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County Facts
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| Form of Government | County Manager | County Facts | County Profile |
| County History | Contact Information | Holiday Schedule | |
County Manager: Thomas
B. Robinson
Assistant County Manager/Finance Officer: Michael W.
Apple
Clerk to the Board: Pamela M. McLain
Director of Personnel :
John A. Dean
County Attorney: W. Eugene
Russell
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Rockingham County Governmental Center:
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Form of Government: Board/Manager
Board of Commissioners
Rockingham County is governed by a five-member Board of Commissioners, elected at large to serve four-year terms. Terms are staggered so that, every two years, one to three Commissioners are up for election. Following the November election, the Board takes office at its December meeting, when a Chair and Vice-Chair are elected for a one-year term each.
The Commissioners enact policies such as establishment of the property tax rate, regulation of land use and zoning outside municipal jurisdiction, and adoption of the annual budget. Commissioners meet on the second and fourth Monday of each month, unless the meeting date is changed due to holidays or other reasons. (See 2009 Meeting Schedule for dates.) Second Monday meetings begin at 630 p.m., with a public hearings scheduled for 7:00 p.m. and Fourth Monday meetings begin at 3:30. Citizens wishing to address the Board will be asked to sign up to speak. All meetings are conducted in the Commissioners' Chambers in the Governmental Center in Wentworth, unless otherwise stated, and are open to the public.
County Manager
Under the leadership of the County Manager, the Commissioners' plans and objectives are carried out. Day-to-day operation of Rockingham County Government is the responsibility of the Manager and his staff. The County Manager has a variety of responsibilities, including the implementation of policies formed by the commissioners, the organization and administration of county departments, and the preparation of the recommended annual budget.
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County Facts
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County Profile:
| Population | |
| Population 2006 (Estimate) | 93,063 |
| Population 2000 | 91,928 |
| Population 1990 | 86,064 |
| Median Age | 38.5 |
| Population Density 2000 | 162 |
| Percent Population Change 1990-2000 | 6.8% |
| Percent 0-17 | 23.4% |
| Percent 65 and over | 14.8% |
| Percent Born in NC | 76.4% |
| Income and Poverty | |
| Median Household Income 2004 | $35,539 |
| Per Capita Income 2005 | $25,418 |
| Population in Poverty 2000 | 11,619 |
| Poverty Rate 2000 | 12.8% |
| Child Poverty Rate | 16.3% |
| Elderly Poverty Rate | 15.5% |
| Percent Receiving Food Stamps | 10.2% |
| Housing | |
| Percent Unaffordable Housing | 18.2% |
| Percent Substandard Housing | 0.1% |
| Home-ownership Rate | 73.7% |
| Health | |
| Persons Per Physician | 11.7 |
| Percent Uninsured | 18% |
| Infant Mortality Rate | 7.6 |
| Emergency Room Visit Rate | 515 |
| Education | |
| Students Passing End of Grade Exams | 71.3% |
| White Students Passing End of Grade Exams | 77.5% |
| Black Students Passing End of Grade Exams | 52.7% |
| American Indian Students Passing End of Grade Exams | |
| Asian Students Passing End of Grade Exams | |
| Hispanic Students Passing End of Grade Exams | 65.5% |
| Per Student Expenditures K-12 | $6,515 |
| Dropout Rate | 5.7% |
| Percent with Less Than High School Education | 31.1% |
| Percent with High School Diploma | 33.3% |
| Percent with Bachelor's Degree or Higher | 10.8% |
| Labor Force and Employment | |
| Percent Working Age Population | 61.8% |
| Unemployment Rate | 7.4% |
| Female Labor Force Participation Rate | 55.3% |
| Percent Working in Manufacturing | 38.6% |
| Percent Working in Agriculture | 0.6% |
| Percent Professionals | 22.3% |
| Percent Working in Production | 28.5% |
| Percent Working in Sales | 22.4% |
| Total Announced Layoffs | 1,137 |
| Agriculture and Natural Resources | |
| Total Agricultural Receipts | $35,683,000 |
| Total Farms 2002 | 871 |
| Percent Family Owned Farms | 93.2% |
| Average Farm Size 2002 | 156 |
| Tobacco Dependency Ranking | Low |
| Other | |
| Crime Rate | 43.7 |
| Property Tax Rate | $0.705 |
| Ability to Pay | 14 |
| Percent Employed in Traditional Industries | 32.3% |
| Voting Rate | 62.2% |
Rockingham County Databook (Public Health)
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County History
The North Carolina General Assembly
created Rockingham County from the northern portion of Guilford County on
December 29, 1785. The new county was named for Charles Watson Wentworth, the
Second Marquis of Rockingham, who served as Great Britain’s Prime Minister
from 1765-1766 and in 1782.
