County health department updates food, pool ordinances; agrees to share lead-paint analyzer with Clark County

5519806 · July 15, 2025

Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts

Subscribe
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Floyd County Health Department presented updates to retail food and pool ordinances to align with a revised state health code, and commissioners approved two ordinances and a memorandum of understanding to lend an XRF lead-paint analyzer to Clark County.

Floyd County commissioners on July 15 approved updates to two public-health ordinances and authorized an intercounty memorandum of understanding to share a state-provided XRF lead-paint analyzer.

Anthony Liebert of the Floyd County Health Department said the retail food establishment ordinance was updated to reflect a revised state health code; he said the primary change is a graduated fee structure for follow-up inspections. "Your second follow-up is 50%. Your third follow-up is 75. Your fourth is a 100%." Liebert said a fourth follow-up would also require a meeting with the health department.

Liebert also presented revisions to the county's pool ordinance, saying rising supply costs and an increase in follow-up inspections prompted a fee increase. He said the department calculated an average incremental cost of about $37 per additional pool inspection and adjusted fees and added a plan-review fee similar to the restaurant process.

Liebert told commissioners that public splash pads in parks and schools generally are not assessed an annual fee unless follow-up inspections are necessitated. He said some short-term rental properties (Airbnb/VRBO) may be subject to inspection depending on occupancy patterns; the department's last survey found seven short-term rentals, one with a pool that did not meet state testing requirements.

On equipment-sharing, commissioners approved a memorandum of understanding with Clark County to permit Clark County staff to borrow an XRF lead-paint analyzer the state provides and that the Floyd County Health Department houses. Liebert said the state requires an MOU among counties for device sharing.

Floyd County Ordinance 2025-18 (retail food and bed-and-breakfast establishments) and Ordinance 2025-19 (public pools) were both brought forward and approved by unanimous consent.

Ending: The health department will finalize ordinance language and coordinate fee implementation; county staff will post updates when the ordinances are formally codified and will publish permit and plan-review instructions for applicants.