List of New York ballot measures
This page provides a list of ballot measures that have appeared on the statewide ballot in New York.
List of ballot measures by year
Measures are listed in reverse-chronological order, with the most recent and upcoming elections appearing first. Tables include brief summaries, relevant topics, and the election results for each measure.
2025
See also: New York 2025 ballot measures
November 4
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposal 1 | Parks, land, and natural area conservation; Athletics and sports | Authorize the state to use up to 323 acres of forest preserve land at the Mount Van Hoevenberg Olympic Sports Complex | 1,929,112 (52%) | 1,774,395 (48%) |
2024
See also: New York 2024 ballot measures
November 5
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposal 1 | Constitutional rights; Race and ethnicity issues; Sex and gender issues; LGBTQ issues; Abortion policy | Provide that people cannot be denied rights based on their "ethnicity, national origin, age, and disability" or "sex, including sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, pregnancy, pregnancy outcomes, and reproductive healthcare and autonomy" | 4,757,097 (62%) | 2,857,663 (38%) |
2023
See also: New York 2023 ballot measures
November 7
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposal 1 | Debt limits; Public education funding | Remove the debt limitations in the New York Constitution from small city school districts | 1,504,083 (64%) | 833,758 (36%) | ||
| Proposal 2 | Utility policy; State and local government budgets, spending, and finance | Exclude indebtedness for the construction or reconstruction of sewage facilities contracted prior to 2034 | 1,582,382 (68%) | 744,696 (32%) |
2022
See also: New York 2022 ballot measures
November 8
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposal 1 | Environment; Bond issues | Issue $4.20 billion in bonds for projects related to the environment, natural resources, water infrastructure, and climate change mitigation | 3,522,141 (68%) | 1,686,300 (32%) |
2021
See also: New York 2021 ballot measures
November 2
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposal 1 | Redistricting policy | Makes changes to the redistricting process in New York | 1,361,043 (46%) | 1,622,195 (54%) | ||
| Proposal 2 | Constitutional rights; Environment | Creates a state constitutional right to to clean water, clean air, and a healthful environment | 2,129,051 (70%) | 907,159 (30%) | ||
| Proposal 3 | Voter registration | Removes the 10-day-advance voter registration requirement | 1,336,327 (44%) | 1,721,811 (56%) | ||
| Proposal 4 | Absentee and mail voting | Authorizes the state legislature to pass a statute for no-excuse absentee voting | 1,370,897 (45%) | 1,677,580 (55%) | ||
| Proposal 5 | State judiciary | Increases the New York City Civil Court's jurisdiction over lawsuits involving claims from $25,000 to $50,000. | 1,874,515 (64%) | 1,051,803 (36%) |
2017
See also: New York 2017 ballot measures
November 7
| Type | Title | Subject | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposal 1 | State constitutional conventions | 594,820 (17%) | 2,910,868 (83%) | ||
| Proposal 2 | Ethics rules and commissions; Public employee retirement funds | 2,512,671 (73%) | 922,195 (27%) | ||
| Proposal 3 | Parks, land, and natural area conservation | 1,755,081 (52%) | 1,600,167 (48%) |
2014
See also: New York 2014 ballot measures
November 4
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposal 1 | Redistricting policy | The New York Redistricting Commission Amendment, Proposal 1 was on the November 4, 2014 ballot in the state of New York as a legislatively referred constitutional amendment, where it was approved. The measure was designed to create a redistricting commission to establish state senate, assembly and congressional districts | 1,705,903 (58%) | 1,252,213 (42%) | ||
| Proposal 2 | Open meetings and public information | The New York Electronic Bills Amendment, Proposal 2 was on the November 4, 2014 ballot in the state of New York as a legislatively referred constitutional amendment, where it was approved. The measure was designed to allow legislative bills to be distributed in an electronically written format rather than as paper copies. | 2,329,959 (77%) | 681,232 (23%) | ||
| Proposal 3 | Bond issues | The New York Bonds for School Technology Act, Proposal 3 was on the November 4, 2014 ballot in New York as a legislatively referred bond question, where it was approved. The measure authorized the state comptroller to issue and sell bonds up to the amount of $2 billion. The revenue received from the sale of such bonds are, according to the proposal, used for projects related to the following: :* Purchasing educational technology equipment and facilities, such as interactive whiteboards, computer servers, desktop and laptop computers, tablets and high-speed broadband or wireless internet. :* Constructing and modernizing facilities to accommodate pre-kindergarten programs and replacing classroom trailers with permanent instructional space. :* Installing high-tech security features in school buildings. | 1,921,054 (62%) | 1,180,581 (38%) |
2013
See also: New York 2013 ballot measures
November 5
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposal 1 | Gambling policy | The New York Casino Gambling Amendment, Proposal 1, was on the November 5, 2013 ballot in New York as a legislatively referred constitutional amendment. It was approved. | 1,579,755 (57%) | 1,186,275 (43%) | ||
| Proposal 2 | Veterans policy | The New York Civil Service Promotions for Disabled Veterans Amendment, Proposal 2, was on the November 5, 2013 ballot in New York as a legislatively referred constitutional amendment. It was overwhelmingly approved. | 2,173,484 (84%) | 424,858 (16%) | ||
| Proposal 3 | State and local government budgets, spending, and finance | The New York Municipal Debt Limit Exemption for Sewage Improvements Amendment, Proposal 3, was on the November 5, 2013 ballot in New York as a legislatively referred constitutional amendment. It was approved. | 1,497,865 (62%) | 907,731 (38%) | ||
| Proposal 4 | Property | The New York Township 40 Land Dispute Settlement Amendment, Proposal 4, was on the November 5, 2013 ballot in New York as a legislatively referred constitutional amendment. It was approved. | 1,744,371 (73%) | 656,371 (27%) | ||
| Proposal 5 | Mineral resources | The New York Land Exchange With NYCO Minerals Amendment, Proposal 5, was on the November 5, 2013 ballot in New York as a legislatively referred constitutional amendment. It was approved. | 1,276,595 (53%) | 1,122,055 (47%) | ||
| Proposal 6 | Age limits for officials | The New York Mandatory Judicial Retirement Age Amendment, Proposal 6, was on the November 5, 2013 ballot in New York as a legislatively referred constitutional amendment. It was defeated. | 1,061,662 (42%) | 1,476,646 (58%) |
2009
See also: New York 2009 ballot measures
November 3
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | Forestry and timber; Public land policy | Authorize a six‑acre forest preserve land exchange with National Grid to install a 46 kV transmission line in St. Lawrence County. | 968,505 (67%) | 469,666 (33%) | ||
| Amendment 2 | Prison work regulations | Authorize inmates to voluntarily work for nonprofit organizations. | 998,829 (68%) | 467,679 (32%) |
2008
See also: New York 2008 ballot measures
November 4
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | Veterans policy; Public assistance programs | Eliminate the requirement that disabled veterans receive federal disability payments to qualify for civil service exam credit. | 1,815,847 (78%) | 506,652 (22%) |
2007
See also: New York 2007 ballot measures
November 6
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | Water | Allow the state to convey one acre of forest preserve land to Long Lake for water‐supply wells in exchange for at least twelve acres of equal‐value land to be added to the preserve. | 825,688 (75%) | 281,497 (25%) |
2005
See also: New York 2005 ballot measures
November 8
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | State and local government budgets, spending, and finance | Revise the state budget process by establishing contingency budgets and spending limits, authorizing multi‑appropriation bills and a fiscal stabilization reserve fund, requiring public budget estimates, and shortening the veto‑change period. | 734,844 (35%) | 1,368,120 (65%) | ||
| Amendment 2 | Bond issues; Public transportation | Authorize a $2.9 billion transportation bond to rebuild and improve the state’s roads, bridges, transit systems, airports, waterways and related infrastructure. | 1,215,769 (56%) | 959,734 (44%) |
2003
See also: New York 2003 ballot measures
November 4
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | Debt limits | Allow local governments to exclude sewage‑facility debt from their constitutional debt limits for an additional ten years. | 839,208 (53%) | 758,359 (47%) | ||
| Amendment 2 | Debt limits | Eliminate small city school districts from the state’s general constitutional debt limit. | 724,141 (46%) | 855,567 (54%) |
2001
See also: New York 2001 ballot measures
November 6
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | Constitutional wording changes | Revise the constitutional language to be gender‑neutral by updating masculine terms to include feminine or neutral forms. | 983,858 (56%) | 779,437 (44%) |
2000
See also: New York 2000 ballot measures
November 7
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposal 1 | Bond issues; Public transportation | Authorize up to $3.8 billion in state bonds to fund improvements, preservation, and restoration of transportation infrastructure. | 1,589,091 (48%) | 1,752,700 (52%) |
1999
See also: New York 1999 ballot measures
November 2
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | State judicial authority | Authorize temporarily assigning city court judges outside New York City to county, family or district courts. | 825,371 (61%) | 529,133 (39%) |
1997
See also: New York 1997 ballot measures
November 4
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | State judicial authority | Increase the monetary jurisdiction limits of certain state courts. | 1,074,603 (44%) | 1,359,910 (56%) | ||
| Amendment 2 | Veterans policy | Clarify eligibility for additional civil service exam credits for active‑duty service members who later qualify as wartime veterans. | 1,663,611 (65%) | 883,312 (35%) | ||
| Proposal 3 | Bond issues; Public education funding | Authorize the state to incur $2.4 billion in debt for school health and safety facility projects. | 1,265,150 (47%) | 1,430,830 (53%) | ||
| Question 1 | State constitutional conventions | Call a constitutional convention to revise and amend the State Constitution. | 929,415 (37%) | 1,579,390 (63%) |
1996
See also: New York 1996 ballot measures
November 5
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposal 1 | Bond issues; Parks, land, and natural area conservation | Authorize $1.75 billion in state debt for clean water, clean air, and environmental restoration projects. | 2,286,063 (57%) | 1,748,925 (43%) |
1995
See also: New York 1995 ballot measures
November 7
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | State judicial authority | Increase the New York City Civil Court's jurisdiction over lawsuits involving claims from $25,000 to $50,000 and the district court’s jurisdiction from $15,000 to $50,000. | 835,143 (50%) | 846,112 (50%) | ||
| Amendment 2 | Literacy, poll tax, and property voting requirements; Election administration and governance; Voting age policy; Voter registration; Residency voting requirements | Eliminate voter re-registration requirements and change qualifications and procedures for voter registration. | 974,206 (57%) | 731,999 (43%) | ||
| Amendment 3 | Revenue allocation | Change the state’s borrowing practices by instituting planning hearings, allowing multiple bond questions, permitting capped revenue debt without referendum, and broadening emergency debt authority. | 656,971 (39%) | 1,024,492 (61%) | ||
| Amendment 4 | Public land policy; Land use and development policy; Parks, land, and natural area conservation | Provide for the exchange of twelve acres of forest preserve for 144 acres and an easement to facilitate a public cemetery. | 1,065,570 (64%) | 594,787 (36%) |
1990
