Oklahoma State Question No. 735 (2008)

From Ballotpedia

Jump to: navigation, search

Contents

Oklahoma's State Question No. 735 was a legislatively-referred constitutional amendment. It enacted law which provides exemption for household personal property tax for certain disabled veterans.

2008 election results

See also 2008 ballot measure election results

These election results are based on the Oklahoma Elections Division.[1]

State Question No. 735
Yes or no Votes Percentage
Yes 1,153,445 85.00%
No 203,567 19.95%
Total votes 1,357,012 100%

Ballot Text

STATE QUESTION NO. 735

LEGISLATIVE REFERENDUM NO. 343

This measure amends the Oklahoma Constitution. It adds Section 8D to Article 10. The measure takes effect January 1, 2009. It creates an exemption from personal property tax. The exemption would be for the full amount of taxes due on all household personal property. The exemption would apply to certain injured veterans. It would also apply to those veterans’ surviving spouses.

To qualify for the exemption an injured veteran would have to meet certain requirements. First, a branch of the Armed Forces or the Oklahoma National Guard would have to have honorably discharged the veteran from active service. Second, the veteran would have to be an Oklahoma resident. Third, the veteran would have to be the head of the household. Fourth, the veteran would have to be one hundred percent permanently disabled. Fifth, the United States Department of Veterans Affairs would have to certify the disability. Sixth, the disability must have occurred through military action or accident, or resulted from a disease contracted while in active service. The Legislature could pass laws to carry out the exemption. Such laws could not change the amount of the exemption.[2]


See also


External links


References

  1. Oklahoma Elections Division, 2008 Election Results
  2. State Questions for the General Election
Personal tools