Alabama Special County Ad Valorem Tax, Amendment 41 (1961)
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The Alabama Special County Ad Valorem Tax, Amendment 41, also known as Amendment 41, was on the ballot in Alabama on December 5, 1961, as a legislatively referred constitutional amendment. It was approved. The amendment proposed to amend the constitution. The amendment proposed that Mobile County would be authorized to levy and collect a special annual ad valorem county tax of three mills on each dollar of taxable property. The revenue from the said tax would be for public hospital use. The tax must be approved by a majority of electors.[1]
Election results
| Alabama Amendment 41 (December 1961) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
| 68,974 | 68.95% | |||
| No | 31,066 | 31.05% | ||
Election results via: Alabama Official and Statistical Register, 1963
See also
- Alabama 1961 ballot measures
- 1961 ballot measures
- List of Alabama ballot measures
- History of Initiative & Referendum in Alabama
External links
Footnotes
State of Alabama Montgomery (capital) | |
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