See also: New York 1990 ballot measures
November 6
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposal 1 | Bond issues; Parks, land, and natural area conservation | Authorize $1.975 billion in state bonds for environmental preservation, enhancement, restoration, improvement, and stewardship. | 1,330,942 (48%) | 1,416,337 (52%) |
1988
See also: New York 1988 ballot measures
November 8
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposal 1 | Public transportation; Bond issues | Authorize $3 billion in state bonds for construction, reconstruction, capacity improvements, replacement, reconditioning, and preservation of highways and bridges. | 2,288,705 (55%) | 1,846,042 (45%) |
1987
See also: New York 1987 ballot measures
November 3
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | Veterans policy; Civil service | Provide civil service credits to lawful resident aliens who served in wartime and removing the residency-at-enlistment requirement for veterans. | 1,219,180 (70%) | 519,769 (30%) | ||
| Amendment 2 | Athletics and sports; Parks, land, and natural area conservation | Increase ski-trail mileage and width on specified peaks, remove South Mountain’s ski-trail authorization, and align Whiteface’s facilities with other forest preserve ski areas. | 881,350 (52%) | 806,091 (48%) |
1985
See also: New York 1985 ballot measures
November 5
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | Bond issues; Public economic investment policy | Increase the state's guaranty cap for Job Development Authority bonds to $600 million and authorize it to make loans up to 60 percent of project cost for business facility improvements. | 1,426,326 (68%) | 663,891 (32%) | ||
| Amendment 2 | Tax and revenue administration | Incorporate federal law by reference into state and local tax statutes. | 946,764 (49%) | 999,056 (51%) | ||
| Amendment 3 | State judicial authority | Provide the Court of Appeals the power to answer certified questions of law from federal or other state courts. | 1,249,238 (66%) | 654,198 (34%) | ||
| Amendment 4 | Bond issue requirements | Authorize municipalities and school districts to issue sinking fund bonds to finance their debt. | 1,049,473 (54%) | 885,424 (46%) | ||
| Amendment 5 | Public education funding; Property taxes | Repeal the special real-estate tax limit on smaller school districts. | 994,490 (50%) | 982,430 (50%) |
1984
See also: New York 1984 ballot measures
November 6
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | Local official term limits | Authorize the legislature to set three- or four-year terms for sheriffs and county clerks. | 2,118,846 (67%) | 1,020,593 (33%) | ||
| Amendment 2 | Gambling policy | Authorize the legislature to adjust prize-limit restrictions for certain charitable games of chance. | 1,803,103 (57%) | 1,387,489 (43%) |
1983
See also: New York 1983 ballot measures
November 8
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 2 | Utility policy; Local government finance and taxes | Permit the exclusion of sewage‐facility debt from local constitutional debt limits for obligations contracted between 1962 and 1994. | 1,344,794 (52%) | 1,241,760 (48%) | ||
| Amendment 3 | Banking policy | Remove constitutional limits on capital stock and trustee interests of savings institutions. | 1,617,862 (61%) | 1,035,645 (39%) | ||
| Amendment 4 | State judiciary oversight; State judicial authority | Permit retired judges or justices to continue serving by appointment of the courts’ administrative board. | 1,144,573 (44%) | 1,466,970 (56%) | ||
| Amendment 5 | State judicial authority | Permit family court judges to be temporarily assigned to the supreme court in their home judicial department. | 1,593,114 (62%) | 990,426 (38%) | ||
| Amendment 6 | Parks, land, and natural area conservation; Public land policy | Authorize the exchange of ten acres of state land and buildings for two hundred acres of wild forest land to preserve historic structures. | 1,602,228 (63%) | 951,970 (37%) | ||
| Amendment 7 | State judicial authority | Increase the New York City Civil Court's jurisdiction over lawsuits involving claims from $10,000 to $25,000 | 1,314,754 (44%) | 1,645,322 (56%) | ||
| Amendment 8 | Land use and development policy | Authorize local governments to carry out public improvements and redevelopment projects. | 1,387,876 (56%) | 1,095,199 (44%) | ||
| Proposal 1 | Bond issues; Public transportation | Authoruze $1.25 billion in state bonds to renew and improve transportation infrastructure. | 1,720,559 (53%) | 1,521,386 (47%) |
1981
See also: New York 1981 ballot measures
November 3
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | Public economic investment policy; Bond issues | Increase the state's bond guarantee limit from $150 million to $300 million for financing facilities that improve employment opportunities. | 1,488,529 (60%) | 973,704 (40%) | ||
| Proposal 1 | Bond issues; Prison and jail funding | Authorize $500 million in state debt to fund acquiring, constructing, rehabilitating, and equipping correctional facilities in New York. | 1,272,672 (50%) | 1,286,371 (50%) |
1979
See also: New York 1979 ballot measures
November 6
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | Public economic investment policy | Increase the state loan guarantee limit for the Job Development Authority to finance industrial or manufacturing projects. | 1,149,429 (47%) | 1,277,476 (53%) | ||
| Amendment 2 | Parks, land, and natural area conservation; Public land policy | Allow land exchanges in the state forest preserve for equal acreage in Hamilton County. | 1,203,753 (51%) | 1,170,181 (49%) | ||
| Amendment 3 | Tax and revenue administration; State legislative processes and sessions | Allow the legislature to incorporate federal tax laws into state tax law by reference without restating them in full. | 1,009,232 (43%) | 1,327,008 (57%) | ||
| Proposal 1 | Bond issues; Public transportation; Energy conservation and efficiency | Authorize $500 million in state bonds for transportation improvements to promote energy conservation. | 1,491,964 (55%) | 1,201,530 (45%) |
1977
See also: New York 1977 ballot measures
November 8
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | State judicial selection; State judiciary structure | Create a judicial nominating commission and establish its process for selecting Court of Appeals judges. | 1,508,258 (53%) | 1,311,621 (47%) | ||
| Amendment 2 | State judiciary structure | Provide for the reorganization and governance of the administration of the Unified Court System. | 1,551,190 (58%) | 1,123,636 (42%) | ||
| Amendment 3 | State judiciary oversight | Establish a commission on judicial conduct and authorizing admonition, censure, removal or retirement of judges and justices. | 1,729,357 (64%) | 961,989 (36%) | ||
| Amendment 4 | State judicial authority | Expand the jurisdiction of town, village and city courts outside New York City. | 1,195,211 (47%) | 1,323,455 (53%) | ||
| Amendment 5 | Public employee retirement funds | Increase pension benefits payable to widows and widowers of state retirees. | 1,598,758 (57%) | 1,200,116 (43%) | ||
| Amendment 6 | Public education governance | Provide for the process for filling vacancies on boards of education. | 1,281,541 (50%) | 1,272,654 (50%) | ||
| Amendment 7 | Bond issues; Public economic investment policy | Increase the state’s guarantee cap from $150 million to $300 million for Job Development Authority bonds used to finance nonprofit industrial development. | 1,239,333 (47%) | 1,374,781 (53%) | ||
| Amendment 8 | Bond issues; Public economic investment policy | Authorize a state-chartered public corporation to provide and back loans for business construction, expansion, and equipment to boost job creation across the State. | 1,399,211 (54%) | 1,178,071 (46%) | ||
| Proposition 1 | Bond issues; Public economic investment policy | Authorize $750 million in state bonds to finance public capital projects aimed at promoting economic development. | 1,067,589 (38%) | 1,714,156 (62%) | ||
| Proposition 2 | State constitutional conventions | Call a convention to revise and amend the Constitution. | 1,126,902 (40%) | 1,668,137 (60%) |
1975
See also: New York 1975 ballot measures
November 4
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | Constitutional rights; Sex and gender issues | Provide that equality of rights under the law cannot be denied on account of sex | 1,470,213 (43%) | 1,950,993 (57%) | ||
| Amendment 2 | Ethics rules and commissions; State judiciary oversight; State judiciary structure | Establish a commission on judicial conduct for oversight over judges | 1,900,262 (63%) | 1,110,515 (37%) | ||
| Amendment 3 | State judiciary structure | Amend Articles 6 and 7 of the state constitution to provide for the administration and financing of the Unified Court System of the State | 1,424,628 (50%) | 1,442,076 (50%) | ||
| Amendment 4 | State legislative processes and sessions | Allow the state legislature, by a two-thirds vote, to convene itself for sessions on extraordinary occasions | 1,491,355 (52%) | 1,362,912 (48%) | ||
| Amendment 5 | Sewage and stormwater | Allow local governments to take on debt to provide for sewage and storm water facilities | 1,307,681 (45%) | 1,567,534 (55%) | ||
| Amendment 6 | Income taxes; Public employee retirement funds | Allow municipalities (excluding New York City) with less than 125,000 inhabitants to exclude taxes on employee contributions to their pension, retirement, and social security liabilities | 1,133,553 (40%) | 1,730,389 (60%) | ||
| Amendment 7 | Gambling policy | Allow certain types of gambling for religious, charitable, and non-profit groups | 1,497,217 (50%) | 1,491,943 (50%) | ||
| Proposal 1 | Bond issues; Housing development funding | Authorize the issuance of $250 million in bonds for low-rent housing | 1,110,419 (36%) | 1,964,681 (64%) |
1974
See also: New York 1974 ballot measures
November 5
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposition 1 | Bond issues; Railways | Authorize $250 million in bonds for the maintenance of the state's railways | 1,763,022 (65%) | 965,623 (35%) |
1973
See also: New York 1973 ballot measures
November 6
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | Debt limits | Exclude certain indebtedness at the county, city, town or village level from January 1, 1962, to January 1, 1983 | 1,720,008 (55%) | 1,414,813 (45%) | ||
| Amendment 10 | State judiciary structure | Abolish the Nassau County Court and transfer the judges to the state supreme court. | 1,224,526 (44%) | 1,538,447 (56%) | ||
| Amendment 2 | Criminal trials; Jury rules | Let certain persons charged with felonies wave indictment by a grand jury | 1,652,460 (54%) | 1,424,437 (46%) | ||
| Amendment 3 | Business regulations; Public economic investment policy | Expand the authority of the Legislature to loan state money to a public corporation | 1,670,032 (53%) | 1,458,628 (47%) | ||
| Amendment 4 | State judicial authority; Salaries of government officials | Increase the salaries and terms of district court judges | 1,388,134 (46%) | 1,598,920 (54%) | ||
| Amendment 5 | Corrections governance | Delete the provision in the Constitution that named the head of the department of correction as chairman of the state commission of correction | 1,571,065 (55%) | 1,309,625 (45%) | ||
| Amendment 6 | State judicial authority | Grant the family court jurisdiction over the custody of minors in habeas corpus cases | 1,926,863 (64%) | 1,086,998 (36%) | ||
| Amendment 7 | Parks, land, and natural area conservation | Provide for an increase in the size of land in the Adirondack and Catskill parks | 1,751,102 (58%) | 1,284,585 (42%) | ||
| Amendment 8 | Local government organization | Remove the rule that a new county can be formed only when its population is large enough to receive an Assembly seat | 1,106,284 (39%) | 1,755,331 (61%) | ||
| Amendment 9 | State judiciary structure | Authorize a retired judge to carry out the functions of their former court, and allow a retired surrogate judge to fulfill the responsibilities of a Supreme Court justice | 1,010,357 (34%) | 1,953,160 (66%) | ||
| Proposition 1 | Public transportation; Bond issues | Allow for $3.5 billion in debt for the maintenance of mass transportation | 1,593,531 (42%) | 2,210,907 (58%) |
1972
See also: New York 1972 ballot measures
November 7
