 600 miles per county under county jurisdiction (Iowa Department of Transportation, Secondary Roads Program).
  7. County Attorney — Prosecution of criminal cases arising in the county, representation of county government in civil matters, and child support enforcement under Iowa Code Chapter 252.

The Iowa Department of Health and Human Services operates a field office presence in Franklin County, delivering assistance programs, child welfare services, and Medicaid administration — functions that are state-administered rather than county-administered, though county facilities may be shared.

Property tax administration provides the clearest illustration of intergovernmental layering: the County Assessor values property, the Board of Supervisors and other taxing entities set levy rates, the County Auditor calculates tax bills, and the County Treasurer collects payments — four distinct offices executing one workflow.

Common scenarios

Residents and professionals interacting with Franklin County government most frequently encounter the following service contexts:

Decision boundaries

Determining which governmental entity holds authority over a given matter in Franklin County depends on 3 primary factors: geography (incorporated versus unincorporated), subject matter (state-regulated versus locally-regulated), and governmental tier (county versus state agency).

County authority applies when:
- The matter arises in unincorporated Franklin County territory
- The service involves a county-statutory function (property recording, tax collection, election administration, secondary road maintenance, sheriff law enforcement)
- Zoning or subdivision review falls outside any municipal extraterritorial jurisdiction

State authority supersedes county authority when:
- The matter involves a state-licensed profession or activity (contractors, health facilities, food establishments) — regulated by the Iowa Department of Inspections, Appeals, and Licensing
- Environmental permitting is required — administered by the Iowa Department of Natural Resources
- Public benefit program eligibility is at issue — administered by the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services

Municipal authority applies when:
- The subject property or activity is within the corporate limits of Hampton or another Franklin County municipality
- Building, zoning, or business licensing is required within those limits

Franklin County does not operate a standalone health department; public health functions are coordinated through the state's county public health system under contracts administered by the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services. This contrasts with Iowa's larger counties — such as Polk or Linn — which operate fully independent county public health departments with broader staffing and programming capacity.

The homepage of this reference network provides orientation to Iowa government's full structural scope, including state agency directories and intergovernmental coordination points relevant to Franklin County residents and administrators.


References