Hamilton County commissioners devoted a lengthy portion of their Jan. 7 meeting to a debate over meeting start times after several commissioners reported constituent feedback requesting later-hour or evening sessions.
Proponents of evening or later start times said meetings that begin after standard work hours would improve access for working residents, teachers and others who cannot attend daytime sessions. Commissioner testimony emphasized benchmarking data (other counties largely meet after 5 p.m.), teacher schedules during budget season and the desire to allow broader civic participation.
Opponents cautioned that changing decades of practice could create staff, security and scheduling challenges, and suggested the change might inconvenience other constituencies. Several commissioners proposed compromise options — for example, alternating evening and morning meetings or holding some agenda and recess sessions at different times — and emphasized the need to balance public access with operational effectiveness.
The chair asked the county attorney to place a resolution on a recessed agenda for next week to determine future meeting times, and directed a committee meeting be scheduled to craft options for the commission. The commission will consider multiple options and a vote is expected at the recessed session, after which the meeting schedule will either be affirmed or revert to the previous 9:30 a.m. start time.
Public speakers at the end of the meeting urged commissioners to weigh agenda types when scheduling (for example, hold evening sessions for zoning or budget items that draw public interest), and several residents recommended a ballot measure for voter input on a permanent change.
What happens next: County staff and the commission’s committee will draft specific options, and the chair instructed a resolution be placed on the recessed agenda for a formal vote next week.