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment 1 | County and municipal governance; State legislative authority; State judicial selection; State judiciary structure | Empower the state legislature to direct the election of district attorneys for every county once every three or four years | 2,478,100 (60%) | 1,673,627 (40%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment 2 | State legislative authority; Constitutional wording changes; State constitutional conventions | Replace Article XIX of the state constitution to add new processes for passing amendments through the state legislature and constitutional conventions | 1,546,784 (39%) | 2,393,174 (61%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment 3 | Constitutional wording changes; State judiciary structure | Increase the number of state judicial departments from four to five | 1,675,316 (42%) | 2,286,190 (58%) | ||
| Proposition No. 1 | Parks, land, and natural area conservation; Bond issues | Authorize issuing $1.15 billion in bonds to provide funding for the preservation of the state's environment | 3,137,048 (67%) | 1,545,795 (33%) |
1971
See also: New York 1971 ballot measures
November 2
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | State and local government budgets, spending, and finance; Land use and development policy; State legislative authority | Authorize the state legislature to establish community development programs | 1,322,065 (35%) | 2,414,805 (65%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | State and local government budgets, spending, and finance; Utility policy; Debt limits; Sewage and stormwater | Extend the ability of counties, cities, towns, or villages to exclude debt accrued from the development of sewage facilities from the debt limit by ten years | 1,801,271 (49%) | 1,876,683 (51%) | ||
| Proposition 1 | Environment; Bond issues | This proposition allowed for $1.5 billion in state debt for the preservation and improvement of the environment. | 1,322,065 (35%) | 2,414,805 (65%) |
1970
See also: New York 1970 ballot measures
November 3
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposition 1 | Housing assistance programs | Increase the statewide limit on low‑rent housing and urban renewal subsidies by $20 million | 1,424,590 (48%) | 1,568,936 (52%) |
1969
See also: New York 1969 ballot measures
November 4
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | Healthcare facility funding | Authorize the state or municipalities to lend their money or credit to corporations or associations for hospital and related health-care facilities. | 2,813,705 (80%) | 718,707 (20%) | ||
| Amendment 2 | Bond issues | Increase the state’s guarantor cap and extend maturity for Job Development Authority bonds and notes. | 2,286,519 (69%) | 1,050,663 (31%) | ||
| Amendment 3 | Parks, land, and natural area conservation | Establish a State Nature and Historical Preserve. | 2,750,675 (81%) | 656,763 (19%) | ||
| Amendment 4 | Redistricting policy | Provide for the inclusion of non-citizens in the total population for legislative redistricting. | 2,229,299 (70%) | 960,452 (30%) |
1967
See also: New York 1967 ballot measures
November 7
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Bond issues; Land use and development policy | Authorize the state to increase its bonds for job development from $50 million to $200 million | 2,045,499 (46%) | 2,388,676 (54%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | Athletics and sports; Land use and development policy; Parks, land, and natural area conservation | Allow the state to build and operate up to 30 miles of ski trails with facilities on specified forest‑preserve slopes | 1,147,937 (27%) | 3,153,389 (73%) | ||
| Proposition 1 | Bond issues; State and local government budgets, spending, and finance; Public transportation; Highways and bridges | Authorize issuing $2.5 billion in bonds for the development of state highways, mass transit, and airport facilities | 2,795,577 (58%) | 2,006,318 (42%) | ||
| Question No. 1 | State constitution ratification | Adopt a new state constitution | 1,327,999 (28%) | 3,487,513 (72%) |
1966
See also: New York 1966 ballot measures
November 8
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | State legislative authority; Bond issues; Land use and development policy | Increase the maximum principal amount of bonds issued to public corporations for the development of industrial and manufacturing plants from $50 million to $75 million | 1,854,074 (49%) | 1,904,285 (51%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 10 | State judiciary structure; Judicial term limits; State judicial selection | Allow the court of appeals to appoint retired judges from the same court to continue serving | 1,777,447 (50%) | 1,783,697 (50%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 11 | State executive powers and duties; State judicial selection; Judicial term limits; State judiciary structure | Allow retired justices of the state supreme court that had served as a justice of any appellate court before the age of 70 to be eligible for a temporary appointment to the appellate division by the governor | 1,801,288 (51%) | 1,727,722 (49%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | State legislative authority | Authorize the state legislature to loan state funds for projects in any area of the state, instead of just areas where unemployment is a problem | 2,007,131 (54%) | 1,724,243 (46%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | Debt limits; Housing development funding | Permit the state legislature to authorize local governments to take on debt for low-income housing projects, up to a limit of two percent of the average full valuation of taxable real estate of the locality | 1,666,381 (45%) | 2,065,195 (55%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 4 | State legislative authority; Public assistance programs | Empower the state legislature to provide for the education and support of programs for people with mental disabilities | 2,960,248 (77%) | 907,989 (23%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 5 | Public employee retirement funds | Increase the pensions of widows of retired members of a teachers' retirement system of the state or of a subdivision of the state | 2,228,190 (60%) | 1,516,233 (40%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 6 | Residency voting requirements | Allow citizens who are 21 years of age or older to vote if they have been a resident of the state and county, city, or village for at least three months prior to an election | 2,370,919 (64%) | 1,354,807 (36%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 7 | Public education funding; Gambling policy | Allow the state legislature to authorize, as prescribed by law, the sale of lottery tickets if the proceeds go towards education funding within the state | 2,464,898 (61%) | 1,604,694 (39%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 8 | Voter registration | Allow the absentee registration of voters who are unable to appear for personal registration due to work requiring them to be outside of the counties of their residence | 2,451,854 (67%) | 1,202,983 (33%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 9 | State and local government budgets, spending, and finance; Public education funding; Property taxes | Empower the Buffalo city school district to have separate taxing and borrowing powers from the City of Buffalo for a minimum of five years | 1,505,396 (43%) | 1,995,523 (57%) | ||
| Proposition 1 | Parks, land, and natural area conservation; Bond issues; Land use and development policy | Authorize issuing $200 million in bonds to develop and acquire land for outdoor recreation, such as for parks and historic sites | 2,402,363 (59%) | 1,660,392 (41%) |
1965
See also: New York 1965 ballot measures
November 2
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 9 | Public employee retirement funds; Election administration and governance | Allow the city of New York to increase pension benefits to retired members of department of street cleaning and their widows and dependent children or parents, and provide that elections, except of judicial officers, of city officers, and county officers in any county wholly within a city, except to fill vacancies, shall be held in odd-numbered years | 1,617,270 (55%) | 1,310,803 (45%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | State executive powers and duties | Require the governor to submit the executive budget to the state legislature by February 1 in each year following the year fixed by the Constitution for the election of the governor and lieutenant governor, and by the second Tuesday following the first day of the annual meeting of the legislature in other years | 1,882,387 (62%) | 1,170,320 (38%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | Judicial term limits | Establish that the term length of justices of town courts cannot be less than four years, starting from the first day of January after their election | 1,379,294 (46%) | 1,622,926 (54%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | State legislative term limits | Increase the term length of state senators and assemblymen from two years to four years, starting in 1966 | 1,221,793 (40%) | 1,806,245 (60%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 4 | Public assistance programs; State legislative authority | Authorize the state legislature to make provisions for nursing home accommodations for low income individuals | 1,584,127 (52%) | 1,474,130 (48%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 5 | Eminent domain policy; Housing development funding | Extend the authority of state and municipalities to make loans and grant power of eminent domain to partnerships, trusts and corporations engaged in providing housing facilities | 1,215,721 (41%) | 1,719,041 (59%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 6 | State legislative processes and sessions | Provide that proposed amendments to the state constitution adopted by the legislature in one session be published for three months prior to the next general election and before the next legislative session | 1,191,595 (41%) | 1,682,195 (59%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 7 | Age limits for officials; State judicial authority; State judiciary oversight; Judicial term limits | Authorize any former judge of the Surrogate's Court in any county within New York city or in Nassau, Suffolk or Westchester counties, as well as to former Court of Appeals Judges and former Supreme Court Justices, to perform the duties of Supreme Court Justices until December 31 of the year when they turn 76 years old | 1,328,360 (46%) | 1,540,430 (54%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 8 | Airport infrastructure; Public land policy | Authorize the state to give 28 acres to the town of Arrieta for the development of Piseco airport in exchange for 30 acres for the state | 1,616,165 (56%) | 1,278,375 (44%) | ||
| Proposed Question No. 1 | State constitutional conventions | Hold a convention to revise the state constitution | 1,681,438 (53%) | 1,468,431 (47%) | ||
| Proposition 1 | Bond issues; Sewage and stormwater; Pollution, waste, and recycling policy | Issue $1 billion in bonds for the development of sewage treatment facilities | 3,037,370 (81%) | 718,398 (19%) | ||
| Proposition 2 | Bond issues; Housing assistance programs | Increase the maximum aggregate amount of state periodic subsidies by $9 million and issue of $200 million in bonds for slum clearance and low-rent housing | 1,227,584 (37%) | 2,115,134 (63%) | ||
| Proposition 3 | Bond issues; Housing assistance programs | Increase the maximum aggregate amount of state subsidies for low-rent housing and urban renewal purposes by $13.5 million | 1,139,715 (35%) | 2,127,721 (65%) |
1964
See also: New York 1964 ballot measures
November 3
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | Housing assistance programs | Increase the Legislature’s power to assist housing and urban renewal efforts, improve substandard homes, and allow municipalities to take on debt for these goals | 1,508,342 (40%) | 2,225,760 (60%) | ||
| Amendment 2 | State legislative authority | Repeal provision for compensation for taking public property and amended provisions for covering legislative salaries, street railroads, and claims against the state regarding civil service preferences for veterans prior to January 1 | 1,849,292 (52%) | 1,710,239 (48%) |
1963
