Wyoming School Revenue Limit, Question A (2004)
Wyoming Constitution |
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Preamble |
Articles |
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Wyoming Constitutional Amendment A, also known as School District Revenue Limits, was on the November 2, 2004, ballot in Wyoming as a legislatively referred constitutional amendment, where it was defeated.[1]
Election results
Although more votes were cast for Amendment A than against Amendment A, it lost, because in Wyoming a constitutional amendment must be approved by a majority of those voting in the election as measured by total ballots cast in the election. Since 245,789 ballots were cast in this election, the measure would have required 122,896 votes in order to be approved.
Wyoming Amendment A (2004) | ||||
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Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
96,762 | 39.37% | |||
Yes | 122,038 | 49.65% | ||
Total vote | 245,789 |
- Note: The percentages above do not add up to 100% because of ballots that were cast in the election with the amendment question left blank. The percentages displayed above are the percentages of all ballots cast in the election rather than the percentage of yes and no vote totals.
Text of measure
"Eliminates a maximum on the amount of revenues rebated from school districts with assessed valuations exceeding statewide averages."[2]
See also
- List of Wyoming ballot measures
- Wyoming 2004 ballot measures
- 2004 ballot measures
- Wyoming signature requirements
External links
- Election results
- 2004 Wyoming Ballot Measures Details
- Wyoming Ballot Measures Election Results 2004
- 2004 Wyoming Ballot Measures Voter Guide
Footnotes
State of Wyoming Cheyenne (capital) | |
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