Amanda Arelle shakes hands with Covington Mayor Ron Washington before receiving her ceremonial gavel on April 28, 2026. Photo by Nathan Granger | LINK nky

The inaugural class of the Covington Mayor’s Academy graduated this week.

The academy was a civics education program that brought interested city residents behind the scenes of Covington City Hall to give them insight into how different city departments and aspects of the city government work. Similar programs exist at the county level and with some police departments.

“The more that you invest in others and in one another and just continue to bring what you have to the table and share it, the better the city is going to be,” Vice Mayor Shannon Smith told graduates on Tuesday.

Graduates of the Covington Mayor’s Academy and elected officials on April 28, 2026. Photo by Nathan Granger | LINK nky

The academy was an eight-month program organized into a series of eight 60-to-120-minute evening sessions covering topics like city administration, neighborhood services, public safety and operations, legal services, human resources, public works and parks and recreation. Many of the sessions were led by city department heads and other people who had insight into the workings of Covington’s government.

29 people out of about 100 applicants were selected for the program last summer, but not all finished. Just over 20 people attended the ceremonial graduation Tuesday night. People who attended the academy came from various walks of life, including workers at the local school district, business leaders, people who already served on neighborhood boards and two candidates for the Covington City Council: Dan Francis and Cari Garriga. The program also allowed people who work in the city but don’t live there to participate.

Those who did finish the program received ceremonial gavels with their names on them. Mayor Ron Washington encouraged graduates to stay involved with city business.

Gavels distributed to graduates of Covington’s Mayor’s Academy. Photo by Nathan Granger | LINK nky

“That’s what my whole goal was: to see if we could keep citizens’ participation,” Washington said. “My predecessors would tell me, one of the hardest things you’re going to find is to be able to fill people on [city] board seats.”

Amanda Arelle, a graduate who spoke with LINK nky after the ceremony and who lives in the Eastside neighborhood, said the academy showed her how much the city government truly cared about the community.

“Throughout the process with each department, I really felt like there was genuine care,” Arelle said. Since joining the academy, Arelle has been appointed as a member of the Covington Human Rights Commission.

“A lot of stuff I have taken back to my community,” said Helene Hill, who works as an attendance clerk with Covington Independent Public Schools and lives in the Helentown neighborhood.

She said these included “how things are trying to develop, how new businesses are coming in, how they’re trying to develop on land for new housing, which a lot of people are really interested in.”

Hill does not yet serve on any city boards but said she was planning to apply for one, so long as her schedule permitted it.

The city is already recruiting for the next mayor’s academy class. Interested residents and people who work for Covington-based firms can apply now through June 1 by filing out Covington’s online form here. Sessions begin in August.

You can see current openings for Covington city boards at onboard.covingtonky.gov.

This story has been updated.