See also: New York 1963 ballot measures
November 5
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | Absentee and mail voting | Allow the legislature to liberalize voting requirements in presidential elections for persons who have recently moved into, within or outside the state and permits wider use of absentee ballots | 1,962,094 (76%) | 618,402 (24%) | ||
| Amendment 2 | State executive branch structure; Salaries of government officials | Delete the maximum salaries of the governor and lieutenant governor and provide provisions for succession | 1,724,497 (71%) | 699,447 (29%) | ||
| Amendment 3 | Government continuity policy; State legislative authority | Allow the legislature to provide for continuity of state and local governmental operations in periods of emergency caused by enemy attack or disaster | 2,021,720 (82%) | 441,696 (18%) | ||
| Amendment 4 | Local government organization | Expand home rule powers for local governments and municipalities | 1,719,074 (72%) | 667,042 (28%) | ||
| Amendment 5 | Sewage and stormwater; Debt limits | Permit local governments to exclude the cost of sewage treatment and disposal facilities from their debt limit for an eleven year period | 1,490,558 (63%) | 874,313 (37%) | ||
| Amendment 6 | Public employee retirement funds | Grant villages the authority to increase pension benefits to retired members of police and fire departments, as well as their widows and dependent children or parents | 1,867,020 (76%) | 601,340 (24%) | ||
| Amendment 7 | Parks, land, and natural area conservation; Pollution, waste, and recycling policy | Permit the state to convey ten acres of forest preserve land to the village of Saranac Lake for refuse disposal in exchange for thirty acres of true forest land owned by the village | 1,861,710 (77%) | 546,593 (23%) |
1962
See also: New York 1962 ballot measures
November 6
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | State legislative authority | Strengthen the state constitution’s anti-corruption provisions by broadening the definition of bribery involving public officials and permanently barring convicted officials from holding public office | 1,619,745 (66%) | 839,588 (34%) | ||
| Amendment 2 | Land use and development policy; American Indian issues | Repeal outdated provisions dealing with ownership of lands, escheat and Indian lands | 1,521,201 (64%) | 857,022 (36%) | ||
| Amendment 3 | Constitutional wording changes | Repeal a military article and replace with a defense article | 1,626,248 (69%) | 746,308 (31%) | ||
| Amendment 4 | Redistricting policy | Delete outdated 1894 Senate district boundary descriptions while keeping the apportionment formula unchanged | 1,507,357 (64%) | 845,358 (36%) | ||
| Proposition 1 | Parks, land, and natural area conservation; Bond issues | Issue a $25 million bond to purchase open lands for parks, conservation and recreation | 1,786,496 (67%) | 889,924 (33%) |
1961
See also: New York 1961 ballot measures
November 7
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | State judiciary structure; Constitutional wording changes | Reorganize the state court system | 2,303,446 (82%) | 507,211 (18%) | ||
| Amendment 2 | State executive powers and duties; Administrative powers and rulemaking; State legislative authority | Restrict the number and flexibility of civil departments while expanding the governor’s and legislature’s authority over their organization and functions | 1,858,351 (73%) | 700,873 (27%) | ||
| Amendment 3 | Railways; Balanced budget requirements | Authorized no more than $100 million for the Port Authority of New York for the purchase and lease of railroad commuter cars | 1,608,405 (62%) | 974,079 (38%) | ||
| Amendment 4 | Public economic investment policy; Balanced budget requirements | Authorize loans not exceeding $50 million to non-profit corporations for industrial and manufacturing plants to provide increased employment in areas of need | 1,549,726 (62%) | 954,203 (38%) | ||
| Amendment 5 | Debt limits | Authorize a state debt for two or more specific purposes in event of a general economic recession | 1,166,894 (48%) | 1,262,080 (52%) | ||
| Amendment 6 | Balanced budget requirements; Higher education funding | Authorize state liability for no more than $500 million for the construction of buildings and other improvements at higher education institutions | 1,278,992 (47%) | 1,440,450 (53%) | ||
| Amendment 7 | Public land policy; Highways and bridges | Grant the use of Hamilton County forest preserve lands for highway relocation | 1,021,765 (41%) | 1,453,392 (59%) |
1960
See also: New York 1960 ballot measures
November 8
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposition 1 | Parks, land, and natural area conservation; Bond issues | Authorize a state debt of $75 million to acquire more open lands for recreational and conservation purposes | 2,390,585 (73%) | 889,234 (27%) |
1959
See also: New York 1959 ballot measures
November 3
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | Vehicle and driver regulations; Administrative organization | Establish a Department of Motor Vehicles in the state government | 1,869,500 (67%) | 911,609 (33%) | ||
| Amendment 2 | Highways and bridges; Public land policy | Permit for no more than 300 acres of state forest preserve land to be used for the construction and maintenance of the Northway interstate highway | 1,621,428 (56%) | 1,261,769 (44%) | ||
| Amendment 3 | Administrative powers and rulemaking | Remove public officials from office for five years who refuse to waive immunity or answer questions when called before a grand jury about their official conduct | 1,907,659 (72%) | 738,540 (28%) | ||
| Amendment 4 | Bond issues; Public education funding | Permit New York City to issue $500 million in bonds for school construction outside its debt limit | 1,248,208 (43%) | 1,638,353 (57%) | ||
| Amendment 5 | Primary election systems | Permit legislature to provide for the elimination of primary elections where there is no contest | 1,544,635 (61%) | 1,000,435 (39%) | ||
| Amendment 6 | State legislative authority | Empower the legislature to lease or transfer the state's barge canal system to the federal government for inclusion into the national system of inland waterways | 1,505,107 (57%) | 1,125,082 (43%) | ||
| Amendment 7 | Public employee retirement funds | Increase pension benefits for certain police and fire department employees or their dependents | 1,909,448 (70%) | 829,642 (30%) | ||
| Amendment 8 | Income taxes; State legislative authority | Allow the Legislature to provide definition of income for income tax purposes by reference to federal laws | 1,616,812 (63%) | 939,003 (37%) | ||
| Amendment 9 | Local government finance and taxes; Local government organization | Authorize multiple municipalities to jointly provide services and facilities, take on shared or separate debt for those projects, and raise taxes or fees to support them | 1,648,447 (65%) | 904,202 (35%) |
1958
See also: New York 1958 ballot measures
November 4
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | Local government organization | Grant the choice to create and amend alternative forms of government to counties outside of the City of New York power within the limitations of the Legislature | 1,606,777 (67%) | 782,133 (33%) | ||
| Amendment 2 | Housing assistance programs; Bond issues | Extend time of payment of notes or obligations for money borrowed in anticipation of the sale of bonds authorized for housing purposes | 1,309,103 (56%) | 1,040,784 (44%) | ||
| Proposition 1 | Housing development funding; Debt limits | Create a $100 million state debt for slum clearance and low-rent housing | 1,187,034 (51%) | 1,140,848 (49%) | ||
| Proposition 2 | Debt limits; Housing development funding | Issue $100 million in loans to limited-profit housing companies | 1,156,093 (50%) | 1,133,936 (50%) |
1957
See also: New York 1957 ballot measures
November 5
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | State constitutional conventions | This measure would have called a constitutional convention to amend the constitution. | 1,242,568 (48%) | 1,368,063 (52%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | Higher education funding; State and local government budgets, spending, and finance | This measure authorized "a $250 million state debt for expansion of the state university." | 1,895,896 (70%) | 805,251 (30%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | Housing | This measure provided for a "method of amortization of state loans for public or limited-profit housing." | 1,612,471 (64%) | 916,771 (36%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 4 | Gambling policy | This measure authorized the "conduct of bingo games by certain organizations under state regulation and local government supervision." | 1,818,353 (61%) | 1,175,820 (39%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 5 | Housing | This measure excluded "liability for certain state housing loans in ascertaining debt-incurring power of towns and villages for housing purposes." | 1,497,237 (62%) | 931,047 (38%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 6 | Parks, land, and natural area conservation | This amendment authorized the "dedication, use, sale, exchange or other disposition of certain state forest preserve lands." | 1,551,982 (61%) | 972,118 (39%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 7 | Public land policy; Parks, land, and natural area conservation; Highways and bridges | This amendment permitted the "limited use of forest preserve lands for state highway purposes." | 1,725,735 (69%) | 791,744 (31%) |
1955
See also: New York 1955 ballot measures
November 8
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Transportation; Bond issues | This amendment would have authorized the "legislature to provide for the issuance of state bonds, not exceeding $750,000,000, for state highway and grade crossing elimination purposes." | 1,139,002 (43%) | 1,493,308 (57%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 10 | State judiciary | This amendment was related to the "appointment of temporary justices and judges, in case of temporary illness or disability of the incumbent." | 822,693 (43%) | 1,073,103 (57%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | Housing | This amendment was related to the "limit for authorization of periodic subsidies by the state for low rent publicly assisted housing." | 1,139,185 (53%) | 1,011,424 (47%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | Absentee and mail voting | This amendment was related to absentee registration and voting. | 1,172,556 (56%) | 923,855 (44%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 4 | Administration of government | This amendment was related to the "powers and duties of the comptroller respecting the taxation and assessment of real estate." | 1,077,914 (54%) | 918,978 (46%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 5 | State and local government budgets, spending, and finance | This amendment was related to the "indebtedness contracted for sewer purposes." | 818,551 (41%) | 1,175,343 (59%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 6 | Public economic investment policy | This amendment was related to the "powers of public corporations and improvement districts to provide for the conveyance, treatment and disposal of sewage and for drainage purposes and to contract indebtedness for such purposes." | 1,163,800 (59%) | 803,884 (41%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 7 | Public land policy | This amendment would have authorized the "use of certain state owned forest preserve lands for the construction and operation of Panther Mountain reservoir to regulate the flow of Moose and Black rivers." | 613,927 (27%) | 1,622,196 (73%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 8 | State judiciary; Administration of government | This amendment was related to the "holding of any other public office by judges, justices or surrogates." | 1,078,167 (56%) | 849,029 (44%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 9 | State judiciary | This amendment was related to the "appointment of temporary judges of county courts in counties outside the city of New York, in case of the temporary illness or disability of the incumbent." | 824,424 (43%) | 1,093,048 (57%) |
1953
See also: New York 1953 ballot measures
November 3
