St. Bernard Parish Government: Structure and Services
St. Bernard Parish is a Louisiana parish located immediately southeast of Orleans Parish, forming a critical component of the New Orleans metropolitan area's governmental landscape. This page covers the structure of St. Bernard Parish's governing bodies, the services delivered to residents, how the parish council-president form of government operates, and how parish authority differs from neighboring jurisdictions. Readers navigating the broader regional governance framework — including the distinctions between parish and municipal government in Louisiana — will find this a grounded reference for understanding one of the metro's most distinct political units.
Definition and scope
St. Bernard Parish operates under Louisiana's home rule charter system, adopted in 1986, which grants the parish government a degree of structural autonomy not available under the default state-imposed police jury model. Under this charter, the parish is governed by a Parish President (chief executive) and an elected Parish Council (legislative body), a model that parallels the consolidated city-parish structure used by New Orleans but functions as a fully separate governmental entity.
The parish covers approximately 465 square miles, though a substantial portion of that area is marsh, wetland, and water. The incorporated municipality of Chalmette serves as the parish seat. Other communities within the parish include Arabi, Meraux, Violet, and Poydras — none of which function as independent incorporated municipalities with their own governing bodies. All unincorporated communities fall under the direct jurisdiction of the parish government.
St. Bernard Parish is distinct from Orleans Parish Government and operates independently of New Orleans Consolidated City-Parish governance structures. Residents of St. Bernard Parish are not subject to New Orleans city ordinances, New Orleans city tax levies, or the jurisdiction of New Orleans municipal courts.
This page does not cover the governance of Jefferson Parish, Plaquemines Parish, or St. Tammany Parish. For regional comparisons across the metro's parishes, the New Orleans Metro Area Regional Governance reference provides broader context. The broader site index maps additional parish and municipal government pages across the region.
How it works
The St. Bernard Parish Government functions through three primary branches established under its home rule charter:
- Parish President — Serves as the chief executive officer, responsible for administering parish departments, preparing the annual budget, executing contracts, and implementing council policy. The President is elected at-large to a 4-year term.
- Parish Council — Composed of 7 members, with 5 elected from single-member districts and 2 elected at-large. The Council holds legislative authority, adopts ordinances, approves the budget, and sets millage rates for property taxation.
- Independently Elected Officials — Several offices operate outside the President-Council structure, including the Sheriff, Clerk of Court, Assessor, Coroner, District Attorney (shared with Plaquemines Parish under Louisiana's 25th Judicial District), and Registrar of Voters.
The Sheriff of St. Bernard Parish holds particular institutional weight under Louisiana law, functioning as the chief law enforcement officer and the operator of the parish jail — a role structurally analogous to, but legally independent from, the Orleans Parish Sheriff's Office.
Key administrative departments under the Parish President include Public Works, Planning and Zoning, Finance, Recreation, and Emergency Management. The parish's Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness coordinates directly with Louisiana's Governor's Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness (GOHSEP) on disaster planning, a function that carries particular significance given the parish's geographic exposure to hurricane surge.
Common scenarios
The following situations commonly bring residents and businesses into contact with St. Bernard Parish Government:
- Property tax assessment and payment — The St. Bernard Parish Assessor sets assessed values; the Council sets millage rates. Property tax bills are collected through the Sheriff's Office, which serves as the tax collector under Louisiana law — a distinction that surprises residents accustomed to other states' systems.
- Building permits and zoning — Development within the parish requires permits issued by the Parish Department of Safety and Permits, and zoning decisions flow through the Planning Commission. There is no separate municipal zoning authority for Chalmette or other communities.
- Disaster recovery coordination — Following Hurricane Katrina in 2005, St. Bernard Parish sustained near-total flooding, with approximately 26,000 housing units damaged or destroyed according to post-storm assessments by the Louisiana Recovery Authority. The parish government became the primary conduit for federal Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) recovery funds administered through the state. This experience shaped the parish's current emergency management infrastructure.
- Road and drainage maintenance — Parish Public Works manages the primary road network. The Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development (LADOTD) retains jurisdiction over state highways passing through the parish, including Louisiana Highway 46 (St. Bernard Highway) and Louisiana Highway 39.
- Recreation services — The St. Bernard Parish Department of Recreation operates parks, athletic facilities, and community programs directly, without a separate recreation district authority.
Decision boundaries
Understanding which level of government holds authority over a given matter is essential for residents and businesses operating in St. Bernard Parish.
Parish authority applies to:
- Unincorporated land use, zoning, and subdivision approval
- Parish road construction and maintenance
- Library system administration (St. Bernard Parish Library)
- Property tax collection (via Sheriff)
- Recreation facilities and programs
- Local ordinances and code enforcement
State authority supersedes parish authority on:
- State highway construction and traffic control (LADOTD)
- Public school governance — St. Bernard Parish Public Schools operates as a separate elected school board under Louisiana law, not a department of the parish government
- Judicial functions — the 34th Judicial District Court serves St. Bernard Parish and is a state court, not a parish administrative body
- Environmental permitting for industrial facilities along the Mississippi River Gulf Outlet (MRGO) corridor, which falls under Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality (LDEQ) and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers jurisdiction
Federal authority applies to:
- Flood insurance through FEMA's National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP), which is significant given that virtually all of St. Bernard Parish lies within FEMA-designated Special Flood Hazard Areas
- Navigation and levee infrastructure managed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, including the Lake Borgne Surge Barrier constructed after Katrina
The contrast between St. Bernard and Orleans Parish governance is structurally sharp. Orleans Parish functions as a consolidated city-parish where municipal and parish functions merge under a single charter. St. Bernard maintains a traditional separation: the parish government provides services to unincorporated areas, while independently elected constitutional officers (Sheriff, Assessor, Clerk of Court) retain statutory authority defined by Louisiana's constitution rather than the parish charter.
For residents seeking guidance on navigating Louisiana state and federal government relationships that affect the parish, the New Orleans State-Federal Government Relations reference addresses how Louisiana state law structures parish authority statewide.
References
- St. Bernard Parish Government — Official Website
- Louisiana Secretary of State — Parish Government Information
- Louisiana Legislature — Home Rule Charter Provisions (La. R.S. Title 33)
- FEMA National Flood Insurance Program
- Louisiana Governor's Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness (GOHSEP)
- U.S. Army Corps of Engineers — New Orleans District
- Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development (LADOTD)
- Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality (LDEQ)
- Louisiana Recovery Authority — Post-Katrina Housing Assessments