Arizona Income Tax Initiative (2010)
| Not on Ballot |
|---|
| This measure did not or will not appear on a ballot |
Contents |
According to the organization, the tax would have raised approximately more than $140 million each year, which would have helped pay health insurance for children and adults in low-income families. Other places the revenue would have been shared would have been toward graduate-school medical education and reimbursement to medical facilities that treat the poverty stricken population. According to John Rivers, president and CEO of the association, at the time, "We think this will strike people as very fair. It is a very modest tax increase and only on people who are able to pay it."[3]
See also
External links
References
| |||||
State of Arizona Phoenix (capital) | |
|---|---|
| Ballot measures |
List of Arizona ballot measures | Local measures | School bond issues | Ballot measure laws | Initiative laws | History of I&R | Campaign Finance Requirements | |
| Government |
Arizona State Constitution | House of Representatives | Senate | Joint Legislative Budget Committee | Legislative Council | Auditor General | |
| State executive officers |
Governor | Attorney General | Secretary of State | Treasurer | Superintendent of Public Instruction | Director of Insurance | Director of Agriculture | Commissioner of Lands | Director of Labor | Chairman of Corporation Commission | State Mine Inspector | |
| Elections |
Recalls | Vote fraud | |
| Judiciary |
Arizona Supreme Court | Arizona Court of Appeals | Arizona General Jurisdiction Court | Arizona Limited Jurisdiction Courts | Judicial selection in Arizona | Judicial News | |
| Transparency topics |
Public Records Law | Transparency Checklist | Government corruption reports | Transparency Legislation | Open Records procedures | Transparency Advocates | State budget | Taxpayer-funded lobbying associations | |
| Divisions |
State |
List of counties |
List of Cities |
List of school districts | |