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Ohio County Engineers - Since 1803
Ohio's County Engineer
Today, the elected
County Engineer
is sworn to “perform for the county all duties authorized or
declared by law to be done by a Civil Engineer or Surveyor.” Although
specifically exempt from engineering duties affecting public buildings,
the
County Engineer
is the engineer for all public improvements under the
authority of the board of commissioners within and for the county. For
example, in
Ohio, County Engineers are
responsible for more than 27,000 bridges; 29,000 miles of highways; and
manage budgets between $2,500,000 and $40,000,000 annually.
Ohio
has the most rigorous standards in the
United States
for qualifying its Professional County Engineers. Ohio
requires its County
Engineers to be both fully licensed as a
“Registered Professional Engineer” and a “Registered Professional
Surveyor” for the office of
County Engineer. To
achieve both accreditations requires a minimum of a college degree in
engineering and surveying, four years of experience in engineering, four
years of experience in surveying and 16 hours of testing for each
license.
As a group,
Ohio’s
County Engineers
are recognized leaders in the nation because of their
professionalism and innovations relating to the maintenance of highways
and bridges. Ohio’s requirement for professional licensing in both
Engineering and Surveying, the fact that the position is elected and the
fact that the gasoline taxes and license plates fees are dedicated to
the repair and maintenance of highways and bridges by the state’s
constitution, allows these elected professionals to utilize the scarce
resources in an efficient and professional manner. Almost 20% of
Ohio’s
County Engineers
hold advanced or additional degrees. As a group they
represent over 1,700 years of public works experience. This averages to
20 years per engineer. On average they have held licenses as
Professional Engineers for 25 years and have held licenses as
Professional Surveyors for 21 years.
Responsibilities
of Today’s County Engineer
There are four
district highway systems in
Ohio. The Ohio Department of
Transportation (ODOT) is responsible for the
19,000-mile State Highway
System. The Township Trustees collectively oversee the
maintenance of the Township Highway System with its 39,000 miles of
roads. Municipalities maintain the streets and alleys within their
boundaries, which together would span over 21,000 miles. The
29,000-mile County Highway System
is, of course, the responsibility of
Ohio’s 88
County Engineers. The
County
Engineer works with the
County
Commissioners
and Township Trustees to carry out a wide variety of
obligations.
County Highways: The
County Engineer
is responsible for the maintenance, repair, widening,
resurfacing, and (re)construction of pavements and bridges in the County
Highway System. Maintenance duties include traffic control, safety
projects, mowing and snow removal.
Township
Highways: The
County Engineer
serves as an engineering advisor to the Township Trustees
for the maintenance, widening and repair of their highways.
Bridges: The
County Engineer
is fully responsible for the bridges on both the County and
the Township Highway Systems, and may also be charged with the upkeep of
bridges within municipalities, including some that are part of the State
Highway System. The
County Engineer
performs the annual inspection and evaluation of the
condition and load-carrying capacity of each bridge. The statutes
regulating this duty require a uniform method of procedure and
record-keeping.
The
County Engineer
participates in county and regional planning commissions and
provides tax map drafting services for the county. In unincorporated
areas, the
County
Engineer may also be
involved in the establishment and maintenance of petitioned and assessed
ditches, sidewalks, and even county airports. The
County
Engineer may also serve as
County
Sanitary Engineer, working with the
County
Commissioners
to supervise the construction of sewer and water lines. The
approval and operation of landfills and incinerators may also be a
function of the
County Engineer’s
office.
History of the County Engineer In Ohio
The office of
County
Engineer
evolved from the important role played by the
County
Surveyor in the first decades of
Ohio’s statehood.
As early as 1785,
Ohio served as a “laboratory” for the development of the Public Lands
rectangular survey system, and well into the 1800’s, the County Surveyor
was charged with the tremendous task of clarifying land titles and
boundaries. After 1820, a movement for “internal improvements” swept
through the state, and
County Surveyors
became increasingly involved in transportation-related
projects: specifically in the development of canals and roads. By the
late 19th century, the major duty of the
County
Surveyor
was the building and maintenance of roads, bridges and
drainage ditches.
The office of
County
Surveyor
was established by the first General Assembly following the
admission of Ohio to the
Union in 1803. Whenever a new county was
created, the
County Surveyor,
Recorder, Prosecuting Attorney and Clerk were appointed by the
legislature. County
Surveyors were paid only a per
diem wage ($5.00 in the late 1800’s) for those days when they were
actually employed.
In 1831, the
legislature voted to make the office elective because of the increased
responsibilities it entailed. The law stated that a
County
Surveyor
would serve a term of three years, “if he so long
qualified.” Legislation passed in 1915 established a salary and
conferred on the
County
Surveyor the title of
“Resident Engineer for the State Highway Department.” In 1928, the term
of office was lengthened from, three years to four. Then on August 30,
1935, the title was changed to “County
Engineer.”
Today, only persons
who hold registration certificates from the State of
Ohio as a “Registered Professional Engineer” and “Registered
Professional Surveyor” may hold the office of
County Engineer.
Tax Mapping
Ohio
law mandates that the
County Engineer
create and organize the tax maps of his community. These tax
maps must be updated on a daily basis to reflect changes in property
ownership. This responsibility entails creating and maintaining a
detailed inventory of every parcel of land in the county. A map must be
drawn for every parcel of property in the county and this map must be to
scale. The
County Auditor’s
office use these detailed tax maps as its official record of property
tax purposes.c
Where the Money Comes From
The several
activities of the
County
Engineer are financed form
various sources. The major responsibility, the upkeep or roads and
bridges, is primarily financed by highway user fees such as motor
vehicle fuel
taxes
and registration fees. Supplemental funds (voted bond issues and levies,
as well as fines) are available for specific highway improvement
purposes.
Fuel taxes earmarked
for highway purposes are levied at the state and federal levels of
government. State revenues are distributed for use in the State, County,
Township and Municipal Highway Systems by means of statutory
formulas. The amount of the tax varies depending on legislative
action. Also, some of the monies distributed to the states from federal
funds are passed on to local governments on a project by project basis.
The income from
state motor vehicle registration fees (after state administrative costs
are deducted) is returned to the local government units of the basis of
statutory formula. Currently the distribution percentages are 71% for
counties, 24% for municipalities and 5% for townships. County, municipal
and township government agencies have the authority to also levy their
own motor vehicle registration fee in the form of an additional tax of
up to $20.00 (in $5.00 increments). The amounts levied vary from county
to county according to highway improvements needs and the enactment
procedure of the three levels of local government. The revenues received
must be use for highway purposes.
CEAO
The County Engineers
Association of Ohio had its beginnings in 1879, when a group of
Ohio’s surveyors (the predecessors of today’s
County Engineers)
met in Columbus
to discuss ways of meeting professional needs. In 1880, the
Association of County Surveyors of Ohio held its first official meeting
and pledge to “bring the interests that [they] represent[ed] into proper
position before the public; obtain a better recognition of [their]
services; and above all things, secure for [themselves] a higher
professional education and protection of the public from the evils of
empiricism.”
In 1940, after sixty
years of changes in name and scope, the County Engineers Association of
Ohio came into being. Its purpose is to “raise the technical and
non-technical standards of service rendered the general public, by the
County
Engineer and his
employees, through the establishment of a central point for reference
and group discussion of mutual problems.”

Glenn Sprowls,
Executive Director
The
County Engineers
Association of
Ohio
37
West Broad Street
– Suite
660
Columbus,
OH
43215
PH. (740)
221-0707 FAX (614) 221-5761
www.ceao.org
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