North Dakota Sales Tax Increase for Education, Measure 4 (1990)
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The North Dakota Sales Tax Increase for Education Initiative, also known as Measure 4, was on the June 12, 1990 ballot in North Dakota as an initiated state statute, where it was defeated.[1][2] The measure would have created the following tax changes to increase elementary, secondary, adult and vocational education funding for the 1989-1991 biennium:[3]
- Increases taxes on retail sales, purchases or personal property
- Increases taxes on purchases of motor vehicles and purchases of aircraft not designed for agricultural purposes
- Increases the tax on retail sale, storage, use, and consumption of mobile homes, farm machinery and repair parts, irrigation equipment, and purchases of aircraft designed for agricultural purposes
- Changes the bracket system used to determine the amount of sales tax added to a consumer's debt owed to a retailer
Election results
North Dakota Measure 4 (1990) | ||||
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Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
![]() | 74,207 | 58.52% | ||
Yes | 52,610 | 41.48% |
Election results via: North Dakota Secretary of State, Official Vote of Primary Election, 1990
Text of measure
The full text of the proposed statutory language can be read here.
See also
- North Dakota 1990 ballot measures
- 1990 ballot measures
- List of North Dakota ballot measures
- History of Initiative & Referendum in North Dakota
External links
- North Dakota Secretary of State, Archived Election Results
- North Dakota 1991 Session Laws
- I&R Institute ballot measure database for North Dakota
Footnotes
- ↑ North Dakota Secretary of State Archived Election Results, "Primary Election Results - 1990," accessed March 26, 2014
- ↑ Initiative and Referendum Institute, "North Dakota Statewide Initiatives," accessed March 26, 2014
- ↑ North Dakota Legislative Assembly, "CHAPTER 735 SALES TAX INCREASE FOR EDUCATION," accessed March 27, 2014
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