The Lawrence County Workforce Crisis – Frozen Wages, Cut Support, and a 30-Day Insurance Scramble

The Lawrence County Workforce Crisis – Frozen Wages, Cut Support, and a 30-Day Insurance Scramble

Over the last 72 hours, multiple Lawrence County employees from various departments have securely reached out to us. Their combined accounts reveal a severe, ongoing financial and administrative crisis inside our local government.

Under the umbrella of "budget issues," county leadership has enacted a series of drastic changes that are directly impacting the livelihoods of the front-line workers who keep our county operational. Here is what is happening behind closed doors:

🔴 The 30-Day Insurance Crisis: On June 26th, employees were suddenly informed that their current county health coverage will terminate on July 31st. The workforce is being pushed to an insurance marketplace and told to use a brokerage firm, JA Benefits, with an open enrollment deadline of July 15th.

🔴 Vulnerable Employees Abandoned: Employees with pre-existing conditions and older staff members are being advised it will be extremely difficult to secure affordable coverage, with many being told they will have to rely on Medicare. The county has also provided zero answers on whether employees will retain dental and vision coverage.

🔴 Three Years of Frozen Wages: The county's “incremental raise” schedule was quietly gutted years ago. County workers have not received a raise—not even a basic Cost of Living Adjustment (COLA)—in three years, effectively forcing them to take an annual pay cut amid record inflation.

🔴 Targeted Cuts and No HR Support: This benefits chaos is happening exactly after the County Council forced a controversial 4-3 vote to eliminate the county's Administrative Director in the 2025 budget. Against the warnings of department heads who stated the role was essential for HR operations, the position was slashed—leaving employees without internal advocacy right as this massive insurance overhaul hits.

🔴 The Staffing & Overtime Squeeze: Recent pay bumps in certain areas were funded directly by cutting the number of open positions, leaving remaining staff with crushing workloads. Meanwhile, department leaders are reportedly pressuring employees to take "comp time" instead of legally earned overtime pay, forcing veteran employees out and leaving vital departments dangerously short-handed.

While elected officials point fingers at the budget, the workforce is taking the hit. The Watchdog is currently preparing formal public records requests regarding the JA Benefits contract, the internal memos distributed on June 26th, and the official Salary Ordinances to get the paper trail for the public.

🗣️ We are listening. If you are a county worker affected by these sweeping changes, message this page securely or email us at records@lawrencecountyrecords.com. Total anonymity is guaranteed.

UPDATE: We went into the State Gateway database to look at the certified 100R employee compensation logs, and the state's own math proves the crisis. Between 2023 and 2025, Lawrence County's reported workforce records shrank from 362 down to 296—slashing 66 positions across the county. Furthermore, official records prove that between 2024 and 2025, base compensation for roles like Clerk First Deputies, Surveyors, Recorders, and Veterans Service Officers flatlined down to the exact penny ($0.00 raise).