Surry County Authority
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Surry County Authority

Surry County has 6,549 residents and a median household income of $78,041.

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Part of Virginia State Authority

Surry County Virginia: Government, Services, and Demographics

Surry County sits on the south bank of the James River, directly across from Williamsburg, occupying a quiet but historically consequential corner of the Virginia Tidewater. With a population of approximately 6,500 residents — one of the smallest county populations in the Commonwealth — Surry operates a full suite of county government functions despite its modest scale. This page covers the county's governmental structure, core public services, demographic profile, and the practical realities of how local administration functions for residents.

Definition and scope

Surry County is a unit of Virginia's constitutional county government system, established under Article VII of the Virginia Constitution. The county seat is the town of Surry, and the county spans roughly 279 square miles (U.S. Census Bureau, 2020 Census) — predominantly rural, forested, and agricultural, with the James River forming its northern boundary.

Virginia's constitution grants counties broad home-rule authority, but Surry, like all Virginia counties, operates under state-delegated powers rather than an independent municipal charter. That distinction matters: decisions on zoning, taxation, public education, and social services all flow through a governance structure defined at the state level, then administered locally.

What this coverage addresses:

What falls outside this scope: Federal programs administered through agencies like the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Rural Development office, or state agencies operating independently of county government (the Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles, for instance), are not county functions. This page does not cover the independent Town of Surry's separate municipal ordinances, nor does it address the jurisdictions of neighboring counties such as Isle of Wight County or Sussex County, which share borders with Surry.

How it works

Surry County is governed by a five-member Board of Supervisors, elected by district, which sets the annual budget, establishes local ordinances, and appoints the County Administrator — the chief executive officer responsible for day-to-day operations. This board-administrator model is the dominant form of county governance in Virginia, used by a majority of the Commonwealth's 95 counties.

The Board of Supervisors adopts a real property tax rate expressed in dollars per $100 of assessed value; Surry's rate has historically aligned with rural Virginia averages, though the specific rate is set annually and confirmed through the county's official budget process (Surry County Government, surryva.gov).

Elected constitutional officers operate alongside but independently of the Board. These include:

This separation between the Board's appointees and the independently elected constitutional officers is a structural feature of Virginia local government — not a quirk, but a deliberate constitutional design dating to Virginia's 1971 constitution. The Clerk of Circuit Court, for example, answers to the voters and the courts, not to the County Administrator.

Public schools operate under the Surry County Public Schools division, governed by a School Board. Enrollment figures for Surry County Public Schools sit below 1,000 students district-wide, a scale that shapes everything from staffing ratios to per-pupil expenditure calculations reported annually to the Virginia Department of Education (VDOE, vdoe.virginia.gov).

Common scenarios

Most resident interactions with county government fall into a predictable cluster of transactions:

Property and land use: Real estate assessment appeals go through the Commissioner of the Revenue, with a formal Board of Equalization process available. Building permits are issued through the county's building and zoning office. Surry County's land use is predominantly agricultural and forested — the county contains portions of Surry County State Forest — so land-use decisions frequently involve interaction with both local zoning and the Virginia Department of Forestry.

Social services: The Surry County Department of Social Services administers state-funded programs including Medicaid, Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), and child protective services under a cooperative funding arrangement between the county and the Commonwealth. Virginia's local social services departments operate as agents of the state, meaning eligibility rules are set in Richmond but casework is handled locally.

Emergency services: Surry County operates a volunteer-based rescue squad alongside the Sheriff's Office for emergency response. The county's small population creates genuine coverage challenges — a persistent characteristic of rural Virginia counties where volunteer fire and rescue infrastructure carries disproportionate weight.

Dominion Energy's Surry Power Station: The county hosts one of the most significant electricity-generating facilities in Virginia. Surry Power Station, a two-unit nuclear plant operated by Dominion Energy, has operated since the early 1970s and contributes substantially to the county's commercial tax base. The plant's presence shapes local government finance in ways that most comparably-sized rural counties never experience — it is, in practical terms, the reason Surry County has the fiscal capacity it does.

Decision boundaries

Residents of Surry County encounter a layered authority structure where county, state, and federal jurisdiction often overlap. Understanding which level of government to contact is genuinely non-obvious.

