Washington County Oregon: Government, Services, and Administration
Washington County is Oregon's second-most populous county, home to more than 600,000 residents (U.S. Census Bureau, 2020 Decennial Census) and anchored by the cities of Hillsboro, Beaverton, and Tigard. The county operates under Oregon's general-law county framework, administering both state-mandated functions and locally initiated services across a 726-square-mile jurisdiction west of Portland. Understanding how county governance is structured, how services are delivered, and where jurisdictional boundaries lie is essential for residents, contractors, businesses, and researchers operating in the region.
Definition and Scope
Washington County is a general-law county organized under Oregon's county government structure, meaning its powers and responsibilities derive from Oregon Revised Statutes (ORS) rather than a home-rule charter. The governing body is the Board of County Commissioners, composed of 5 elected commissioners — 4 representing geographic districts and 1 serving as Chair at-large — as confirmed by the Washington County Charter.
The county administers services in the following primary domains:
- Land use and development — zoning, permitting, code compliance, and coordination with the Oregon Department of Land Conservation and Development
- Public health and social services — in partnership with Oregon Health Authority and Oregon Department of Human Services
- Transportation infrastructure — county road maintenance and coordination with Oregon Department of Transportation
- Assessment and taxation — property assessment, collection of property taxes, and distribution to taxing districts
- Judicial and law enforcement — the Washington County Sheriff's Office and Circuit Court, which operates as part of the Oregon Circuit Court system
- Elections administration — conducted under authority delegated by Oregon's election administration framework
Scope limitations: This page covers Washington County's governmental structure and services under Oregon law. Federal programs administered locally (such as FEMA flood management or HUD housing grants) are subject to federal agency rules not addressed here. Incorporated cities within Washington County — including Hillsboro and Beaverton — maintain independent municipal governments; county services do not override or duplicate city-level functions within incorporated boundaries except where state law mandates unified administration (e.g., elections, assessments).
How It Works
Washington County government operates through a department structure reporting to the Board of County Commissioners. The Chair serves as the chief executive officer and appoints a County Administrator who manages day-to-day operations. The county's fiscal year runs July 1 through June 30, with the annual budget adopted by the Board following public hearings required under Oregon's public meetings law.
Property tax administration is a core county function. The county assessor determines assessed values; the tax collector distributes revenues to approximately 100 taxing districts operating within county boundaries, including school districts, fire districts, and urban renewal agencies. Washington County falls within the Metro regional government service area for regional planning and waste management coordination.
For land use decisions, Washington County applies its Community Development Code in conformance with the statewide land use planning goals administered by DLCD. Urban growth boundaries — defining where development is permitted — are negotiated between the county, Metro, and individual cities. Rural land outside the urban growth boundary is subject to stricter agricultural and forest preservation rules under Oregon land use planning statutes.
The county also participates in the Washington County Consolidated Communications Agency (WCCCA), a 911 dispatch service covering law enforcement, fire, and emergency medical services across the county's jurisdictions.
Common Scenarios
Professionals and residents encounter Washington County government in several recurring contexts:
- Building and development permits — Unincorporated Washington County requires permits for new construction, remodels, and land divisions through the Land Use and Transportation department. Permit types include land use approvals, building permits, and public improvement permits, each governed by separate ORS chapters and county code.
- Property tax appeals — Property owners disputing assessed values file with the Washington County Board of Property Tax Appeals, which convenes annually between October 1 and April 15 under ORS 309.026.
- Business licensing — Washington County does not issue a general county-level business license; however, businesses in unincorporated areas may require specific land use approvals or state-issued licenses administered through the Oregon Department of Consumer and Business Services.
- Elections and voter registration — The Washington County Elections Division administers all county, city, school district, and special district elections under state law. Oregon's all-mail voting system means ballots are mailed to registered voters 14–18 days before each election (Oregon Secretary of State, Elections Division).
- Public records requests — Filed under Oregon's public records law, requests are directed to the specific department holding the records; the county charges fees consistent with ORS 192.324.
Washington County borders Multnomah County to the east and Yamhill County to the south, creating frequent jurisdictional adjacency issues for projects, businesses, or residents straddling county lines.
Decision Boundaries
Determining which governmental entity holds authority over a specific issue in Washington County follows a layered analysis:
County vs. city jurisdiction: County land use and building codes apply only in unincorporated areas. Properties within city limits fall under that city's municipal code. The Washington County vs. Beaverton boundary is an active planning boundary affecting property owners in western portions of the Portland metropolitan area.
County vs. state authority: Environmental permits (air, water, hazardous materials) are issued by the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality, not the county. Employment disputes fall under the Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries. Tax disputes above the county board level proceed to the Oregon Tax Court.
County vs. special district: Washington County contains more than 60 special districts providing services ranging from fire protection to library services. The Oregon special districts framework governs their formation, governance, and dissolution independently of county government. The Oregon Secretary of State maintains the official registry of active special districts statewide.
For a broader view of how Washington County fits within Oregon's governmental hierarchy, the Oregon Government Authority index provides structured access to state agency and local government reference information.
References
- Washington County, Oregon — Official Website
- Washington County Charter
- U.S. Census Bureau — 2020 Decennial Census, Washington County Oregon
- Oregon Revised Statutes — County Government (ORS Chapter 203)
- Oregon Secretary of State, Elections Division
- Oregon Department of Land Conservation and Development
- Metro Regional Government
- Washington County Consolidated Communications Agency (WCCCA)
- Oregon ORS 309.026 — Board of Property Tax Appeals
- Oregon ORS 192.324 — Public Records Fee Schedule