Hernando County Florida Government: Structure, Services, and Resources
Hernando County operates under Florida's constitutional framework for county government, functioning as a non-charter county within the state's 67-county system. The county seat is Brooksville, and the county encompasses incorporated municipalities alongside unincorporated areas subject to direct county jurisdiction. This page covers the structural organization of Hernando County government, the primary services delivered to residents and businesses, and the regulatory and administrative boundaries that define county authority.
Definition and Scope
Hernando County is a non-charter county established under Florida's county government structure, meaning its governing powers derive directly from the Florida Constitution and state statute rather than from a locally adopted charter. The Board of County Commissioners (BOCC) serves as the principal legislative and executive body, composed of 5 commissioners elected from single-member districts to staggered 4-year terms (Florida Statutes §125).
Alongside the BOCC, Hernando County government includes 5 constitutionally mandated officers — the Clerk of the Circuit Court, Property Appraiser, Sheriff, Supervisor of Elections, and Tax Collector — each independently elected and accountable directly to voters rather than to the commission. This separation between the commission and constitutional officers is a defining structural feature of Florida's non-charter counties.
The county covers approximately 477 square miles of land area. Incorporated municipalities within Hernando County include Brooksville and Weeki Wachee; all other territory falls under unincorporated county jurisdiction. Services and regulations in incorporated areas may differ from those administered by the county.
Scope boundary: This page addresses Hernando County's governmental structure and services under Florida law. Federal programs administered through Hernando County (such as FEMA disaster assistance or HUD housing grants) operate under separate federal authority not covered here. State agency field offices located in Hernando County — such as Florida Department of Children and Families or Florida Department of Transportation district operations — operate under state rather than county authority.
How It Works
Hernando County government operates through the following principal divisions and offices:
- Board of County Commissioners — Adopts the annual county budget, enacts local ordinances, sets millage rates for property taxation, and oversees the county administrator and department operations.
- County Administrator — Appointed by the BOCC to manage day-to-day operations of county departments including Public Works, Planning and Zoning, Parks and Recreation, and Emergency Management.
- Clerk of the Circuit Court — Maintains court records, processes property records, serves as the BOCC's official record keeper, and administers the county's finance and audit functions under Florida law.
- Property Appraiser — Determines taxable value for all real and personal property in Hernando County for ad valorem tax purposes (Florida Department of Revenue — Property Tax Oversight).
- Sheriff — Provides law enforcement services countywide, operates the county detention facility, and serves civil process.
- Supervisor of Elections — Administers voter registration, candidate qualifying, and election operations consistent with Florida elections law.
- Tax Collector — Collects property taxes, issues motor vehicle registrations and titles, and processes driver license transactions under delegation from the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles.
The BOCC adopts a budget annually by September 30, the close of Florida's fiscal year, setting millage rates and appropriating funds across all county departments. Hernando County's budget documents are publicly available through the county's official finance division in accordance with Florida's public records law.
Common Scenarios
Residents and professionals interact with Hernando County government across a defined set of recurring administrative situations:
- Building permits and zoning: The Hernando County Building Division processes construction permits under the Florida Building Code. Zoning and land-use decisions flow through the Planning and Zoning Department and, for variances or rezonings, require BOCC approval following public hearings.
- Property tax assessment and appeals: Property owners may contest assessed values through the county's Value Adjustment Board (VAB), a quasi-judicial body composed of BOCC members, school board members, and citizen appointees, operating under Florida Department of Revenue guidelines.
- Public records requests: Under the Florida Sunshine Law (Chapter 119, Florida Statutes), county records are presumptively open. Requests are directed to the custodial agency — Clerk of Court, Sheriff, or individual county department — depending on the record type.
- Emergency management: The Hernando County Office of Emergency Management coordinates with the Florida Division of Emergency Management for disaster preparedness, response, and recovery under the State Emergency Management Act.
- Environmental and water resources: Land development in Hernando County requires coordination with the Southwest Florida Water Management District (SWFWMD) for stormwater permitting and consumptive use permits, separate from county land-use approvals.
Decision Boundaries
Understanding which level of government controls a given matter in Hernando County requires distinguishing between county, state, and municipal authority.
County vs. Municipality: Within Brooksville or Weeki Wachee city limits, municipal codes, police departments, and utility systems govern rather than the county. Building permits inside city limits are issued by the municipal building department, not the Hernando County Building Division.
County vs. State Agency: The Florida Department of Health operates a county health department in Hernando County under a shared state-county funding and governance model. The county does not set public health policy; the state agency does. Similarly, the Florida Department of Environmental Protection retains primacy over environmental permitting that crosses county lines or involves state-regulated resources.
Charter vs. Non-Charter Counties: Hernando County's non-charter status means it cannot enact ordinances in areas preempted by state law and has less structural flexibility than Florida's charter counties such as Miami-Dade or Broward. Residents seeking to compare Hernando County's governance model against adjacent jurisdictions can reference the broader Florida county government structure or visit the site index for county-specific reference pages.
Special Districts: Hernando County contains independent special districts — including community development districts and fire control districts — that operate with their own boards and taxing authority outside the BOCC's direct control. The Florida Department of Economic Opportunity maintains the official Special District Accountability Program registry (Florida Statutes §189).
References
- Hernando County Board of County Commissioners — Official Site
- Florida Statutes Chapter 125 — County Government
- Florida Statutes Chapter 119 — Public Records
- Florida Statutes Chapter 189 — Special Districts
- Florida Department of Revenue — Property Tax Oversight
- Florida Department of Revenue — Value Adjustment Board
- Southwest Florida Water Management District
- Florida Division of Emergency Management
- Florida Senate — Statutes and Constitution