County jurisdiction applies to: local property tax assessments, zoning and subdivision approvals, county road maintenance requests (for secondary roads, submitted through Virginia Department of Transportation's residency offices), animal control, and local business licenses.

State jurisdiction applies to: driver licensing, vehicle registration, professional licensing, state park management, and circuit court proceedings — all administered by state agencies that happen to have local offices or operate locally.

Federal jurisdiction applies to: nuclear facility oversight (the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission regulates the Surry Power Station, not the county), federal highway programs, and federal benefit programs like Social Security administered through field offices.

The Virginia Government Authority resource provides detailed reference material on how Virginia's state-level agencies interact with county governments across the Commonwealth — particularly useful for understanding the funding formulas and regulatory frameworks that flow down to counties like Surry. It covers the structural relationship between Richmond and local government in the kind of operational depth that county-level pages cannot fully replicate.

For residents navigating questions that span multiple levels — a land-use dispute involving a state utility easement, for instance — the practical starting point is almost always the County Administrator's office, which can route inquiries to the correct authority. A full orientation to the state's geographic and administrative divisions is available on the Virginia State Authority home page.

The contrast between Surry and a county like Fairfax County is instructive. Fairfax, with over 1.1 million residents, runs a fully professionalized county government with dedicated departments for every function. Surry, at roughly 6,500 residents, achieves comparable constitutional completeness — all the same elected offices, the same service mandates — with a fraction of qualified professionals and budget. The structure is identical. The scale is not.

Communities in This County

Federal Disaster Declarations (13)

Severe Winter Storm
January 2026 · Emergency declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · incident type: winter storm · EM-3631-VA
COVID-19 Pandemic Federal Disaster
January 2020 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance only (institutional reimbursement) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4512-VA
COVID-19 Emergency
January 2020 · Emergency declaration · Public Assistance only (institutional reimbursement) · EM-3448-VA
Hurricane Florence
September 2018 · Emergency declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · EM-3403-VA
Hurricane Sandy
October 2012 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4092-VA
Hurricane Sandy
October 2012 · Emergency declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · EM-3359-VA
Hurricane Irene
August 2011 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-4024-VA
Hurricane Irene
August 2011 · Emergency declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · EM-3329-VA
Severe Storms And Flooding Associated With Tropical Depression Ida And A Nor'East
November 2009 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-1862-VA
Tropical Depression Ernesto, Severe Storms And Flooding
August 2006 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-1661-VA
Hurricane Katrina (hosted evacuees, no local impact)
August 2005 · Emergency declaration · hosted federal evacuees (no local impact) · EM-3240-VA
Hurricane Isabel
September 2003 · Major disaster declaration · Individual Assistance to residents · DR-1491-VA
Severe Winter Storms
January 2000 · Major disaster declaration · Public Assistance to local agencies (no Individual Assistance) · Hazard Mitigation grants available · DR-1318-VA

Codes & laws coverage

County ordinances indexing

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categories with corpus rows (100% of applicable) · known: Agency Guidance, Attorney General Opinions, Constitution & Foundation, County Ordinances, Court Decisions (+5 more) · full breakdown →

Laws & Codes

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  • 2026-06454 Incorrect Terminology in Regulatory Text; Technical Amendments · source
  • 2026-07667 Notice of 2026 Coastal Plain Oil and Gas Lease Sale · source
  • 2025-24202 Congressional Review Act Revocation of 2024 Review of Final Rule Reclassification of Major Sources as Area Sources Under Section 112 of the · source
  • 2026-08295 Submission for OMB Review; Comment Request · source
  • 2026-08127 Foreign-Trade Zone 255; Application for Subzone; Fisher BioServices; Frederick, Maryland · source
  • 2026-02639 Ripe Olives From Spain: Preliminary Results and Partial Rescission of Countervailing Duty Administrative Review; 2023 · source
  • 2026-01454 Slag Pots From the People's Republic of China: Antidumping Duty Order and Countervailing Duty Order · source
  • 2026-08483 Agency Information Collection Activities: Requests for Comments; Clearance of a New Approval of Information Collection: Reauthorization Sect · source
  • 2026-05316 Center for Scientific Review; Notice of Closed Meetings · source
  • 2026-05906 Notice Pursuant to the National Cooperative Research and Production Act of 1993-Biopharmaceutical Manufacturing Preparedness Consortium · source

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