How Billings Metro Government Is Structured

Billings, Montana operates under a two-tiered local government framework that divides authority between the City of Billings and Yellowstone County, the most populous county in Montana. Understanding how these bodies relate — and where their jurisdictions overlap, cooperate, or conflict — is essential for residents, businesses, and civic participants engaging with local public services. This page covers the formal structure of Billings metro governance, the mechanics of each governing body, the drivers behind the current configuration, and the tensions that shape ongoing policy debates.


Definition and Scope

The Billings metropolitan area encompasses the City of Billings, Yellowstone County, and adjacent unincorporated communities that function economically and socially as part of the same urban region. For governmental purposes, the primary administrative units are the Billings City Council (operating under a council-manager form of government) and the Yellowstone County Commission.

Billings is the largest city in Montana, with a city population exceeding 117,000 as of the 2020 U.S. Census (U.S. Census Bureau, 2020 Decennial Census). Yellowstone County's total population was recorded at approximately 161,300 in the same enumeration, meaning roughly 73 percent of county residents live within the city limits. That ratio has direct consequences for how tax burdens, service delivery, and political representation are distributed across the metro area. More detail on population composition is available on the Billings Metro Population and Demographics page.

The scope of "metro government" in Billings does not refer to a unified consolidated government (as exists in cities like Louisville-Jefferson County, Kentucky). Instead, it describes a functional metro region governed by legally distinct but cooperating entities operating under Montana state law, Title 7 of the Montana Code Annotated (MCA).


Core Mechanics or Structure

City of Billings — Council-Manager Form

The City of Billings operates under the council-manager model, one of the two most common municipal governance forms in U.S. cities (International City/County Management Association, ICMA). Under this structure:

The City Administrator position insulates day-to-day operations from electoral cycles, emphasizing administrative continuity over direct democratic accountability in routine management decisions.

Yellowstone County Commission

Yellowstone County is governed by a 3-member Board of County Commissioners, elected to staggered 6-year terms under Montana law (MCA Title 7, Chapter 4). Commissioners serve simultaneously as an executive and legislative body — there is no separate county administrator role mandated by state law, though Yellowstone County employs professional department heads. The County is responsible for functions that extend across the full county geography, including property assessment, elections administration (through the County Clerk and Recorder), district courts, and sheriff services.

Special Districts and Independent Boards

Beyond the two primary bodies, the Billings metro area contains a constellation of special-purpose districts operating with independent taxing authority. These include:

Each special district levies its own mill rates, approved by elected or appointed boards, and falls outside the direct control of either the City Council or County Commission.


Causal Relationships or Drivers

Montana's constitutional framework (Montana Constitution, Article XI) requires that cities and counties remain structurally separate unless voters approve a formal consolidation referendum. No such consolidation has occurred in Yellowstone County. The persistence of parallel city and county governments is therefore constitutionally and politically determined rather than the result of administrative inertia alone.

The council-manager form in Billings was adopted to professionalize city administration — a reform movement that spread across U.S. cities in the early 20th century as a response to patronage-driven government. Roughly 55 percent of U.S. cities with populations above 25,000 use the council-manager form (ICMA State of the Profession Survey), reflecting Billings' alignment with a national municipal governance trend.

Population growth has also been a structural driver. Billings' population grew by approximately 8.7 percent between 2010 and 2020 (U.S. Census Bureau), expanding both the geographic footprint of urban services and the pressure on county-administered infrastructure in unincorporated areas adjacent to city limits. That growth dynamic creates ongoing negotiation over annexation, service extension, and cost-sharing — all of which are documented in Billings Metro Regional Planning.


Classification Boundaries

Montana law distinguishes between incorporated municipalities (cities and towns) and unincorporated county territory. This boundary determines which governmental body holds zoning, code enforcement, and utility provision authority.

Territory Type Governing Authority Zoning Jurisdiction Primary Services
Incorporated City of Billings City Council + City Administrator City Planning Department Police, city water/sewer, city roads
Unincorporated Yellowstone County County Commission County Planning Board Sheriff, county roads, rural fire districts
Annexed areas (recently incorporated) Transitional — City assumes control upon annexation completion City City services phased in per annexation agreement
Special district territory Special district board N/A (no land-use authority) Specific service only (e.g., fire, water)

The distinction between city and county authority is particularly consequential for Billings Metro Zoning and Land Use, where two separate planning bodies — the Billings City-County Planning Board (a joint body) and the City Planning Department — operate under distinct legal mandates despite shared geography.


