South Dakota Amendment C, Property Tax Limitation Measure (1988)

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South Dakota Amendment C

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Election date

November 8, 1988

Topic
Property taxes and Revenue and spending limits
Status

DefeatedDefeated

Type
Indirect initiated constitutional amendment
Origin

Citizens



South Dakota Amendment C was on the ballot as an indirect initiated constitutional amendment in South Dakota on November 8, 1988. It was defeated.

A "yes" vote supported limiting property taxes on agricultural and nonagricultural land, allowing controlled increases in property values, permitting "special taxes" with a two-thirds vote, and requiring a two-thirds legislative vote for tax law changes that increase revenue.

A "no" vote opposed limiting property taxes on agricultural and nonagricultural land, allowing controlled increases in property values, permitting "special taxes" with a two-thirds vote, and requiring a two-thirds legislative vote for tax law changes that increase revenue.

 


Election results

South Dakota Amendment C

Result Votes Percentage
Yes 116,240 38.66%

Defeated No

184,452 61.34%
Results are officially certified.
Source


Text of measure

Ballot title

The ballot title for Amendment C was as follows:

An initiated amendment to the Constitution of the State of South Dakota relating to limitations on property taxes.


Path to the ballot

See also: Indirect initiated state statute

From 1898 to 1988, initiated statutes were indirect in South Dakota. Voters made the process direct with approval of Amendment A in 1988.

An indirect initiated state statute is a citizen-initiated ballot measure that amends state statute. There are nine (9) states that allow citizens to initiate indirect state statutes.

While a direct initiative is placed on the ballot once supporters file the required number of valid signatures, an indirect initiative is first presented to the state legislature. Legislators have a certain number of days, depending on the state, to adopt the initiative into law. Should legislators take no action or reject the initiative, the initiative is put on the ballot for voters to decide.

See also


External links

Footnotes