Ward County commissioners voted July 15 to approve on first reading Ordinance 2025-3, a measure to regulate camping on county-owned public property, and set a public hearing and second reading for Aug. 19. The first-reading motion passed on a 5-0 roll call.
The ordinance arises from repeated campsite activity on an island owned by the county. Highway Engineer Dana Larsen told the commission there are about "10–15 transient people" camping on the site and that deputies found numerous tents, garbage and other items during an on-site assessment. Sheriff Robert Roed confirmed deputies made a few arrests tied to outstanding warrants when they visited the location.
County officials said the proposed ordinance would give deputies clearer authority to address camping on that county land. Commissioner Olson moved to approve the ordinance on first reading and Commissioner Schuler seconded; Commissioners Rostad, Merritt, Olson, Schuler and Chair Fjeldahl voted yes.
The first reading authorizes a public hearing and second reading of Ordinance 2025-3 at the commission meeting scheduled for Aug. 19. No final adoption occurred on July 15; commissioners will consider public testimony and a second reading before any ordinance becomes law.
The discussion and vote took place during the regular commission meeting, and county staff signaled enforcement would follow the ordinance if adopted after the second reading and public hearing.