Tradeoffs and Tensions

Coordination Costs vs. Autonomy

The dual-body structure requires formal intergovernmental agreements for shared services. The City and County jointly fund the Billings Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO), required by federal transportation law for urban areas exceeding 50,000 in population (23 U.S.C. § 134). Coordinating two elected bodies with different electoral cycles and different constituent bases increases transaction costs but preserves independent democratic accountability for each jurisdiction.

Annexation Conflicts

The City's authority to annex unincorporated county territory is a recurring source of political tension. When the City annexes land, it gains tax revenue but also inherits service obligations. County residents in areas targeted for annexation may resist, since city property tax rates can differ from county-only rates. Montana's annexation procedures are governed by MCA Title 7, Chapter 2, Part 46, which requires notice and, in some cases, consent from affected property owners.

Special District Fragmentation

The proliferation of independent taxing districts means a single Billings-area property may be subject to city, county, school district, fire district, and other levies simultaneously. This creates a complex tax bill but limits any single elected body's control over the total tax burden. For context on fiscal structures, the Billings Metro Budget and Finance page details how revenues are allocated across entities.


Common Misconceptions

Misconception: The Mayor runs the city administration.
Correction: Under Billings' council-manager form, the Mayor is a council member with a presiding role, not a chief executive. Day-to-day administration is the City Administrator's responsibility. The Mayor cannot unilaterally hire, fire, or direct city department heads.

Misconception: Billings has a metro-wide consolidated government.
Correction: No consolidation referendum has been passed in Yellowstone County. The City and County remain legally distinct entities with separate budgets, elected officials, and service obligations. The appearance of coordination (joint planning boards, shared facilities) reflects intergovernmental agreements, not a merged governance structure.

Misconception: The City Council controls the school districts.
Correction: Billings School District 2 and Billings High School District are independent governmental entities with separately elected school boards and separate taxing authority. The City Council has no statutory authority over school board decisions, personnel, or budgets.

Misconception: County Commissioners serve 4-year terms.
Correction: Montana county commissioners serve 6-year staggered terms, not the 4-year cycles common in many other states (MCA § 7-4-2101).


Checklist or Steps

Elements to Verify When Identifying the Governing Authority for a Billings-Area Address

  1. Confirm whether the address falls within incorporated City of Billings limits using the City's official GIS mapping portal.
  2. If within city limits, identify the City Council ward assignment for the address.
  3. If outside city limits, confirm the address is in unincorporated Yellowstone County territory governed by the County Commission.
  4. Check whether the property falls within any special district boundaries (school district, fire district, water/sewer district) using Yellowstone County's parcel viewer.
  5. For zoning questions, determine whether the applicable zoning code is the City of Billings Zoning Ordinance or the Yellowstone County Zoning Regulations.
  6. For elected officials representing the address, cross-reference both county commissioner district maps and city council ward maps, since county commissioner districts do not align with city ward boundaries.
  7. For federal program eligibility, confirm whether the address falls within the Billings MPO urbanized area boundary, which affects transportation funding and planning requirements.

The Billings Metro Elected Officials page lists current officeholders by jurisdiction and district.


Reference Table or Matrix

Comparative Structure: City of Billings vs. Yellowstone County

Attribute City of Billings Yellowstone County
Governance form Council-Manager Commission (3 members)
Elected legislative body City Council (10 members) Board of County Commissioners
Chief executive Appointed City Administrator Commissioners serve executive role
Mayor/Chair Elected Mayor (presiding, non-executive) Commission Chair (rotating)
Term lengths Council: 4 years; Mayor: 4 years Commissioners: 6 years (staggered)
Primary legal authority Montana Code Annotated, Title 7 Montana Code Annotated, Title 7
Zoning authority City Planning Department County Planning Board
Law enforcement Billings Police Department Yellowstone County Sheriff
Geographic scope Incorporated city limits (~44 sq. miles) Full county (~2,635 sq. miles)
Budget cycle Fiscal year beginning July 1 Fiscal year beginning July 1
Key shared body City-County Planning Board (joint) City-County Planning Board (joint)

Residents seeking a broader civic orientation can access the overview at billingsmetroauthority.com, which maps the full scope of metro area resources.


References