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | State judiciary | This amendment temporary assigned "justices or judges to terms of courts within the city of New York." | 995,128 (78%) | 276,700 (22%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | State judiciary | This amendment increased the monetary civil jurisdiction from $3,000 to $6,000 for county courts outside New York City. | 1,141,754 (75%) | 376,815 (25%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | Elections and campaigns; State executive official measures | This amendment called for the joint election of the governor and lieutenant governor of the state. It also provided for the legislature to fill vacancies in those two offices. | 844,310 (56%) | 663,471 (44%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 4 | State and local government budgets, spending, and finance; Water | This amendment related to local indebtedness for water supply. It granted powers to the legislature to deal with "public corporations and improvement districts concerning excess supply of water." | 56,798 (12%) | 431,766 (88%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 5 | Salaries of government officials | This amendment authorized the legislature to fix the salary of the governor, by joint resolution to a $50,000 maximum. | 1,016,430 (65%) | 538,529 (35%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 6 | Salaries of government officials | This amendment authorized the legislature to fix the salary of the lieutenant governor, by joint resolution to a $20,000 maximum. | 1,011,359 (66%) | 531,632 (34%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 7 | State and local government budgets, spending, and finance | This amendment related to the power of "counties, cities, towns, villages and certain school districts to contract indebtedness and to raise taxes on real estate." | 989,741 (65%) | 524,193 (35%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 8 | Taxes; Housing | This amendment related to the constitutional limitation on the "amount to be raised by the city of New York, and counties therein, by tax on real estate." | 947,531 (63%) | 560,023 (37%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 9 | State legislative authority; Parks, land, and natural area conservation | This amendment was related to the removal of legislature power "to provide for use of portions of forest preserve for the construction of reservoirs to regulate the flow of streams." | 1,002,462 (59%) | 697,270 (41%) |
1951
See also: New York 1951 ballot measures
November 6
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Absentee and mail voting; Military service policy | This amendment was related to the "absentee voting privileges of electors in military service and certain members of their immediate families." | 1,695,034 (90%) | 193,223 (10%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | Military service policy; Elections and campaigns | This amendment was related to the exemption "requirement of personal registration voters in military service, inmates of certain veterans' bureau hospitals and certain members of their immediate families." | 1,584,025 (88%) | 217,601 (12%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | Public employee retirement funds | This amendment empowered the legislature "to increase pensions of members of retirement system of the state or of any subdivision." | 1,392,034 (75%) | 471,148 (25%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 4 | Bond issues | This amendment empowered the legislature "by law to make the state liable for bonded indebtedness of a public corporation created to construct state thruways." It also authorized the "use of state canal lands and properties by such corporation." | 1,563,044 (81%) | 366,767 (19%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 5 | State judiciary | This amendment provided for "appeals to court of appeals, by permission, from non-final orders in proceedings by or against public officers." | 1,357,821 (83%) | 278,959 (17%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 6 | State and local government budgets, spending, and finance | This amendment restricted the "powers of counties, cities, towns, villages and certain school districts to contract indebtedness and to impose taxes upon real estate." | 1,297,378 (74%) | 461,611 (26%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 7 | State judiciary | This amendment increased the "monetary jurisdiction of the city court of the city of New York." | 1,320,299 (80%) | 325,476 (20%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 8 | State judiciary | This amendment permitted "judges of the court of appeals and justices of the supreme court to serve in the armed forces of the United States or state of New York." | 1,343,294 (79%) | 348,584 (21%) |
1949
See also: New York 1949 ballot measures
November 8
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Administration of government | This amendment authorized the "lieutenant-governor-elect to serve as governor in event of death of governor-elect before assuming office." | 1,796,852 (80%) | 452,419 (20%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | Veterans policy | This amendment authorized the "payment of war bonus to members of armed forces from New York state whether or not resident of state at time of application." | 1,633,560 (72%) | 633,569 (28%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | State judiciary | This amendment established "court of claims as constitutional court of record." | 1,479,971 (71%) | 616,707 (29%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 4 | State judiciary; Administration of government | This amendment provided for further penalty for a public officer that refuses to waive immunity or give testimony. | 1,611,049 (77%) | 471,724 (23%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 5 | Veterans policy; Civil service | This amendment related to "revising veterans' preference in civil service employment." | 1,592,483 (59%) | 1,090,977 (41%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 6 | State and local government budgets, spending, and finance; Housing | This amendment extended to "to certain villages -- 5,000 or more inhabitants -- certain powers of cities in relation to indebtedness for low rent housing." | 1,441,214 (70%) | 627,479 (30%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 7 | State and local government budgets, spending, and finance | This amendment changed the "power of counties, cities, towns and villages to contract indebtedness; excluding from New York city debt limit $150,000,000 for city hospitals." | 1,435,575 (71%) | 590,332 (29%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 8 | Taxes; Housing | This amendment changed the "limitations upon the amount of real estate taxes which may be levied by counties, cities, villages and certain school districts." | 1,364,859 (69%) | 602,855 (31%) | ||
| Proposition 1 | Housing; State and local government budgets, spending, and finance | This bond issue created "a state debt in the aggregate amount of $300,000,000 for the purpose of making loans to cities, town, villages and authorities for slum clearance and low-rent purposes under and pursuant to article 18 of the Constitution and the Public Housing law." | 1,112,494 (61%) | 717,411 (39%) |
1947
See also: New York 1947 ballot measures
November 4
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Veterans policy | This amendment authorized the legislature to create a state debt for payments to veterans of the armed forces from New York. | 2,221,800 (73%) | 805,826 (27%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | Absentee and mail voting | This amendment permitted "more extensive use of absentee ballots." | 1,848,701 (76%) | 573,050 (24%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | Salaries of government officials | This amendment permitted members of the legislature to receive a fixed salary by law It also deleted a provision of Constitution that fixed the annual salary at legislators at $2,500. | 1,431,636 (61%) | 901,023 (39%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 4 | State judiciary | This amendment related to the "removal or retirement of judicial officers by the court on the judiciary." | 1,572,256 (68%) | 749,020 (32%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 5 | State judiciary | This amendment created another judicial district out of a second judicial district. | 1,181,559 (54%) | 1,009,223 (46%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 6 | Parks, land, and natural area conservation; Athletics and sports | The measure allowed for the construction and maintenance of ski trails on Gore Mountain and Belleayre Mountain in the Catskill Mountains. The amendment received 1,431,526 "yes" votes, but the number of "no" is not known. | ||||
| Proposition 1 | Housing; Bond issues | This proposition issued a $135,000,000 bond for slum clearance and public housing. | 1,515,403 (71%) | 633,868 (29%) | ||
| Proposition 2 | Housing | This proposition increased from $9,000,000 to $13,000,000 aggregate payments for subsidies for public housing projects. | 1,439,187 (70%) | 627,198 (30%) | ||
| Proposition 3 | Housing | This proposition increased from "$1,000,000 to $1,500,000 the maximum aggregate payments for periodic subsidies in housing projects for one year." | 1,429,548 (69%) | 630,862 (31%) |
1945
See also: New York 1945 ballot measures
November 6
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Administration of government | This amendment would have required that the "governor and lieutenant-governor be chosen jointly." | 475,912 (49%) | 485,534 (51%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | Administration of government | This amendment prescribed a procedure "in filling vacancies in the offices of governor and lieutenant-governor and the performance of the duties of such offices by others in certain cases." | 575,740 (64%) | 324,258 (36%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | Elections and campaigns | This amendment removed the disqualification of "votes of certain electors of a nonpersonal election district after removal within thirty days preceding an election from one election district to another in the same county." | 458,749 (52%) | 416,474 (48%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 4 | Redistricting policy | This amendment provided that "towns with certain population ratios may be divided in creation of senate and assembly districts." | 613,373 (70%) | 264,296 (30%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 5 | County and municipal governance | This amendment permitted "two-thirds of the members of a county governing body to request enactment of special or local laws by the legislature without approval of county executive officer." | 608,296 (71%) | 246,141 (29%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 6 | Veterans policy; Civil service | This amendment gave "disabled veterans preference in civil service appointments and promotions and extending until December 31, 1950, the same preference to non-disabled veterans." | 621,436 (51%) | 587,217 (49%) |
1943
See also: New York 1943 ballot measures
November 2
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Administration of government | This amendment established a department of commerce in the state government. | 600,495 (72%) | 239,222 (28%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | Taxes | This amendment authorized the legislature "to establish a fund or funds for tax revenue stabilization reserves, and regulating payments thereto, and withdrawals therefrom." | 558,726 (69%) | 246,011 (31%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | Redistricting policy | This amendment was related to the "creation of assembly districts in counties to which have been apportioned a greater number of assemblymen than the number of towns in such county." | 385,025 (50%) | 387,496 (50%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 4 | Elections and campaigns | This amendment changed the residence requirement for voting purposes. It required a four month residence for voters in counties, cities or villages. | 599,330 (73%) | 220,812 (27%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 5 | Elections and campaigns; State legislatures measures | This amendment was related to the "residence requirements for election to the senate or assembly at the first election next ensuing after readjustment or alteration of the districts." | 566,149 (73%) | 212,320 (27%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 6 | State judiciary | This amendment was related to the "jurisdiction of the court of appeals and the regulation of appeals to that court." | 571,574 (73%) | 207,888 (27%) |
