Know your vote. Take a look at your sample ballot now!

Arkansas Environmental Preservation Amendment (2026): Difference between revisions

From Ballotpedia
Jump to: navigation, search
No edit summary
 
Line 8: Line 8:
::''See also: [[Laws governing the initiative process in Arkansas]]''
::''See also: [[Laws governing the initiative process in Arkansas]]''
===The state process===
===The state process===
{{InitiativePTB|State = Arkansas | Type = ICA | Year = 2026}}
{{InitiativePTB General|State = Arkansas |Type =ICA}}
{{InitativePTB2025/26|State =Arkansas | Type= ICA| Year = 2026}}


===Details about this initiative===
===Details about this initiative===

Latest revision as of 15:44, 16 March 2026

Arkansas Environmental Preservation Amendment

Flag of Arkansas.png

Election date

November 3, 2026

Topic
Constitutional rights and Parks, land, and natural area conservation
Status

Pending official review

Type
Initiated constitutional amendment
Origin

Citizens



The Arkansas Environmental Preservation Amendment may appear on the ballot in Arkansas as an initiated constitutional amendment on November 3, 2026.

This measure would provide for fundamental right to a clean and healthy environment and allow the state legislature to make and implement laws to preserve it.[1]

Path to the ballot

See also: Laws governing the initiative process in Arkansas

The state process

An initiated constitutional amendment is a citizen-initiated ballot measure that amends a state's constitution. Eighteen (18) states allow citizens to initiate constitutional amendments.

In Arkansas, the number of signatures required for an initiated constitutional amendment is equal to 10% of the votes cast in the last gubernatorial election. Arkansas requires that a petition must contain qualified signatures equaling at least half of the required percentage of signatures (5%) from each of 15 of the state's 75 counties. A simple majority vote is required for voter approval. The requirements to get initiated constitutional amendments certified for the 2026 ballot:

Details about this initiative

  • October 3, 2025: The attorney general, Tim Griffin, rejected the initial proposal under Opinion No. 2025-98, with the ballot title "The Amendment to Keep Arkansas Natural."[2]
  • November 4, 2025: The attorney general rejected the proposal again with the new title "The Clean and Healthy Natural Environment Amendment."[1]

See also

External links

Footnotes