|
||||
![]() |
![]() |
|||
|
||||
| 10:26:36 AM | Home > Departments > Chancery Clerk |
|
About John
Prior to beginning his political career in 1987 when he was elected Harrison County Justice Court Judge, John McAdams served five years as a Harrison County Deputy Sheriff, four as a uniformed patrolman and one as a criminal investigator. He served as Justice Court Judge for eight years, thereafter being elected Chancery Clerk and taking office in January 1996. He has overseen many improvements in the operation of the Chancery Clerk's office. One of his first acts was to hire a Certified Public Accountant as Chief Deputy Clerk to help manage the county's money. This includes depositing tax money collected into interest-bearing accounts. John McAdams began a records management program for Harrison County and encouraged the Board of Supervisors to authorize collecting a $1 records management fee on all documents recorded, the first county in the state to do so. (See the Records Management page for more details.) Thanks to the salary cap on fee-paid officials, John McAdams has been able to turn over to Harrison County nearly $1.5M in fees since taking office, which funds have helped establish a countywide digital imaging system for land recordings, all court files, county claims, and Minutes of the Board of Supervisors. John McAdams is a member of the Property Records Industry Association (PRIA), a partnership of business and government members with the goal of facilitating recordation and access to public property records. He also serves on the National Board of Directors, and is co-chair of the Land Records Committee, of the National Association of County Recorders, Election Officials and Clerks (NACRC). NACRA is a professional organization of elected and appointed county administrative officials, which provides its members continuing education and opportunities to exchange ideas and information on a national level. He also serves on the Legislative Committee of the Mississippi Chancery Clerks Association, being instrumental in the establishment of statewide uniform real estate documents legislation, to be effective July 1, 2009. Click on "Format for Deeds" here or in the Linked Site Services box at left, which contains Section 89-5-24, Miss. Code of 1972, Annotated, and a sample Warranty Deed in the new format. Duties and Responsibilities As the Clerk of the Board of Supervisors, he records the official minutes. As Treasurer, the Clerk prepares the claims docket and payrolls for all departments of the County, and after Board approval, he writes and signs checks for payments. As public recorder, the Clerk handles the recording and storage of several types of documents and maintains various indexes that aid people in researching these records. The primary records are deeds and mortgages relating to real property, but the Clerk also records construction and condominium liens, federal tax liens, lis pendens (notices of pending lawsuits) and military discharges. The Clerk is in charge of the storage and authorized disposal of older land rolls, tax receipts and many other County records after their active use lifespan. As Clerk of the Chancery Court, the Clerk handles a multitude of tasks such as matters of estates, guardianships, conservatorships, divorces, child custody, adoption, property disputes and other matters of equity. Current and Completed Projects On March 15, 2004, the Chancery Clerk's Office implemented a computerized deed imaging system that eliminates the need for hard copy books and also established the first and only E-commerce site for purchasing land record documents on line. Imaging helps the office deal with space problems due to the increasing volume of deeds and mortgages being filed while providing backups for the hard copy books in case they are damaged. These images, along with existing deed records back to 1985, are also available on the County's website - click on "Land Records Online" in the Linked Site Services box at left. In April 2006, McAdams initiated digital recordings in Chancery Court, making court files accessible to judges, attorneys, and clerks, thus creating a more efficient method of management of records. Beginning November 2006, the Chancery Clerk, as Clerk of the Board of Supervisors, implemented a computerized imaging system to scan the Minutes of the Board of Supervisors. This is an ongoing process, and as time permits the Minutes prior to November 2006 are being scanned by the Minutes Clerk. In 2001-02 the Genealogical Society of Utah, in conjunction with the Mississippi Department of Archives and History, sponsored a 14-month project microfilming Harrison County's older deed, marriage, voter registration and Chancery Court records, along with several other miscellaneous records, including Confederate pension records, totaling nearly 525,000 images. Local and GSU volunteers flattened and repaired court files and compiled indexes to several County record series dating from 1841 to 1950. The original records are still preserved here while microfilm copies are available at the Department of Archives and History and through GSU. In the records vault of the Chancery Clerk's Office in Gulfport you will find notebooks containing historical and genealogy information obtained from probate records, 1841-1915. These books contain the names of the decedent, the administrator/executor of the estate, the heirs of the deceased, the devisees under the will filed for probate, and any debtor or creditor of the estate. These extractions are a valuable tool in genealogical research of the early records of Harrison County. County claims are now electronically generated with digital backup of
claims and laser printer technology for all checks issued. Digital backup
of claims is more efficient and accessible for auditing purposes. All
subdivision plats have been scanned and a digital copy is available for
easy access and reproduction. As time permits, hard copies of all documents
are being digitally scanned for easy and efficient access. Additional
computers have been added in the records vaults of both the First and
Second Judicial District Courthouses for public use in accessing the land
records. Employees of the First and Second Judicial Distrsict recording
departments are in the process of back scanning, from 1979 to 1986, deeds
and deeds of trust, construction liens, les pendens notices, Federal tax
liens, and Charters of Incorporation, converting these records to digital
format for easy accessibility to the public. |
|||||||||||||||||||||||
| ©2002-2010
Harrison County - All Rights Reserved Currently, there are 69 people online |