In 1786 the
first session of the Rockingham County Court of Pleas and Quarter Session
convened at the home of Adam Tate at Eagle Falls on the south side of the Dan
River. A site for a county seat was secured in 1787 on the land of Constantine
Perkins and Charles Gallaway near the center of the county.
The site was
located on a high ridge just east of Rockhouse Creek between Bear and Rocky
branches. Public buildings were then constructed and the county court convened
in the new courthouse in November 1787. Action by the General Assembly in 1798
established the town of “Wentworth” at the county seat.
In early North
Carolina government was largely in the hands of the County Court of Pleas and
Quarter Sessions composed of a “board” of Justices of the Peace appointed to
the court by the Governor and, in later years, by the General Assembly. In
addition to other duties, the responsibilities of the court included:
·
hearing civil suits and minor criminal cases,
·
providing for public buildings,
·
probating decedent’s estates,
·
ruling on individual cases of lunacy,
·
caring for orphans and illegitimate children, and
·
maintaining public roads and bridges
Those appointed
to the county court served for life and, as appointments were made with
ever-increasing volume during the nineteenth century, the court became quite
large. Although up to forty to
fifty justices were serving, there were seldom more than four to six justices
present whenever quarterly court was in session. Elections for county officers
usually brought out most of the justices at least once a year.
The county
court appointed other county officers such as:
the sheriff, the county’s chief
enforcer of law and in later years the tax collector;
clerk of court, who recorded all
court proceedings;
trustee, the equivalent of
treasurer;
register of deeds;
rangers;
entry taker, who represented the
government concerning land grants;
surveyor;
road overseers;
standard keepers, who maintained the
system and rate of weights and measurements throughout the county;
wardens of the poor, who oversaw the
county’s poor and needy with special attention to the county home;
coroners, who held inquests into
unnatural deaths;
patrolers, who kept the slave
population in control, and
constables, who executed the
directives of the justices.
With the
passage of the North Carolina Public School of Act of 1839, each county was
instructed to appoint a county board of superintendents of the common schools
consisting of some five to ten prominent citizens. This board of superintendents
was responsible for the numerous school districts in the county and also
appointed local committees in each of those districts for the schools therein.
Following the
overthrow of the Confederate Government, the North Carolina Constitution was
rewritten in 1868, by draftsmen familiar with the forms of local government in
states such as Pennsylvania and Ohio. This
new constitution greatly changed county government.
The position of
justice of the peace was retained but the county court was abolished. The
court’s legal duties were largely assigned to the Superior Court and the
administrative duties of the court were assigned to the newly created board of
county commissioners. The board of commissioners was composed of five members
elected by the county’s voters at large. Moreover, the voters would now elect
the sheriff, register, clerk, coroner, surveyor, and treasurer (the office of
trustee was abolished).
The county was
divided into townships (now numbering eleven) in which the voters therein
elected two justices of the peace and a clerk to serve as the governing body of
the township. Each township also had one constable. The township system never
developed to a great extent in the state and today exists only for
administrative purposes.
With the return
of the Conservatives (Democrats) to power in the state, the Constitution was
again amended in 1875. The board of commissioners was retained, but its members
were chosen by the county justices in called session. All other officers, since
1868 elected by the voters, were to be appointed by either the justices or the
commissioners. In addition, the office of county treasurer was made optional,
allowing the sheriff to serve as treasurer ex officio if the office was
abolished, which was the case in Rockingham County after 1890.
Under an act in
1876, the county commissioners constituted the county board of education. Soon,
however, the joint sessions of the justices and commissioners elected the board
of education. Beginning in 1881, the two boards and the justices elected a
county superintendent of public instruction (school superintendent). After 1901
the board of education was elected by the legislature and, beginning in 1918,
board members were nominated by the county conventions. Today, school boards are
elected by the voters by district.
The state
constitution was again amended in 1895. Restoring the elections of the board of
commissioners to the voters and the reduction in the powers of the justices were
among the many changes made. Briefly the number of the board of commissioners
was reduced to three, but was soon returned to the traditional five.
The present
century has witnessed the creation of numerous offices such as county manager,
auditor, finance officer, tax supervisor, superintendent of health (originally
created to inspect and treat conditions at the county home and jail), and
others. Today the county’s elected positions include sheriff, commissioners,
register, clerk of court, and school board. The remaining positions are
appointed.
Taken from "Historical Sketch on Rockingham County Government" by
Michael Perdue
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Contact Us
By Mail:
PO Box 206,
Wentworth NC 27375
By Phone:
(336) 342-8100
By Fax:
(336) 342-8105
By E-mail:
gwaynick@co.rockingham.nc.us
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