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Louisiana Severance Taxes on Natural Resources for Parishes Amendment (2023)

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Louisiana Severance Taxes on Natural Resources for Parishes Amendment
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Election date
October 14, 2023
Topic
Natural resources and State and local government budgets, spending and finance
Status
Not on the ballot
Type
Constitutional amendment
Origin
State legislature

The Louisiana Severance Taxes on Natural Resources for Parishes Amendment was not on the ballot in Louisiana as a legislatively referred constitutional amendment on October 14, 2023.[1]

The amendment would have set a $10 million limit on annual severance taxes on natural resources remitted to parishes beginning July 1, 2024, and made other changes related to state severance taxes remitted to parishes.[1]

Text of measure

Ballot question

The ballot question for the amendment was as follows:[1]

Do you support an amendment to change the portion of existing state severance tax revenue paid to the parishes where severance or production of natural resources occurs, to authorize the legislature to enact laws relative to how parishes spend such revenue, and to repeal existing limits placed on parishes with regard to state severance tax retention? (Effective July 1, 2024) [2]

Full text

The full text may be found here

Background

Odd-year ballot measures in Louisiana

A total of 56 constitutional amendments appeared on the statewide ballot in Louisiana during odd-numbered years from 1999 through 2021. Of the 56 amendments, 37 (67.27%) were approved and 19 (34.54%) were defeated.

Legislatively-referred constitutional amendments, 1999-2021
Total number Approved Percent approved Defeated Percent defeated Odd-year average Odd-year median Odd-year minimum Odd-year maximum
56 37 67.27% 19 34.54% 5 4 0 16


Path to the ballot

See also: Amending the Louisiana Constitution

In Louisiana, a two-thirds vote is needed in each chamber of the Louisiana State Legislature to refer a legislatively referred constitutional amendment to the ballot for voter consideration.

This amendment was introduced as House Bill 277. It was passed in the House by a vote of 101-0 on May 11, 2023. It was not passed in the other chamber before the 2023 legislative session adjourned.[1]


Vote in the Louisiana House of Representatives
May 11, 2023
Requirement: Two-thirds (66.67 percent) vote of all members in each chamber
Number of yes votes required: 70  Approveda
YesNoNot voting
Total10104
Total percent96.19%0.00%3.81%
Democrat3201
Republican6704
Independent200

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See also

External links

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Louisiana State Legislature, "House Bill 277," accessed April 4, 2023
  2. Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.