Logan County West Virginia Government: Structure, Services, and Offices

Logan County occupies 456 square miles in the southwestern coalfields region of West Virginia, bordering Mingo, Wyoming, Boone, and Lincoln counties. This page covers the administrative structure of Logan County government, the offices and elected positions that operate within it, the services those offices deliver, and the boundaries distinguishing county authority from state and municipal jurisdiction. For broader context on how West Virginia's governmental framework functions statewide, the West Virginia Government Authority index provides a structured overview of the full system.


Definition and scope

Logan County is a constitutional county unit of West Virginia state government, established under Article IX of the West Virginia Constitution. Counties in West Virginia are not independent governmental entities in the municipal sense — they are administrative subdivisions of the state, created to administer state functions locally and exercise limited home-rule powers as authorized by the West Virginia Legislature.

The county seat is Logan, West Virginia. The county government serves a population of approximately 31,000 residents (U.S. Census Bureau, 2020 decennial count). County authority covers unincorporated areas of Logan County and certain shared administrative functions that extend into incorporated municipalities such as Man, Chapmanville, and Switzer, though municipalities maintain their own elected mayors and councils under separate municipal charters.

Scope of this page: Coverage is limited to the Logan County governmental structure under West Virginia law. Federal agency operations within the county (e.g., U.S. Forest Service, Army Corps of Engineers, Social Security Administration field offices) are not covered. State agency field offices operating within Logan County — such as those under the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources or the West Virginia Department of Transportation — function under separate state administrative authority and are not subordinate to the county commission.


How it works

Logan County government operates through a commission-based structure mandated by West Virginia Code Chapter 7. The governing body is the Logan County Commission, composed of 3 elected commissioners serving staggered 6-year terms. Commissioners are elected countywide in partisan elections and hold both legislative and executive authority over county-level policy, budgeting, and administration.

Elected offices in Logan County include:

  1. County Commission (3 members) — primary governing authority; sets the county levy rate, approves the annual budget, and oversees county property
  2. County Clerk — administers elections, maintains deed records, issues marriage licenses, and files commission proceedings
  3. Circuit Clerk — maintains records for the 17th Judicial Circuit and the Family Court Division
  4. Sheriff — operates the county jail, enforces court orders, collects property taxes, and provides law enforcement in unincorporated areas
  5. Assessor — determines the assessed value of all real and personal property for tax purposes
  6. Prosecuting Attorney — represents the state in criminal proceedings within Logan County
  7. Magistrate Court — handles civil claims under $10,000 and minor criminal matters; Logan County has magistrate judges allocated by the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals based on population thresholds

The Logan County Sheriff's Office functions as the primary law enforcement and tax collection authority in areas not served by municipal police departments. Tax collection by the sheriff is a West Virginia-specific structural feature distinguishing it from most states, where a separate treasurer handles collections. The West Virginia State Police maintains a detachment within the county, operating under state rather than county command authority.

County revenues derive primarily from the real and personal property levy, state shared revenue distributions, and federal transfer payments. The county commission sets levy rates annually, subject to caps established under West Virginia Code §11-8.


Common scenarios

Residents and professionals interacting with Logan County government most frequently encounter the following service categories:

Adjacent Mingo County and Boone County operate under the same constitutional framework but maintain separate commissions, elected officers, and levy rates. Logan County residents cannot access Mingo or Boone county services for property or court matters absent specific jurisdictional crossover (e.g., circuit court venue transfers).


Decision boundaries

Determining which governmental level handles a specific matter in Logan County requires applying a structured jurisdictional test:

For matters involving West Virginia public records law, records held by the County Clerk and Circuit Clerk are subject to the West Virginia Freedom of Information Act (West Virginia Code §29B-1-1 et seq.), with specific exemptions for sealed court records and grand jury materials.


References