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Portage County commissioners outline tight budget year, health‑benefit changes and recent county projects

Portage County Board of Commissioners · April 30, 2026
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Summary

At a public town‑hall, commissioners described steps taken to balance a tight 2025 budget — using health‑benefit reserves, instituting temporary benefit holidays and applying a 5% non‑personnel reduction — and highlighted county projects including airport development, building repairs and emergency‑management investments.

Commissioners used the meeting to explain recent budget decisions and provide an overview of county projects and services.

Commissioner Sabrina Christian Bennett said the county is managing a lean budget year as COVID‑era funds wind down. She described actions taken to close a budget gap, including aligning health‑benefit costs to historical usage, applying two 'health benefit holidays' and transferring $600,000 from the county's health‑benefit account to offset healthcare costs. Despite those steps, Bennett said the county still faced a roughly $2.7 million shortfall and applied a 5% reduction across non‑personnel lines in general‑fund departments.

Commissioner Mike Timlin highlighted investments in county buildings and services, naming recent renovations (including a renovated fifth floor of the auditor's office, elevator and HVAC replacements) and upgrades to the veteran services building to improve accessibility. He also praised airport development under director Robert Hartigan, noting private investment at the regional airport and grants that brought activity to the facility.

Bennett described procurement rules and contract thresholds (staff estimated the bid threshold is in the mid‑$70,000s and indexed annually), and clarified that the county follows the calendar year for its fiscal cycle. On capital decisions, commissioners said Portage County holds a AA bond rating but has not issued debt in roughly a decade; any large capital or building project would require months of study and an ability to repay debt.

Commissioners stressed efforts to be good stewards of taxpayer money while maintaining critical services. Timlin highlighted emergency‑management responses and mutual‑aid support in recent incidents and asked residents to contact county offices with questions. The meeting closed with announcements about upcoming community events and a tree‑planting for America250.