1941
See also: New York 1941 ballot measures
November 4
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Transportation; Bond issues | This amendment authorized the "diversion of $60,000,000 railroad grade crossing elimination bonds for construction and reconstruction of state highways and parkways." | 936,279 (60%) | 629,313 (40%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | Administration of government; State legislatures measures | This amendment would have provided four-year terms to state senators. | 588,894 (41%) | 860,684 (59%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | Constitutional wording changes | This amendment was related to the validity of proposed constitutional amendments. | 776,385 (58%) | 558,638 (42%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 4 | Athletics and sports; Parks, land, and natural area conservation | This amendment permitted the "construction of ski trails on slopes of Whiteface Mountain." | 740,506 (50%) | 730,562 (50%) |
1939
See also: New York 1939 ballot measures
November 7
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Gambling policy | This amendment permitted "pari-mutuel betting on horse races." | 1,225,495 (67%) | 594,811 (33%) |
1938
See also: New York 1938 ballot measures
November 8
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 7 | Proportional representation | Prohibit a system of proportional representation in New York | 627,123 (29%) | 1,554,404 (71%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | State constitutional conventions | This amendment was submitted by the constitutional convention. | 1,521,036 (54%) | 1,301,797 (46%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | State constitutional conventions; Administration of government | This amendment was submitted by the constitutional convention. It would have repealed Sections 2 to 5 of Article 3 of the state Constitution and substituted new sections on "legislative apportionment and increasing term of senators from two to four years." | 848,367 (37%) | 1,425,344 (63%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | State constitutional conventions; Transportation | This amendment was submitted by the constitutional convention. It eliminated railroad grade crossings. | 1,561,846 (64%) | 895,382 (36%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 4 | State constitutional conventions; Housing | This amendment was submitted by the constitutional convention. It related to low rent housing and slum clearance and authorized the "contracting of state debt up to $300,000,000 for loans, the expanding of the debt limit of cities by 2 per cent, and authorizing the granting of subsidies." | 1,686,056 (64%) | 936,279 (36%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 5 | State judiciary; State constitutional conventions | This amendment was submitted by the constitutional convention. It would have amended a judiciary article. | 641,332 (29%) | 1,550,653 (71%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 6 | Public works labor and contracting | This amendment was submitted by the constitutional convention. It related to the "rights of labor and fixing the hours and prevailing rate of wages on public works." | 1,869,883 (67%) | 940,770 (33%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 8 | Public assistance programs; State constitutional conventions | This amendment was submitted by the constitutional convention. This amendment permitted the "use of state money and credit for social welfare, including provision, by insurance or otherwise, against the hazards of unemployment, sickness and old age." | 1,902,075 (67%) | 943,296 (33%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 9 | Transportation; State and local government budgets, spending, and finance | This amendment was submitted by the constitutional convention. It excluded $315 million from the debt limit of NYC for the unification of transit facilities. | 1,407,056 (60%) | 935,744 (40%) |
1937
See also: New York 1937 ballot measures
November 2
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Administration of government; State executive official measures | This amendment increased the "term of office of governor and lieutenant governor from two years to four years." | 842,980 (63%) | 503,656 (37%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | Administration of government | This amendment increased the term of office for Assembly members from one year to two years. | 856,818 (65%) | 463,074 (35%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | Criminal trials; Jury rules | This amendment permitted "defendants in all criminal cases, except those in which the crime charged may be punishable by death, to waive trial by jury." | 721,540 (57%) | 550,297 (43%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 4 | Local official term limits | This amendment removed the "provision which made sheriffs ineligible for the next term after the termination of their offices." | 697,007 (53%) | 610,515 (47%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 5 | State judiciary | This amendment would have prescribed the "jurisdiction and powers of the city court of the city of New York." | 551,569 (46%) | 636,938 (54%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 6 | State judiciary | This amendment would have prescribed the "jurisdiction and powers of the municipal court of the city of New York." | 538,312 (45%) | 649,769 (55%) | ||
| Proposition 1 | Bond issues | This measures issued a bond for $40 million for the construction of buildings for state hospitals for the insane, state charitable and correctional institutions. | 756,843 (63%) | 444,527 (37%) |
1936
See also: New York 1936 ballot measures
November 3
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | State constitutional conventions | This amendment called for a constitutional convention to amend the state Constitution. | 1,413,604 (54%) | 1,190,275 (46%) | ||
| Proposition 1 | Bond issues | This measure issued a $30 million bond for unemployment relief funds from 11/15/36 through 2/15/38. | 1,578,519 (67%) | 788,512 (33%) |
1935
See also: New York 1935 ballot measures
November 5
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Administration of government | 1,288,297 (72%) | 499,332 (28%) | |||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | Jury rules; Civil trials | This amendment was related to "non-unanimous jury verdicts in civil cases." | 1,150,687 (71%) | 480,340 (29%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | Banking policy | This amendment was related to the "liability of stockholders of banks." | 1,086,701 (67%) | 538,442 (33%) | ||
| Proposition 1 | Bond issues | This measure issued a $55 million bond for emergency relief from 11/15/35 through 2/15/37. | 1,204,698 (69%) | 534,107 (31%) |
1933
See also: New York 1933 ballot measures
November 7
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Property | This amendment related to compensation of private property when it is taken by New York City. | 1,113,371 (72%) | 443,326 (28%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | Veterans policy; Civil service | This amendment would have extended "civil service preference to disabled veterans who were residents but not citizens of this state at time of entrance into military or naval service." | 755,675 (45%) | 939,036 (55%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | Public land policy; Transportation | The measure allowed for the construction of a road from Indian Lake to Speculator on state Forest Preserve land. | 1,099,399 (69%) | 492,424 (31%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 4 | Transportation | This amendment was related to the "sale or disposition of barge terminal canal lands in New York city." | 1,109,388 (72%) | 425,378 (28%) | ||
| Proposition 1 | State and local government budgets, spending, and finance | This measure created a $60 million state debt for temporary emergency relief. | 1,669,801 (84%) | 306,341 (16%) |
1932
See also: New York 1932 ballot measures
November 8
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Parks, land, and natural area conservation; Public land policy | This amendment would have used forest preserve land for lodges, hotels, and recreational facilities. | 693,542 (34%) | 1,326,599 (66%) | ||
| Proposition 1 | Bond issues | This measure issued a $30 million state bond for temporary emergency relief. | 1,780,502 (79%) | 473,365 (21%) |
1931
See also: New York 1931 ballot measures
November 3
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Redistricting policy | This amendment abolished the state census and begun the use of the federal census as a "basis for formation of senatorial and assembly districts." | 924,228 (73%) | 335,206 (27%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | State legislatures measures | This amendment would have permitted "legislators to receive civil appointments during their legislative terms." | 424,522 (38%) | 700,177 (62%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | Parks, land, and natural area conservation | This amendment was related to the eleven year reforestation program. | 778,192 (58%) | 554,550 (42%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 4 | State judiciary; State legislatures measures | This amendment would have permitted the "legislature to divide the second judicial district and create a new district." | 504,737 (47%) | 578,445 (53%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 5 | Public assistance programs; Administrative organization | This amendment changed the "the title of the state department of charities to the state department of social welfare." | 812,545 (69%) | 365,804 (31%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 6 | Taxes | This amendment would have authorized "Westchester county to adopt a system of assessment for taxation purposes." | 497,616 (47%) | 552,559 (53%) |
1929
See also: New York 1929 ballot measures
November 5
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Civil service; Veterans policy | This amendment was related to "civil service preference to veterans." | 1,071,517 (73%) | 404,454 (27%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | Absentee and mail voting | This amendment was related to the absentee voting privilege of inmates of veterans' bureau hospitals. | 1,119,164 (81%) | 256,664 (19%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | State legislatures measures; County and municipal governance | This amendment limited the power of legislature "relative to Nassau and Westchester county laws." | 818,497 (71%) | 327,904 (29%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 4 | State and local government budgets, spending, and finance | This amendment related to the state debt that the state can contract to suppress forest fires. | 959,454 (75%) | 313,512 (25%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 5 | State judiciary | This amendment related to the transfer of criminal jurisdiction of justices of the peace. | 889,689 (74%) | 312,622 (26%) |
1927
See also: New York 1927 ballot measures
November 8
