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Alabama County School Tax, Amendment 3 (1924)
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The Alabama County School Tax, Amendment 3, also known as Amendment 3, was on the ballot in Alabama on November 4, 1924, as a legislatively referred constitutional amendment. It was approved. The amendment proposed to amend the constitution. The amendment proposed that the county of Mobile may levy and collect taxes for the funding of public schools. The rate of taxation would not exceed in the total of any one year, one-fifth of one percent of the value of such property as assessed. Such taxes would be in addition to those taxes authorized under Article XIX of the Alabama Constitution of 1901.[1]
Election results
Alabama Amendment 3 (1924) | ||||
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Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
![]() | 58,559 | 66.98% | ||
No | 28,873 | 33.02% |
Election results via: Alabama Official and Statistical Register, 1927
See also
- Alabama 1924 ballot measures
- 1924 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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