Quitman County board outlines budget, taxes and district leadership
Quitman County residents can track taxes, roads and spending through five supervisors, with public board meetings at the courthouse in Marks.

What can this board change in your daily life right now? In Quitman County, the answer starts with your property tax rate, the annual budget and the people who decide how county money moves into roads, staffing and public services. It also starts with knowing which of the county’s five supervisors represents your district and where to show up when the board meets at the courthouse in Marks.
What the board controls
Quitman County’s Board of Supervisors is the county’s main governing body, and the county’s own board page makes clear why that matters. The board adopts the annual budget, sets the annual property tax rate, and establishes the policies, goals and objectives that guide county growth and development. It also appoints the county administrator, which means the board sits at the top of the chain that turns policy into daily operations.
That makes the board central to the county decisions most residents feel first: road work, public buildings, staffing, spending priorities and the way county services are organized. In a place with a limited tax base, those choices are not abstract. They shape how quickly a complaint moves, which projects get funded and how much homeowners and businesses pay to support county government.
Who represents each district
The board is made up of one supervisor from each of Quitman County’s five districts. If you want to know who speaks for your area, the county’s district listing gives the names to start with:
- District 1: Sheridan Boyd, board president
- District 2: Greg Thomas
- District 3: Johnny Tullos, board vice president
- District 4: Manuel Killebrew
- District 5: Jeremy Moore
Robert Roy serves as board attorney. That roster matters because county government is easier to navigate once residents know which supervisor covers their district and which office handles the legal and administrative side of county business.
For a resident in Marks or anywhere else in the county, the district split is practical. A road repair concern, a question about county spending, or a complaint about a public building does not have to stay a general grievance. It can be raised with the supervisor tied to the district, then carried into the board’s public process.
Where meetings happen and how to get involved
Quitman County holds recurring Board of Supervisors meetings at 9 a.m. at the Quitman County Courthouse, 220 Chestnut St. in Marks, and the county says public participation and involvement are “highly encouraged.” The county’s events calendar also shows upcoming meeting dates on July 6, 2026 and August 3, 2026.
That schedule gives residents a straightforward way into county government. If you want to question a budget line, raise a road maintenance problem or ask how a county service is being funded, the board meeting is the public forum where those issues can be placed on record. The courthouse setting in Marks reinforces how centralized county government remains, with the board serving as the place where the county’s major decisions are aired in public.

The administrator’s office is part of the path too
The board appoints the county administrator to handle daily operations, and Quitman County lists Beatrice Pryor as County Administrator/Comptroller at 220 Chestnut St. Ste. 3, Marks, MS 38646. That office is the practical administrative contact tied to the board’s work, especially when a resident needs to know who manages the county side of a problem after the policy decision has been made.
Mississippi’s Department of Revenue adds another piece to the picture: chancery clerks work closely with boards of supervisors to facilitate approval of the county’s annual tax rolls. For residents, that means county property tax administration is not a single-office task. It is a linked process, with the board setting the tax rate and the broader county machinery helping move the annual rolls toward approval.
Why the numbers matter here
Quitman County is small enough that board decisions carry outsized weight. The U.S. Census Bureau counted 6,176 residents in the 2020 Census, then estimated the county’s population at 5,364 on July 1, 2025. The county also covers 405.0 square miles of land area.
Those numbers help explain why budget choices can feel immediate in Quitman County. When fewer people are supporting county government across a wide rural area, every decision about taxes, staffing and public spending has to stretch farther. That is one reason the board’s annual budget work is so central. It is not just about bookkeeping; it sets the frame for what the county can afford to do next.
The county’s structure comes from a long history
Quitman County was established in 1877 from parts of Tallahatchie, Tunica, Panola and Coahoma counties. It was named for Mississippi governor John A. Quitman, while the county seat, Marks, was named for Leopold Marks, the state legislator who introduced the bill creating the county.
That history still shows up in the way county government operates. The courthouse-centered structure in Marks is not accidental. It reflects a county built around a single local governing body, with the Board of Supervisors still serving as the place where policy, taxes and spending meet.
For residents, the most useful starting point is simple: know your district, know your supervisor and know the courthouse address in Marks. In Quitman County, the board is where the county’s public priorities become action.
This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.
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