Owsley County Residents Guide to Courts, Health, and School Services
The MCHC clinic at 826 KY-11 North (606-593-6395) and the courthouse at 20 Main St. cover much of what Booneville residents need; here's how to navigate both.

The address 20 Main Street, Booneville is where court business in Owsley County begins and ends. Whether the need is a certified filing, a hearing date, or a docket lookup, the Owsley County Courthouse and its Circuit Court Clerk are the official starting point for every circuit and district court matter in the county. Understanding what each local institution handles, and calling the right office first, saves hours of back-and-forth for nearly every civic transaction residents face.
Court Records and the Circuit Court Clerk
The Kentucky Court of Justice designates the Owsley County Courthouse at 20 Main St. as the official location for circuit and district court matters, with the Circuit Court Clerk's office serving as the keeper of dockets, filings, and case records. For anyone looking up a case, researching a hearing date, or confirming a filing status, the Kentucky Court of Justice online docket search tools are the authoritative source. Before calling or logging on, have a party name, case number, or approximate hearing date ready; those three pieces of information will dramatically speed up any search.
Certified copies of court documents require a direct request to the Circuit Clerk's office, either in person at the courthouse or by phone. Call ahead to confirm current fee schedules and accepted payment methods, since both can change and an unprepared visit means a second trip. If a record appears unavailable through the online portal, the clerk's office can advise on formal records request procedures and realistic wait times.
County Clerk: Elections, Motor Vehicles, and Deeds
The Owsley County Clerk's Office in Booneville is the hub for three entirely different needs that often catch residents off guard: motor vehicle renewals, real property deed records, and all things election-related. Voter registration deadlines, candidate filing information, absentee ballot guidance, and primary election timelines all live on the county clerk's elections page, making it the first call for anyone with a voting question in the weeks surrounding an election cycle.
Routine transactions such as title work, marriage licenses, and official records requests generally require an in-person visit during posted business hours. Bring a government-issued photo ID and payment; the clerk's office publishes its current hours and fee structures online, and confirming both before arrival prevents avoidable delays. For absentee ballot applications specifically, the clerk's elections portal provides direct guidance on the mail-voting process and applicable deadlines.
Primary Care at the Owsley County Medical and Dental Clinic
Mountain Comprehensive Health Corporation (MCHC) operates the Owsley County Medical/Dental Clinic at 826 KY Highway 11 North, Booneville, serving as the county's primary source for local outpatient medical and dental care. The clinic's main line is 606-593-6395. MCHC's services extend beyond basic sick visits: the Booneville clinic coordinates telehealth access, pharmacy services, and chronic disease management, which matters significantly for patients managing conditions like diabetes or hypertension who need consistent follow-up care without traveling out of county.
New patients should call ahead to ask about required intake paperwork, sliding-scale fee options, and whether same-day sick visits are available on a given day. For behavioral health, dental, or specialty needs that exceed the Booneville clinic's immediate capacity, MCHC's broader network includes additional sites with extended hours; the network's location pages list which facilities carry that expanded capacity and how to schedule there. The sliding-scale program, in particular, is worth asking about directly, as eligibility is based on household income and household size.

Owsley County Schools: Enrollment, Services, and Contacts
The Owsley County Schools central office and district website serve as the official directory for every administrative function in the district, from superintendent's office contacts to student transportation routing. Families navigating enrollment for the first time, or those seeking to update an address mid-year, should start with the district main number and ask to be routed to the enrollment office specifically. Asking for the right department by name shortens the queue considerably.
The district website is also the place to find the current school calendar, substitute-teaching application procedures, and food services contacts for free and reduced lunch eligibility. Families seeking special education services or related evaluations should request the special education coordinator directly when calling the central office; the same applies to bus transportation questions, which are handled by the district's bus supervisor rather than individual school offices.
- Free and reduced lunch eligibility: contact the food services director through the central office
- Special education referrals and evaluations: ask for the special education coordinator
- Substitute teaching applications: available through the district website
- School calendar, delays, and closures: posted to the district website and distributed through school communication channels
Where to Start: A Quick Reference
Knowing which office handles which transaction prevents wasted calls and missed deadlines. The following is a direct summary of primary contacts:
- Court dates, docket lookups, certified filings: Kentucky Court of Justice Owsley County page and Circuit Court Clerk at 20 Main St., Booneville
- Voter registration, absentee ballots, motor vehicle renewals, deed records: Owsley County Clerk's Office, Booneville
- Primary medical and dental care, telehealth, chronic disease management: MCHC Owsley County Clinic, 826 KY Highway 11 North, Booneville; 606-593-6395
- Enrollment, school calendar, transportation, special education, food services: Owsley County Board of Education central office
Keep a photo ID and any relevant reference numbers, such as a case number, vehicle VIN, or student ID, accessible before calling any of these offices. When a public record is delayed or not visible online, the county clerk and circuit clerk can both advise on formal request timelines. The fastest path through most civic transactions in Booneville is simply calling the right office first and arriving prepared.
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