South Carolina Agricultural Property Tax Question 2 (2004)
South Carolina Constitution |
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Preamble |
Articles |
I • II • III • IV • V • VI • VII • VIII • VIII-A • IX • X • XI • XII • XIII • XIV • XV • XVI • XVII |
South Carolina Amendment 2, also known as the Agricultural Property Taxes Act, was on the November 2, 2004 election ballot in South Carolina as a legislatively referred constitutional amendment, where it was defeated.[1]
Election results
Question 2 | ||||
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Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
![]() | 825,602 | 61% | ||
Yes | 528,121 | 39% |
Text of measure
The language that appeared on the ballot:
The state constitution currently allows a four-percent property tax assessment ratio for agricultural land owned by a corporation with ten or fewer shareholders. A 'yes' vote will allow the General Assembly to set a shareholder limit by law. A 'no' vote will keep the current limit of ten or fewer shareholders.
See also
Footnotes
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State of South Carolina Columbia (capital) |
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