Bradford County Florida Government: Structure, Services, and Resources
Bradford County sits in north-central Florida, covering approximately 294 square miles with a county seat in Starke. This page covers the governing structure of Bradford County, the constitutional officers who administer county services, the operational framework through which county government functions, and the boundaries that distinguish county authority from state and municipal jurisdiction. Professionals, researchers, and residents navigating Bradford County's public sector will find the institutional structure and service categories described here.
Definition and scope
Bradford County is one of Florida's 67 counties, established under Article VIII of the Florida Constitution and governed pursuant to Chapter 125 of the Florida Statutes. It operates as a non-charter county, meaning it functions under the general law framework applicable to all Florida counties that have not adopted a home rule charter. This structure distinguishes Bradford from charter counties such as Miami-Dade and Broward, which operate under locally adopted governing documents that can expand or modify statutory powers.
The primary governing body is the Bradford County Board of County Commissioners (BOCC), composed of 5 members elected from single-member districts to staggered four-year terms. The BOCC holds legislative and executive authority over unincorporated Bradford County, adopts the annual county budget, sets millage rates, and enacts land use regulations under the county's comprehensive plan.
Bradford County also includes elected constitutional officers who operate independently from the BOCC under Article VIII, Section 1(d) of the Florida Constitution. These officers — the Sheriff, Clerk of the Circuit Court and Comptroller, Property Appraiser, Tax Collector, and Supervisor of Elections — each administer distinct statutory functions and maintain separate budgets subject to BOCC approval where required by law.
The county seat of Starke and the City of Lawtey operate as incorporated municipalities within Bradford County. Municipal services within those city limits fall under municipal authority, not the BOCC, as further described under Florida municipal government.
Scope and coverage limitations: This page covers Bradford County's governmental structure under Florida law. Federal regulatory programs, state agency operations headquartered outside the county, and the internal governance of Starke and Lawtey are not covered here. Bradford County's authority extends only to unincorporated territory and countywide constitutional officer functions — it does not apply to municipalities, special districts, or state-level administrative actions. For a broader framework of county government structure statewide, see Florida county government structure.
How it works
Bradford County government operates through two parallel tracks: the BOCC-administered county departments and the independent constitutional officers.
BOCC-administered departments include:
- Growth Management / Planning and Zoning — administers land development regulations, building permits, and comprehensive plan compliance
- Public Works — maintains county roads, bridges, stormwater systems, and rights-of-way
- Emergency Management — coordinates preparedness and response under the Florida Division of Emergency Management framework
- Parks and Recreation — operates county recreational facilities
- Animal Control — enforces county ordinances governing animals in unincorporated areas
- Human Resources and Administration — supports internal county operations and procurement
Constitutional officers operate independently:
- The Sheriff provides law enforcement services throughout the county and operates the Bradford County Jail
- The Clerk of the Circuit Court and Comptroller maintains court records, processes county financial transactions, and records official documents
- The Property Appraiser assesses all taxable property in Bradford County for ad valorem tax purposes under Chapter 193, Florida Statutes
- The Tax Collector collects property taxes, issues motor vehicle registrations, and administers driver license services as a local agent for the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles
- The Supervisor of Elections administers all federal, state, and local elections within the county under Chapter 98, Florida Statutes, and coordinates with Florida elections and voting frameworks
Bradford County's fiscal year runs from October 1 through September 30. The BOCC adopts the budget following the TRIM (Truth in Millage) process mandated by Section 200.065, Florida Statutes, which sets specific public notice and hearing requirements before millage rates are finalized.
Common scenarios
Individuals and businesses interact with Bradford County government across a defined set of recurring service areas:
- Property transactions — require records searches through the Clerk of Court (deeds, liens, judgments) and valuation data from the Property Appraiser's office
- Building and land use — construction in unincorporated Bradford County requires permits from Growth Management; zoning determinations and variances go before the BOCC or a designated Zoning Board
- Tax payments and vehicle registration — processed through the Tax Collector, which also serves as a local service center for state-level DHSMV transactions
- Public records requests — Bradford County is subject to Chapter 119, Florida Statutes (the Florida Public Records Law), and requests for BOCC records, Clerk records, and Sheriff records each route to the respective custodian; see Florida public records law
- Elections and voter registration — the Supervisor of Elections office handles voter registration, poll worker recruitment, and precinct administration
- Law enforcement and jail services — the Bradford County Sheriff's Office operates under the Sheriff's independent constitutional authority, not under BOCC direction for law enforcement operations
Decision boundaries
Determining which authority governs a given matter in Bradford County requires distinguishing between four categories of jurisdiction:
| Jurisdiction | Governing Body | Applicable Law |
|---|---|---|
| Unincorporated county land use | Bradford County BOCC | Ch. 125, F.S.; county LDRs |
| Municipal territory (Starke, Lawtey) | Respective city commissions | Ch. 166, F.S. |
| State-administered programs | Relevant state agency | State statutes and rules |
| Special districts | District governing board | Ch. 189, F.S. |
Bradford County contains special districts — including fire control districts and the Bradford County School Board, which governs public K–12 education independently from the BOCC under Article IX of the Florida Constitution. The School Board's taxing authority and operational decisions are separate from county government. For context on how school governance interfaces with county structure, see Florida school districts.
When a matter crosses county lines or involves a regional function such as water resource management, jurisdiction shifts to bodies such as the Suwannee River Water Management District, which has regulatory authority over water use and environmental permitting across a multi-county region including Bradford.
Residents and professionals navigating multiple service areas across Florida's county network can access the statewide government reference framework at the Florida Government Authority index.
References
- Bradford County Board of County Commissioners
- Florida Statutes, Chapter 125 — County Government
- Florida Statutes, Chapter 119 — Public Records
- Florida Statutes, Chapter 200.065 — TRIM Process
- Florida Constitution, Article VIII — Local Government
- Florida Statutes, Chapter 189 — Special Districts
- Suwannee River Water Management District
- Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles