Indiana Township Trustee and Board Question (2010): Difference between revisions
m (Annotated dead link.) |
m (Text replace - "William Crawford" to "William Crawford") |
||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{noin2010}}{{tnr}}The '''Indiana Township Trustee and Board Question''', also known as '''House Bill 1181''', did not appear on the [[Indiana 2010 ballot measures|May 4, 2010 primary election ballot]] in the state of [[Indiana]]. The question would have asked voters whether or not to keep township trustees and boards. Family members and spouses would have also not been allowed to supervise each other in township offices if the bill was placed on the ballot and enacted by voters. If enacted, the newly approved law would have become effective on [[BC2010#July|July 10, 2010]]. [[Indiana House of Representatives|Representative]] [[William Crawford]] and [[John Barnes]] introduced the measure. The [[Indiana General Assembly|2010 Indiana General Assembly]] adjourned with no action on the proposal.<ref> [http://www.southbendtribune.com/article/20100321/Opinion/3210467/-1/googleNews ''South Bend Tribune'', "Wrapping up a short session," March 21, 2010] ''([[dead link]])''</ref><ref> [https://web.archive.org/web/2/http://www.post-trib.com/news/2047987,statehouse-0215.article ''Post Tribune'', "Lawmakers brace for 11th-hour crush," February 15, 2010]</ref><ref> [http://www.in.gov/legislative/bills/2010/HB/HB1181.2.html ''House Bill 1181'']</ref> | {{noin2010}}{{tnr}}The '''Indiana Township Trustee and Board Question''', also known as '''House Bill 1181''', did not appear on the [[Indiana 2010 ballot measures|May 4, 2010 primary election ballot]] in the state of [[Indiana]]. The question would have asked voters whether or not to keep township trustees and boards. Family members and spouses would have also not been allowed to supervise each other in township offices if the bill was placed on the ballot and enacted by voters. If enacted, the newly approved law would have become effective on [[BC2010#July|July 10, 2010]]. [[Indiana House of Representatives|Representative]] [[William Crawford (Indiana)|William Crawford]] and [[John Barnes]] introduced the measure. The [[Indiana General Assembly|2010 Indiana General Assembly]] adjourned with no action on the proposal.<ref> [http://www.southbendtribune.com/article/20100321/Opinion/3210467/-1/googleNews ''South Bend Tribune'', "Wrapping up a short session," March 21, 2010] ''([[dead link]])''</ref><ref> [https://web.archive.org/web/2/http://www.post-trib.com/news/2047987,statehouse-0215.article ''Post Tribune'', "Lawmakers brace for 11th-hour crush," February 15, 2010]</ref><ref> [http://www.in.gov/legislative/bills/2010/HB/HB1181.2.html ''House Bill 1181'']</ref> | ||
==Path to the ballot== | ==Path to the ballot== | ||
A majority vote was required (in two successive sessions of) the [[Indiana General Assembly]]. Indiana is one of [[Legislatively-referred constitutional amendment#Majority (Two sessions)|11 states that requires this process.]] | A majority vote was required (in two successive sessions of) the [[Indiana General Assembly]]. Indiana is one of [[Legislatively-referred constitutional amendment#Majority (Two sessions)|11 states that requires this process.]] | ||
Revision as of 19:24, 24 February 2015
| Not on Ballot |
|---|
| This measure was not put on an election ballot |
The Indiana Township Trustee and Board Question, also known as House Bill 1181, did not appear on the May 4, 2010 primary election ballot in the state of Indiana. The question would have asked voters whether or not to keep township trustees and boards. Family members and spouses would have also not been allowed to supervise each other in township offices if the bill was placed on the ballot and enacted by voters. If enacted, the newly approved law would have become effective on July 10, 2010. Representative William Crawford and John Barnes introduced the measure. The 2010 Indiana General Assembly adjourned with no action on the proposal.[1][2][3]
Path to the ballot
A majority vote was required (in two successive sessions of) the Indiana General Assembly. Indiana is one of 11 states that requires this process.
See also
External links
References