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Scott County Council approves local service and equipment spending, debates transfer station funding and wheel-tax timing

5817236 · August 12, 2025
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

Scott County Council members on Tuesday approved several budgetary moves to cover local services, public-safety bills and equipment replacements while opening a broader debate over transfer-station costs and whether to pursue a county-level wheel tax.

Scott County Council members on Tuesday approved several budgetary moves to cover local services, public-safety bills and equipment replacements while opening a broader debate over transfer-station costs and whether to pursue a county-level wheel tax.

The meeting’s most immediate actions were appropriations and transfers to close out outstanding contracts and to fund specific local programs. Councilors voted unanimously to provide $25,000 from restricted opioid funds to Genesis House, a women’s recovery residence; to approve a roughly $210,000 additional appropriation for county-wide computer replacements for the information-technology department; and to approve multiple emergency-management and sheriff-related payments tied to 2024 invoices and an agreed order. Separately, the council agreed to pay $6,700 in fines and fees tied to the county transfer station after extended discussion about cost overruns there.

Why it matters: The votes fund existing local services — from recovery housing to 911 recording software — and move forward a multi-hundred-thousand-dollar IT upgrade countywide. At the same time, extended debate about persistent overruns at the transfer station, and a wider discussion about creating a wheel tax to stabilize road funding, indicate several county operations face larger structural funding questions going into FY 2026.

Key actions and supporting details

Genesis House: The council approved Ordinance 2025-48, an appropriation of $25,000 from the restricted opioid fund to Genesis House, a women’s transitional recovery residence based on Capitol Avenue in Scottsburg. Genesis House executive director Megan Stockdale told the council the group has served 189 women since 2020, 22 from Scott County; the requested funds were described as the last piece to finish a $766,000 capital expansion to increase beds from 30 to 46 and expand its “mommy-and-me” capacity. The council vote was 6-0 in favor.

County computer replacement: The information-technology replacement project was discussed as an out-of-cycle need to replace most county desktops and laptops. Andrew (IT) told the council bids and specifications were reviewed and the commissioners had preliminarily approved a Lenovo ThinkPad-based procurement. Councilors debated the…

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