Government

Menominee County clerk of courts page gives contacts, payment options

Menominee County residents can pay court obligations, check cases, and reach the right branch fast through the clerk of courts page. The site also points people to Wisconsin’s public case-search portal.

Marcus Williams··5 min read
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Menominee County clerk of courts page gives contacts, payment options
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A practical gateway to the courthouse

If you need to know where to pay a fee, which branch is handling a case, or how to reach the court office without wasting a trip, Menominee County’s clerk of courts page gives you the basics in one place. That matters in a county where a missed hearing, a late payment, or confusion over the wrong phone number can quickly become a bigger problem than the original case.

The page is built for everyday court business: contacts, scheduling, payment methods, and access to records. Instead of leaving residents to sort through the courthouse on their own, it lays out the main routes for getting help, whether the issue involves a fine, a payment plan, a hearing date, or a record search.

Who handles each circuit court branch

The county separates its circuit court contact information by branch, which makes it easier to reach the right office the first time. Branch 1 is listed with Judge Katie Sloma and Judicial Assistant Amber Fischer, and the phone number for that branch is 715-526-9352.

Branch 2 is listed with Judge William Kussel Jr. and Judicial Assistant Tiffany Kast, and that branch can be reached at 715-526-9328. For residents trying to confirm a date, ask about a filing, or sort out a calendar issue, those separate numbers are the quickest way to avoid being bounced around.

That structure also reflects how county court work is often handled in practice. The judicial assistants are named right alongside the judges, which gives people a clear point of contact when they are dealing with scheduling or need help understanding which branch is responsible for their matter.

Where to pay, and what forms of payment are accepted

For people who owe court-related money, Menominee County gives more than one payment path. Payments can be made in person at the Menominee County Clerk of Courts office with cash, check, or money order.

The county also allows debit or credit card payments through AllPaid, although that option comes with a processing fee. The county page lists the phone payment number as 1-888-604-7888 and gives the Pay Location Code as 8491, which is especially useful if you need to make a payment without going to the courthouse in person.

That mix of options matters for residents with changing work hours, transportation limits, or tight deadlines. A single missed payment can trigger extra consequences, so the clear payment instructions are one of the page’s most practical features.

The office location and hours

The Menominee County Clerk of Courts office is at W3269 Courthouse Lane, Keshena, WI 54135-0279. The county also lists a mailing address of PO Box 279, Keshena, WI 54135-0279, which gives people a separate channel for paperwork that does not need to be delivered in person.

Office hours are Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. and 12:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. That midday break matters for anyone planning a same-day visit, because the office is not open straight through lunch.

Menominee County also provides a main clerk of court contact, Delsy Kakwitch, at 715-799-3313. A TTY line is listed as 711, and the county says the office handles case processing, payments, payment plans, and language access services.

How to look up cases and court calendars

For residents who want to check a hearing, verify a case status, or see what is on the court calendar, the county points to Wisconsin Circuit Court Access, commonly known as WCCA. The Wisconsin Court System describes WCCA as the public access site for Wisconsin circuit court records and case search.

That statewide portal is important because it gives Menominee County residents a way to check court information without making a trip to Keshena. It is especially helpful for attorneys, family members, jurors, and anyone trying to keep track of a date or confirm whether a matter is actually scheduled.

The circuit court clerk directory from the Wisconsin Court System also helps place Menominee County’s contact information inside the broader statewide structure. For local users, that means the county’s clerk office is not a stand-alone dead end but part of a larger public records system with a clear search path.

What the clerk of courts office actually does

The Menominee County contact page makes clear that the clerk of courts office is more than a records desk. It handles case processing, payments, payment plans, and language access services, which means it is often the first stop when a person needs to sort out a practical court issue.

That broader role is important because people often assume a clerk’s office only stores documents. In reality, the office is one of the main administrative points where residents can confirm what is due, what has been filed, and what kind of help is available for navigating the court process.

The branch contacts, the payment instructions, and the public records portal all work together to reduce confusion. For someone facing a deadline, that can be the difference between a manageable visit and a missed obligation.

Why this matters in Menominee County

Menominee County is a relatively small county, but its courthouse plays an outsized civic role in Keshena. The county was formed on July 3, 1959, as Wisconsin’s 72nd county, and local courthouse history sources say the Menominee County Courthouse in Keshena was built in 1969 as a modern wood-and-glass facility.

That history helps explain why clear court access still matters so much now. In a county where the courthouse is a central public building and court calendars can affect work, family life, and travel, a straightforward contact page is not a minor convenience. It is a practical tool for keeping residents connected to the system that handles their cases, their payments, and their records.

The result is a courthouse guide that is simple on the surface but essential in practice. For Menominee County residents, the page does what government service information should do: it makes the next step visible, the right office reachable, and the court system easier to navigate without guesswork.

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