Union County recognized Lynn as one of its longest-serving staff during remarks for Women’s History Month, a county staff member said.
The staff member told attendees that "Union County has only had 2 clerks to the board in 52 years" and noted that Lynn has worked for the county since 1990 and has adapted her work as technology has changed, calling her the longest-serving employee in Union County government history.
The speaker framed the comments as part of Women’s History Month observances, saying the month is an occasion to “reflect not just on milestones, but on the steady leadership that makes them possible.” The remarks emphasized institutional continuity: the speaker highlighted the small number of people who have held the clerk-to-the-board role over more than five decades and Lynn’s long tenure.
The county did not provide a last name or additional biographical details in the remarks. The transcript included a garbled reference to Lynn’s exact year-count (“going on her 30 sixth year”); the county statement confirmed she began county service in 1990, so reporting describes her tenure as spanning more than three decades rather than quoting the unclear phrasing.
No formal actions, votes, or policy decisions were recorded during the remarks. The observance appeared intended as recognition of longtime service rather than a personnel action.
The county did not state whether any formal award or personnel action accompanied the remarks, nor did the speaker provide Lynn’s surname or job title in the public remarks.