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | State executive official measures; Constitutional wording changes | This amendment related to a new article, Article 4-A, on the executive budget. | 1,291,990 (74%) | 446,107 (26%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | State and local government budgets, spending, and finance | This article was related to the city debt limit. | 961,632 (55%) | 799,867 (45%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | Transportation | This article was related to the elimination of railroad grade crossings and how its cost included counties. | 1,339,332 (77%) | 397,205 (23%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 4 | Salaries of government officials | This amendment increased the salaries of legislators, the governor and lieutenant-governor. | 1,073,802 (61%) | 683,999 (39%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 5 | Administration of government; State executive official measures | This amendment was related to the head of the executive department. | 1,197,931 (71%) | 488,095 (29%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 6 | State legislative term limits; Executive official term limits | This amendment would have changed the term of senators to four-years, assemblyman to two-years and the governor, lieutenant governor, comptroller and attorney-general to four-year terms. | 578,863 (32%) | 1,256,157 (68%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 7 | Public land policy; Transportation | This amendment was related to the construction of a highway on forest preserve land. | 1,082,864 (64%) | 602,395 (36%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 8 | Public land policy | This amendment was related to the "condemnation of land by counties." | 1,085,441 (67%) | 533,705 (33%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 9 | Land use and development policy | This amendment was related to the "annexation of territory by cities." | 1,144,872 (68%) | 527,388 (32%) |
1925
See also: New York 1925 ballot measures
November 3
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Bond issues | This amendment was related to a bond issue for the construction of public buildings. | 960,385 (51%) | 937,990 (49%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | Bond issues | This amendment was related to a bond issue for the elimination of railroad grade crossings. | 1,032,109 (55%) | 859,702 (45%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | Administration of government | This amendment was related to the reorganization of state departments. | 1,048,087 (57%) | 775,768 (43%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 4 | State judiciary | This amendment was related to the organization of the state judicial system. | 1,090,632 (61%) | 711,018 (39%) |
1924
See also: New York 1924 ballot measures
November 4
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposition 1 | Bond issues; Parks, land, and natural area conservation | This measure issued a state bond of $15 million for the improvement of state parks and for the establishment of new state parks. | 1,542,928 (73%) | 556,920 (27%) |
1923
See also: New York 1923 ballot measures
November 6
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Veterans policy | This amendment was related to a bonus that was given to "soldiers, sailors and marines of the World War." | 1,072,112 (61%) | 689,885 (39%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | Administration of government | This amendment was related to the home rule of cities. | 957,108 (65%) | 510,947 (35%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | Water; Parks, land, and natural area conservation | This amendment was related to "water power development in the forest preserve." | 470,251 (33%) | 965,777 (67%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 4 | State and local government budgets, spending, and finance | This amendment was related to the "debt limitation of a city or county." | 608,684 (48%) | 671,141 (52%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 5 | Absentee and mail voting | This amendment was related to the extension of absentee voting to inmates, soldiers and sailors. | 1,019,077 (71%) | 423,497 (29%) | ||
| Proposition 1 | Bond issues | This measure issued a state bond of $50 million to construct buildings for institutions for care, support, instruction and training of wards of the State. | 1,105,999 (73%) | 398,811 (27%) |
1922
See also: New York 1922 ballot measures
November 7
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | State judiciary | This amendment was related to increasing the salary of judges on the court of appeals. | 572,502 (39%) | 891,980 (61%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | State and local government budgets, spending, and finance | 819,628 (60%) | 554,654 (40%) |
1921
See also: New York 1921 ballot measures
November 8
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Civil service; Veterans policy | This amendment related to civil service preference for veterans. | 699,697 (39%) | 1,090,418 (61%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | Salaries of government officials | This amendment would have increased the salaries of legislators. | 556,560 (35%) | 1,027,624 (65%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | Literacy, poll tax, and property voting requirements | This amendment was related to voting qualifications and literacy. | 896,355 (59%) | 632,144 (41%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 4 | County and municipal governance | This amendment established "governing bodies in Nassau and Westchester counties." | 655,506 (51%) | 640,701 (49%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 5 | State judiciary | This amendment established "children courts and courts of domestic relations." | 930,929 (63%) | 537,610 (37%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 6 | Water | This amendment approved the disposition of a portion of the Erie canal. | 800,487 (59%) | 555,926 (41%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 7 | Water | This amendment approved the disposition of a portion of the Erie canal. | 781,665 (59%) | 552,994 (41%) |
1920
See also: New York 1920 ballot measures
November 2
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | State and local government budgets, spending, and finance | This measure amended sections 2, 4, 5, 11 and 12 of Article 7 of the state constitution. It was related to state indebtedness. | 1,117,546 (64%) | 630,265 (36%) |
1919
See also: New York 1919 ballot measures
November 4
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Water | This amendment was related to drainage. | 718,497 (55%) | 590,235 (45%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | Absentee and mail voting | This amendment was related to absentee voting. | 791,860 (60%) | 534,452 (40%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | Salaries of government officials | This amendment would have increased the salary of the House speaker and legislators. | 625,897 (48%) | 680,945 (52%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 4 | Salaries of government officials; State judiciary | This amendment would have increased the salary of judges on the court of appeals. | 608,244 (47%) | 690,131 (53%) |
1918
See also: New York 1918 ballot measures
November 5
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | State and local government budgets, spending, and finance | This amendment was related to the contraction of state debts. | 780,099 (73%) | 285,977 (27%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | Public land policy | The measure allowed for the construction of a highway from Saranac Lake to Long Lake to Old Forge. | 756,894 (69%) | 337,257 (31%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | Water | This amendment authorizes "the sale or lease of a portion of the Erie Canal." | 722,235 (70%) | 310,992 (30%) |
1917
See also: New York 1917 ballot measures
November 6
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | Sex and gender issues; Women's suffrage | Provides for women's suffrage in state constitution | 703,129 (54%) | 600,776 (46%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | State and local government budgets, spending, and finance | This amendment was related to the city debt limit. | 591,728 (58%) | 420,303 (42%) |
1916
See also: New York 1916 ballot measures
November 7
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | State constitutional conventions | This amendment would have called a constitutional convention to amend the constitution. | 506,563 (43%) | 658,269 (57%) | ||
| Proposition 1 | Parks, land, and natural area conservation; Bond issues | This measure issued a $10 million bond for the acquisition of land for state park purposes. | 653,129 (57%) | 501,514 (43%) |
1915
See also: New York 1915 ballot measures
November 2
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 2 | Women's suffrage; Sex and gender issues | Provide for women's suffrage in state constitution | 553,348 (43%) | 748,332 (57%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | State constitution ratification | The measure would have authorized a new state constitution. | 400,423 (31%) | 910,462 (69%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | State and local government budgets, spending, and finance | This amendment was related to state debt. | 430,423 (37%) | 725,784 (63%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 4 | State legislatures measures | This amendment was related to legislative apportionment. | 371,588 (29%) | 891,337 (71%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 5 | Taxes | 346,922 (27%) | 924,571 (73%) |
1914
See also: New York 1914 ballot measures
April 7
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | State constitutional conventions | This amendment called for a constitutional convention to revise the constitution. | 153,322 (50%) | 151,969 (50%) |
1913
See also: New York 1913 ballot measures
November 4
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Property | This amendment gives "compensation on private property taken for public use." | 424,928 (61%) | 270,467 (39%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | Constitutional wording changes | 510,914 (72%) | 194,497 (28%) | |||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | State judiciary | This amendment increased the number of county judges. | 389,971 (60%) | 255,539 (40%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 4 | Water | 486,264 (72%) | 187,290 (28%) |
1911
See also: New York 1911 ballot measures
November 4
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Salaries of government officials | This amendment would have increased the salaries of legislators. | 262,490 (39%) | 414,404 (61%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | State judiciary | This amendment was related to "certain powers of justices of the appellate division." | 267,194 (43%) | 352,830 (57%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | State judiciary | This amendment was related to "additional county judges for Kings county." | 247,764 (41%) | 360,859 (59%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 4 | Property | 254,095 (42%) | 357,881 (58%) | |||
| Proposed Amendment No. 5 | Salaries of government officials | This amendment would have increased the salary of the governor. | 252,791 (40%) | 376,455 (60%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 6 | Administration of government | 282,893 (47%) | 324,465 (53%) | |||
| Proposed Amendment No. 7 | Property | This amendment was related to "compensation of private property taken for public use." | 274,846 (46%) | 322,782 (54%) |
1910
See also: New York 1910 ballot measures
November 8
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | State judiciary | This amendment would have increased the salaries of judges. | 332,300 (50%) | 332,592 (50%) |
1909
See also: New York 1909 ballot measures
November 2
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Administration of government | 253,774 (53%) | 223,331 (47%) | |||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | Salaries of government officials; State judiciary | This amendment was related to salaries of Supreme Court Justices. | 278,415 (53%) | 249,576 (47%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | Administration of government | This amendment was related to the rate of interest on debts. | 279,352 (56%) | 216,541 (44%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 4 | State and local government budgets, spending, and finance | This amendment was related to "limiting indebtedness of cities." | 290,795 (58%) | 207,781 (42%) |
1907
See also: New York 1907 ballot measures
November 5
| Type | Title | Subject | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | State and local government budgets, spending, and finance | 352,905 (72%) | 137,721 (28%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | Administration of government | 309,159 (71%) | 123,919 (29%) |
1905
See also: New York 1905 ballot measures
November 7
