Big Industry in a Small County: Hancock County Kentucky Landlord Law and HB128
Hancock County is a study in contrasts. By population it is one of Kentucky’s smallest counties — fewer than 9,000 residents in 188 square miles, a county seat in Hawesville that numbers under a thousand people, the kind of place that doesn’t make the statewide economic news. By industrial output and per-capita manufacturing employment, it is a different story entirely. The Ohio River corridor in Hancock County hosts aluminum processing operations with a lineage tracing back to Alcoa, power generation infrastructure that serves a regional grid, and a network of chemical and industrial facilities that together give the county one of the highest ratios of industrial employment to resident population in Kentucky. The community of Lewisport, the county’s largest incorporated place, grew directly from that industrial base. When you drive through Hancock County’s river corridor and see the scale of the facilities along the water, the population figures stop making sense in the usual way.
The county was established in 1829 from Ohio, Daviess, and Breckinridge counties, named for John Hancock — the Massachusetts patriot whose outsized signature on the Declaration of Independence became so iconic that his name became a permanent synonym for a signature in American English. Legend holds that Hancock wrote it large so King George could read it without his spectacles. Whether that is true or not, it is the kind of story that sticks. The county seat of Hawesville, established in 1836, was named for Richard Hawes, a Kentucky politician who briefly served as Confederate governor during the Civil War.
Renting to Industrial Shift Workers: What Landlords Need to Know
The defining characteristic of the Hancock County rental market is the industrial shift worker. The aluminum, power, and chemical facilities along the Ohio River operate around the clock, seven days a week, and their employees work rotating schedules: days, evenings, nights, rotating 12-hour shifts on patterns that cycle through weekdays and weekends without the structure most people associate with employment. For landlords, this creates a few practical considerations worth addressing in your lease and your screening process.
First, income verification for shift workers requires attention to what you are measuring. Base hourly wages at major industrial facilities in Hancock County are genuinely above the regional average — union scale and market wages for aluminum smelting, power plant operations, and chemical processing are competitive, and many of these positions carry full benefits packages. But total compensation can vary significantly depending on shift differentials, overtime, and production bonuses. For income ratio purposes, calculate using base hourly rate times standard scheduled hours rather than total average gross pay. If a worker is regularly running 15 hours of overtime per week, that overtime boosts their current paychecks but may not be available indefinitely — production schedules change, facilities adjust staffing, and overtime hours that look reliable today can disappear in a contract cycle or a market downturn. Use the predictable base as your floor.
Second, confirm whether the applicant is a direct employee of the industrial facility or placed through a staffing or contracting agency. Major industrial operations frequently use both. Direct employees typically have union membership, full benefits, seniority protections, and a level of employment stability that makes them excellent rental applicants. Contract employees at the same facility may earn similar hourly rates but lack the job security, seniority, and benefits of direct positions, and their placements can end more abruptly. Ask directly: “Are you a direct employee of [facility], or are you placed through a contracting or staffing agency?” Request documentation that confirms direct-hire status if the applicant claims it.
Third, rotating shift schedules affect more than just rent payment timing. When you are drafting lease terms for a shift worker, consider how entry notice provisions interact with a schedule where “reasonable time” for maintenance visits differs by shift week. HB128 requires 24 hours’ advance notice for standard entry and 72 hours for routine maintenance; rotating shift workers may be sleeping during what you consider normal business hours. A lease provision noting that maintenance scheduling will be coordinated with the tenant’s current shift schedule prevents friction before it starts.
The Ohio River and Flood Risk in Hawesville and Lewisport
Hawesville sits on the Ohio River’s southern bank, and Lewisport is similarly river-adjacent. Both communities have documented flood histories, as does virtually every Ohio River town in western Kentucky. Before renting any property in a low-lying area near the river, verify its FEMA flood zone designation through the National Flood Insurance Program’s flood map service. Properties in Special Flood Hazard Areas with federally backed mortgages require flood insurance. Even absent a legal mandate, disclosing known flood risk to prospective tenants in writing is both legally prudent and the ethically correct course. HB128’s habitability duty covers structural integrity and weatherproofing; in a flood-adjacent location, that means ongoing attention to foundation drainage, moisture management, and the cumulative effects of periodic high-water events on structural components.
Filing at the Hancock County Justice Center
All residential evictions in Hancock County are Forcible Detainer actions filed in District Court at the Hancock County Justice Center, 55 State Highway 271, Hawesville, KY 42348, phone (270) 927-6117. Note that the justice center address is on State Highway 271 rather than a traditional Main Street courthouse square location — confirm current directions and parking before your first visit. Call ahead to verify current office hours and civil hearing dates; Hawesville is a very small county seat and court operations are correspondingly lean. Bring your original lease, notice with proof of service, and complete payment and communications record. The 14-day nonpayment notice must fully expire before filing; for lease violations, the 14-day cure period and 30-day minimum termination period must both run.
HB128 compliance is the same in Hancock County as anywhere in Kentucky: written notices, separate deposit account, 30-day return with itemized deductions, nonwaivable habitability, proper entry notice, no self-help eviction. For pre-1978 housing stock — which covers most of the county’s rental inventory — the federal lead paint disclosure requirement applies. Deliver the EPA pamphlet, get the signed acknowledgment, keep it in your lease file. The industrial workers who anchor this rental market earn wages that reflect their skill and the dangerous conditions they work in; give them housing that meets the legal standard.
This guide is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. HB128 applies to leases made on or after its effective date; prior Kentucky law governs older leases. Consult a licensed Kentucky attorney for guidance specific to your situation. Last updated: March 2026.
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