Indiana township trustee: Difference between revisions
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* Managing the township budget and financial records |
* Managing the township budget and financial records |
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* Preparing an annual financial report |
* Preparing an annual financial report |
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* Property assessment (in townships with fewer than 15,000 parcels) |
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==Township Board== |
==Township Board== |
Revision as of 17:59, 11 March 2009
A Township Trustee is an elected official in the local government of the U.S. state of Indiana. A township trustee administers a township, which is a political subdivision of a county, and in common with most other state officials serves a term of four years.
Duties
The duties of a township trustee include:
- Providing fire protection and ambulance service to unincorporated areas of the county
- Providing for poor relief and burial of the indigent
- Maintaining cemeteries and burial grounds
- Resolving fence disputes
- Investigating claims of livestock killed by dogs
- Controlling weeds
- Managing the township budget and financial records
- Preparing an annual financial report
Township Board
The trustee is assisted by a three-member Township Board whose members are also elected to four year terms. Duties of the board include adopting the annual budget, serving as a board of finance and approving township contracts. In January of each year, the trustee presents to the board an annual report showing the receipts, expenditures, investments and debts of the township. The approved report is then published in local papers for public inspection.