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Alabama Ad Valorem Tax Amendment (September 1982)
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The Alabama Ad Valorem Tax Amendment, also known as Amendment 1, was on the ballot in Alabama on September 7, 1982, as a legislatively referred constitutional amendment. It was approved. This measure proposed that officials who were charged with the collection of ad valorem taxes should be paid on a salary basis. It also proposed that, subject to local voter approval, the legislature could enact a local law to abolish the offices of tax assessor, tax collector or license commissioner in a county.[1]
Election results
Alabama Amendment 1 (September 1982) | ||||
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Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
![]() | 227,931 | 69.62% | ||
No | 99,466 | 30.38% |
Election results via: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research, Referenda and Primary Election Materials: Alabama
See also
- Alabama 1982 ballot measures
- 1982 ballot measures
- List of Alabama ballot measures
- History of Initiative & Referendum in Alabama
External links
Footnotes
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State of Alabama Montgomery (capital) |
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