| Type | Title | Subject | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | State and local government budgets, spending, and finance | 363,117 (74%) | 129,424 (26%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | State and local government budgets, spending, and finance | 307,768 (70%) | 134,773 (30%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | State judiciary | 297,893 (69%) | 133,999 (31%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 4 | Administration of government | 338,570 (72%) | 133,606 (28%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 5 | Transportation | 383,188 (77%) | 117,181 (23%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 6 | State and local government budgets, spending, and finance | 293,552 (70%) | 127,364 (30%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 7 | State judiciary | 288,227 (70%) | 125,649 (30%) |
1901
See also: New York 1901 ballot measures
November 5
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Constitutional wording changes | This measure amended section 18 of article 3 of the constitution. | 354,881 (53%) | 309,245 (47%) |
1899
See also: New York 1899 ballot measures
November 7
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Administration of government | This measure amended section 26 of article 3 of the constitution on the boards of supervisors. | 325,182 (69%) | 144,667 (31%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | State judiciary | This amendment was related to the "temporary designation of justices to the appellate division." | 283,880 (67%) | 137,408 (33%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | State judiciary | 279,469 (68%) | 132,064 (32%) | |||
| Proposed Amendment No. 4 | State and local government budgets, spending, and finance | 315,475 (68%) | 145,450 (32%) |
1896
See also: New York 1896 ballot measures
November 3
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Forestry and timber | The measure would have allowed timber production on state lands. | 321,486 (31%) | 710,505 (69%) |
1894
See also: New York 1894 ballot measures
November 6
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Constitutional wording changes | The measure ratified the state's fourth constitution, the Constitution of 1894. | 410,697 (56%) | 327,402 (44%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | State legislatures measures | 404,335 (54%) | 350,625 (46%) | |||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | Water | 442,998 (57%) | 327,645 (43%) | |||
| Proposed Amendment No. 4 | State judiciary | This amendment was related to county judges and court of sessions in Kings County. | 391,350 (54%) | 332,505 (46%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 5 | State judiciary | 395,233 (54%) | 341,713 (46%) |
1892
See also: New York 1892 ballot measures
November 8
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | State legislatures measures | This amendment was related to the powers of both chambers of the legislature. | 174,678 (49%) | 180,030 (51%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | State judiciary | 161,759 (45%) | 198,110 (55%) | |||
| Proposed Amendment No. 3 | Public land policy; Mineral resources | 170,765 (50%) | 171,442 (50%) |
1888
See also: New York 1888 ballot measures
November 6
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Constitutional wording changes | This amendment was related to a proposed amendment to section 6, article 6 of the constitution. | 498,114 (90%) | 55,822 (10%) |
1886
See also: New York 1886 ballot measures
November 2
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | State constitutional conventions | This amendment called for a constitutional convention to revise and amend the constitution. | 574,993 (95%) | 30,766 (5%) |
1884
See also: New York 1884 ballot measures
November 4
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Constitutional wording changes | This amendment was related to a proposed amendment to section 11, article 8 of the constitution. | 499,661 (98%) | 9,661 (2%) |
1882
See also: New York 1882 ballot measures
November 7
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Constitutional wording changes | This measure was related to an amendment to section 3 of article 7 of the constitution. | 486,105 (75%) | 163,151 (25%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | Constitutional wording changes | This measure was related to an amendment to article 6 of the constitution. | 248,784 (77%) | 75,644 (23%) |
1880
See also: New York 1880 ballot measures
November 2
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Constitutional wording changes | This measure was related to an amendment to sections 12 and 13 of article 6 of the constitution. | 221,903 (67%) | 111,225 (33%) |
1879
See also: New York 1879 ballot measures
November 4
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Constitutional wording changes | This measure was related to an amendment to section 6 of article 6 of the constitution. | 95,331 (79%) | 25,578 (21%) |
1876
See also: New York 1876 ballot measures
November 7
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed Amendment No. 1 | Constitutional wording changes | This measure related to an amendment to section 3 of article 5 of the constitution. | 533,151 (87%) | 81,832 (13%) | ||
| Proposed Amendment No. 2 | Constitutional wording changes | This measure was related to an amendment to section 4 of article 5 of the constitution. | 530,226 (87%) | 80,358 (13%) |
1874
See also: New York 1874 ballot measures
November 3
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | Constitutional wording changes | This measure was related to an amendment to article 2 of the constitution. | 357,635 (67%) | 177,033 (33%) | ||
| Amendment 10 | Constitutional wording changes | This measure was related to a new article 15 to the constitution. | 351,693 (66%) | 177,923 (34%) | ||
| Amendment 11 | Constitutional wording changes | This measure was related to a new article 16 to the constitution. | 446,883 (84%) | 85,758 (16%) | ||
| Amendment 2 | Constitutional wording changes | This measure was related to an amendment to sections 1 through 8 of article 3 of the constitution. | 325,904 (61%) | 206,029 (39%) | ||
| Amendment 3 | Constitutional wording changes | This measure was related to an amendment to section 17 through 25 of article 3 of the constitution. | 435,313 (82%) | 98,050 (18%) | ||
| Amendment 4 | Constitutional wording changes | This measure was related to an amendment to article 4 of the constitution. | 336,197 (63%) | 196,125 (37%) | ||
| Amendment 5 | Constitutional wording changes | This measure was related to an amendment to article 7 of the constitution. | 428,190 (80%) | 104,139 (20%) | ||
| Amendment 6 | Constitutional wording changes | This measure was related to an amendment to sections 4 and 11 of article 8 of the constitution. | 337,891 (63%) | 194,234 (37%) | ||
| Amendment 7 | Constitutional wording changes | This measure was related to an amendment to section 10 of article 8 of the constitution. | 336,237 (63%) | 195,047 (37%) | ||
| Amendment 8 | Constitutional wording changes | This measure was related to an amendment to article 10 of the constitution. | 335,548 (63%) | 194,333 (37%) | ||
| Amendment 9 | Constitutional wording changes | This measure was related to an amendment to article 12 of the constitution. | 352,514 (66%) | 179,365 (34%) |
1873
See also: New York 1873 ballot measures
November 4
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | State judiciary | This amendment was related to the appointment of judges from the court of appeals to the supreme court. | 115,337 (26%) | 319,979 (74%) | ||
| Amendment 2 | State judiciary | This amendment was related to the appointment of county and city court judges. | 110,725 (26%) | 319,660 (74%) |
1872
See also: New York 1872 ballot measures
November 5
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | State judiciary | This amendment was related to the commission of appeals. | 176,038 (95%) | 9,196 (5%) |
1869
See also: New York 1869 ballot measures
November 2
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | State constitution ratification | The measure would have authorized a new state constitution. | 223,935 (44%) | 290,456 (56%) | ||
| Amendment 2 | State judiciary | 247,240 (51%) | 240,442 (49%) | |||
| Amendment 3 | Taxes; Property | This amendment was related to the "uniform rule of assessment and taxation of real and personal property." | 183,812 (40%) | 272,260 (60%) | ||
| Amendment 4 | Property | This amendment was related to the "property qualification for colored men." | 282,403 (53%) | 249,802 (47%) |
1866
See also: New York 1866 ballot measures
November 6
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | State constitutional conventions | This amendment called for a constitutional convention to revise the constitution. | 352,854 (58%) | 256,364 (42%) |
1864
See also: New York 1864 ballot measures
March 8
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | Military service policy; Absentee and mail voting | This amendment extended the "right to vote to absent electors in military service." | 258,795 (84%) | 48,079 (16%) |
1858
See also: New York 1858 ballot measures
November 2
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | State constitutional conventions | This amendment would have called for a constitutional convention to revise the constitution. | 135,166 (49%) | 141,526 (51%) |
1854
See also: New York 1854 ballot measures
February 15
| Type | Title | Subject | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Contract Bidding for Canal Projects Amendment | Ports and harbors; Public works labor and contracting | 185,771 (75%) | 60,526 (25%) |
1846
See also: New York 1846 ballot measures
November 3
| Type | Title | Subject | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Repeal of Property Requirement for African Americans to Vote Amendment | Race and suffrage; Race and ethnicity issues | 85,306 (28%) | 223,834 (72%) | ||
| State Constitution of 1846 Measure | State constitution ratification | 221,528 (71%) | 92,436 (29%) |
1845
See also: New York 1845 ballot measures
November 4
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | Property | This amendment repealed property qualifications for public officers. | 114,900 (97%) | 3,901 (3%) | ||
| Amendment 2 | State judiciary | This amendment was related to the "regulation of removal of judicial officers." | 114,769 (97%) | 3,689 (3%) | ||
| Amendment 3 | State constitutional conventions | This amendment called for a constitutional convention to revise the constitution. | 213,257 (86%) | 33,860 (14%) |
1839
See also: New York 1839 ballot measures
November 4
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | Local government officials and elections | Provide for the annual election of city mayors | 90,473 (100%) | 382 (0%) |
1835
See also: New York 1835 ballot measures
November 2
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | Taxes | This amendment was related to the "restoration of duties on salt and on goods sold at auction." | 68,126 (89%) | 8,675 (11%) |
1833
See also: New York 1833 ballot measures
November 4
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | Taxes | This amendment reduced the duty on salt. | 93,260 (92%) | 7,865 (8%) | ||
| Amendment 2 | Local government officials and elections | Require the mayor of New York City to be elected by the city's qualified voters annually | 48,977 (96%) | 1,936 (4%) |
1826
See also: New York 1826 ballot measures
November 6
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | State executive elections | This amendment was related to the election of justices of the peace. | 122,098 (99%) | 1,663 (1%) | ||
| Amendment 2 | Suffrage | This amendment was related to the extension of elective franchise. | 127,077 (98%) | 3,215 (2%) |
1822
See also: New York 1822 ballot measures
January 15
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | State constitution ratification | The measure authorized the Constitution of 1821. | 74,732 (64%) | 41,402 (36%) |
1821
See also: New York 1821 ballot measures
April 24
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amendment 1 | State constitutional conventions | This amendment called for a constitutional convention to revise the constitution. | 109,346 (76%) | 34,901 (24%) |
See also
State of New York Albany (capital) | |
|---|---|
| Elections |
What's on my ballot? | Elections in 2025 | How to vote | How to run for office | Ballot measures |
| Government |
Who represents me? | U.S. President | U.S. Congress | Federal courts | State executives | State legislature | State and local courts | Counties | Cities | School districts | Public policy |