Mason County, Michigan: Government and Services

Mason County is one of Michigan's 83 counties, situated along the eastern shore of Lake Michigan in the western Lower Peninsula. This page covers the structure of county government in Mason County, the principal services administered at the county level, how those services interact with state authority, and the jurisdictional boundaries that define what the county government does and does not control.

Definition and scope

Mason County operates under Michigan's general law county framework, governed by the Michigan County Government Structure provisions established under the Michigan Compiled Laws (MCL Chapter 46). The county seat is Ludington. Mason County covers approximately 495 square miles of land area, with additional water jurisdiction extending into Lake Michigan.

County government in Michigan functions as an administrative arm of state government, not as a fully independent municipal authority. The Mason County Board of Commissioners serves as the primary legislative and administrative body. Under MCL 46.1, a board of commissioners is required for each Michigan county, with composition and term lengths established by state statute. Mason County's board operates with a set number of elected districts, with commissioners serving 2-year or 4-year terms depending on election cycle alignment.

Scope and coverage limitations: This page addresses Mason County's county-level government structure and services only. It does not cover the independent municipalities within Mason County, such as the City of Ludington or Scottville, which operate under separate municipal charters. Township-level governance — addressed separately under Michigan Township Government — also falls outside this page's scope. Federal programs administered through Mason County agencies (such as certain USDA Rural Development grants) are governed by federal authority, not county ordinance.

How it works

Mason County government is organized into elected and appointed offices that collectively deliver the core services mandated under Michigan law.

Elected county offices include:

  1. Board of Commissioners — policy-making, budget approval, and administrative oversight
  2. County Clerk — maintains vital records, election administration, and court records for the probate and circuit courts
  3. County Treasurer — property tax collection, delinquent tax administration, and investment of county funds under MCL 211.78
  4. Register of Deeds — records real property instruments, plats, and liens
  5. Sheriff — law enforcement, jail administration, and civil process service
  6. Prosecuting Attorney — criminal prosecution under state law, child support enforcement coordination
  7. Drain Commissioner — drainage infrastructure maintenance under the Michigan Drain Code (MCL 280.1 et seq.)

County departments operate under the board's authority and typically include a road commission (in Michigan, many counties maintain a separate road commission as a quasi-independent entity under MCL 224.1), a health department, and an emergency management office. Mason County's public health functions are carried out in alignment with standards set by the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services.

Property tax administration is a central function. Under MCL 211.27a, the county equalization process annually reviews assessed values across townships and municipalities to produce a county equalized value. The Mason County Equalization Department performs this function, with final State Equalized Value (SEV) determinations subject to the State Tax Commission's oversight.

Common scenarios

Residents and businesses interact with Mason County government in defined, recurring circumstances:

Adjacent counties — including Manistee County to the north and Oceana County to the south — operate parallel structures under the same state framework, but each county maintains independent administrative offices, tax rolls, and elected officials.

Decision boundaries

The county government's authority is constrained by a defined legal hierarchy. State law preempts county ordinances in most substantive areas; the county cannot, for example, create zoning that conflicts with the Michigan Zoning Enabling Act (MCL 125.3101 et seq.). Zoning authority within Mason County's unincorporated areas is exercised at the township level, not the county level, unless a township has ceded that function.

The Mason County Road Commission, if organized as a separate body, operates under its own board and budget distinct from the Board of Commissioners, reflecting a structural division common across Michigan's county road administration system.

For services that span state agency authority — including environmental permitting through the Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy or licensing functions administered by the Michigan Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs — Mason County offices serve as points of local contact or co-administration, not as the regulatory authority of record.

The main site index provides orientation to the broader Michigan government reference landscape, including state-level agencies that hold authority over functions Mason County administers locally.

References