Cheboygan County, Michigan: Government and Services

Cheboygan County occupies the northeastern tip of Michigan's Lower Peninsula, bordered by the Straits of Mackinac to the north and Mullett Lake and Burt Lake within its interior. The county operates under Michigan's constitutional framework for county government, delivering a defined set of public services to a resident population of approximately 25,000 (U.S. Census Bureau, 2020 Decennial Census). This page maps the structure of county government in Cheboygan, the services administered at the county level, the decision boundaries between county and state authority, and the scenarios where residents interact with these governmental layers.

Definition and scope

Cheboygan County is a general-law county operating under Michigan's county government structure as established in the Michigan Constitution of 1963 and the General Law Village Act and County Organization statutes within the Michigan Compiled Laws (MCL). The county seat is the City of Cheboygan. The county encompasses 8 cities, villages, and townships, covering a total land area of approximately 715 square miles (U.S. Census Bureau, Gazetteer Files).

As a unit of Michigan state government, Cheboygan County does not operate under a home-rule charter. Its authority is delegated from the State of Michigan and bounded by state statute. The county government is responsible for the following core functional areas:

  1. Administration — Board of Commissioners, County Clerk, County Administrator
  2. Judicial services — 53rd Circuit Court, 89th District Court, County Probate Court
  3. Law enforcement and corrections — Cheboygan County Sheriff's Office, county jail
  4. Public health — Health Department of Northwest Michigan (serving Cheboygan, Charlevoix, Emmet, and Antrim counties jointly)
  5. Property records and taxation — Register of Deeds, Equalization Department, County Treasurer
  6. Infrastructure — County Road Commission, responsible for approximately 680 miles of county road (Michigan Association of Counties)
  7. Human services — Michigan Department of Health and Human Services local district office
  8. Animal control — County-operated shelter and enforcement

Scope limitation: This page covers only county-level governmental authority within Cheboygan County. Township government functions — administered separately by units such as Burt Township, Koehler Township, and Tuscarora Township — fall under Michigan township government frameworks and are not covered here. Federal programs administered through county offices (such as USDA Farm Service Agency) operate under federal authority, not county authority.

How it works

Cheboygan County's legislative authority rests with a Board of Commissioners elected from single-member districts. The board sets county policy, approves the annual budget, and appoints key department heads. Constitutional county officers — including the Sheriff, Clerk, Treasurer, Prosecuting Attorney, and Register of Deeds — are elected independently and carry authority derived directly from the Michigan Constitution, Article VII, meaning the Board of Commissioners cannot abolish those offices or override their statutory functions.

The county road commission operates as a separate elected body under MCL 224, responsible for county primary and local roads distinct from state trunklines maintained by the Michigan Department of Transportation. This structural separation means road funding decisions, maintenance prioritization, and permitting for county roads proceed independently from state highway administration.

Public health services in Cheboygan County are delivered through a multi-county district health department — the Health Department of Northwest Michigan — which consolidates resources across 4 counties. This arrangement, authorized under MCL 333.2415, is common in Michigan's lower-density northern counties where single-county departments would lack sufficient population base to sustain full-service operations.

Property tax administration follows a three-step process: (1) local township or city assessment, (2) county equalization review under the Cheboygan County Equalization Department to ensure uniform valuation at 50 percent of true cash value as required by MCL 211.27, and (3) tax levy and collection by the County Treasurer.

Common scenarios

Residents and professionals encounter Cheboygan County government in identifiable operational contexts:

Decision boundaries

The distinction between county authority and state agency authority determines where service seekers must direct requests. Two structural contrasts define most boundary questions:

County-administered vs. state-administered services: The Cheboygan County Sheriff enforces state law within unincorporated areas and has concurrent jurisdiction with the Michigan State Police, but the State Police retain independent authority and report through state command structure, not through the Board of Commissioners. Similarly, child protective services workers operating out of the local MDHHS district office are state employees under the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services, not county employees, despite being physically located within the county.

County roads vs. state trunklines: M-33, US-23, and other designated state routes passing through Cheboygan County are maintained by MDOT, not the county road commission. Permit applications for utility crossings or driveway access on state routes go to MDOT's Bay Region office, not to Cheboygan County.

For access to the broader landscape of Michigan state government services that intersect with county-level operations, the Michigan Government Authority home page provides a structured reference across all 83 counties and state agencies.

References