Clinton County Council approves budget adjustments, appointments and transfers in unanimous votes

Clinton County Council · November 13, 2025

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Summary

At its meeting in the new county chamber, the Clinton County Council approved multiple motions including minutes, a library-board reappointment, two job descriptions, an additional-appropriations ordinance covering a $500,000 local match for a highway grant and a $175,000 jail lift item, and a slate of interdepartmental transfers. All motions were

The Clinton County Council voted unanimously on a slate of routine but consequential actions at its Nov. 1 meeting, approving minutes, personnel job descriptions, an additional-appropriations ordinance and multiple budget transfers to close out the year.

Council members approved the October 14 and October 24 meeting minutes by voice vote after motions were offered; the chair reported the October 14 minutes carried with a tally of 5 yes and 2 abstentions (members absent that day) and the October 24 minutes carried with one member noted as abstaining. The council reappointed Laura Woodard to the Colfax Library Board by a 7–0 vote after a motion from Carol and a second from Mike.

In a single ordinance (No. 2025-20) the council approved several additional appropriations the auditor presented: smaller County General adjustments (fuel and vehicle reimbursements totaling $667.89), EMS fuel and certification costs (about $19,250), a $500,000 local match for the state Community Crossings highway grant, and $175,000 for a correctional-facility lift/HVAC replacement. The chair announced the appropriation ordinance passed 7–0.

The council also approved a long list of line-item transfers across departments. Many of the transfers moved funds into "longevity" or to cover equipment and overtime; examples included probation transfers to purchase bulletproof vests, EMS transfers to body armor and overtime, and several small shifts in clerk/treasurer and recorder budgets. The transfer slate passed 7–0 on a motion by Joe with Mike seconding.

Other routine approvals included accepting the auditor's October financial and budget-status reports (acknowledged 7–0) and approving a $7,500 commissary expenditure the sheriff requested to fund the office's annual banquet (7–0).

Context: The transfers and appropriations are end-of-year adjustments common when departments reconcile actual spending against the adopted line-item budget; the council's action included a large local match for a state highway grant that had been omitted previously. The council chair said the reorganized year-end accounting will provide clearer data for the next budget cycle.

The council adjourned after closing business; no contested or split votes were recorded on the financial measures.