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Maine Question 3, Veterans' Mortgage Loans and School Building Authority Bond Issue Adjustments Amendment (1976)

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Maine Question 3

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Election date

November 2, 1976

Topic
Bond issues and Public education funding
Status

ApprovedApproved

Type
Legislatively referred constitutional amendment
Origin

State legislature



Maine Question 3 was on the ballot as a legislatively referred constitutional amendment in Maine on November 2, 1976. It was approved.

A "yes" vote supported increasing the bonding limit on the Maine Veterans' Mortgage Loans and decreasing the bonding limit on the Maine School Building Authority. 

A "no" vote opposed increasing the bonding limit on the Maine Veterans' Mortgage Loans and decreasing the bonding limit on the Maine School Building Authority. 


Election results

Maine Question 3

Result Votes Percentage

Approved Yes

247,499 59.27%
No 170,083 40.73%
Results are officially certified.
Source


Text of measure

Ballot title

The ballot title for Question 3 was as follows:

Shall the Constitution be amended as proposed by a resolution of the Legislature to increase the bonding limit on Maine veterans' mortgage loans from $2,000,000 to $4,000,000 and to decrease the bonding limit of the Maine School Building Authority from $25,000,000 to $10,000,000?"


Path to the ballot

See also: Amending the Maine Constitution

A two-thirds majority (66.67%) vote is required during one legislative session for the Maine State Legislature to place a constitutional amendment on the ballot. That amounts to a minimum of 101 votes in the Maine House of Representatives and 24 votes in the Maine State Senate, assuming no vacancies. Amendments do not require the governor's signature to be referred to the ballot.

See also


External links

Footnotes