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Arkansas Creation of State Tax Commission, Proposed Amendment 63 (1984)

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The Arkansas Creation of State Tax Commission Proposed Amendment, also known as Proposed Amendment 63, was on the ballot in Arkansas on November 6, 1984, as a legislatively referred constitutional amendment. It was defeated. The measure would have created a state tax commission and exempted certain personal property from ad valorem taxes.[1][2]

Election results

Arkansas Proposed Amendment 63 (1984)
ResultVotesPercentage
Defeatedd No452,61259.36%
Yes309,81140.64%

Election results via: Arkansas Secretary of State

Text of measure

The question on the ballot:

An amendment to the constitution to exempt household furniture, clothing and related items of personal property from ad valorem taxation; to simplify the means of collecting personal property taxes on motor vehicles; to place a ceiling of twenty percent on the value at which taxable real and personal property can be assessed; and, to create a State Tax Commission to administer the laws pertaining to statewide equalization of property.[2][3]

See also


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Footnotes