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Nevada Special Tax District Ban Measure (2012)

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Special Tax District Ban Measure
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Type:State statute
State code:NRS 360.291
Referred by:Nevada State Legislature
Topic:Taxes
Status:On the ballot

Contents

The Nevada Special Tax District Ban Measure will appear on the November 6, 2012 general election ballot in the state of Nevada as a legislatively-referred state statute. Also known as Senate Bill 495, it was introduced on March 28, 2011 as a response to the certified sports arena ballot measure. The proposal would prohibit a special tax district in the state. Also, the bill would prohibit the creation of an area in which the sales tax was higher than other parts of the county. The measure was introduced by the Senate Revenue Committee, and according to State Senator Sheila Leslie, chairwoman of the committee, if approved by the Legislature, the bill would be placed on the 2012 ballot as a competing measure to the sports arena initiative. Leslie also stated that the proposal that received the most votes in the 2012 general election would win. However, if neither measure receives 50 percent of the vote, both would be considered rejected by voters.[1]

The Sports Arena Initiative will appear on the November 6, 2012 statewide ballot as an indirect initiated state statute. The proposed initiative would allow a 20,000-seat sports arena on the Las Vegas Strip. Specifically the initiative would impose a 0.9 cent sales tax in a taxing district near the proposed arena. The revenue would finance bonds to construct the arena.[2]

Support

Supporters

Path to the ballot

The Senate Committee on Revenue voted unanimously to approve the measure on April 12, 2011. The measure was then placed in front of Nevada State Senate. On May 23, 2011, the state senate voted in favor of the measure, with a tally of 39 to 3. Then on May 24, 2011, the Nevada Assembly voted in favor of the measure as well. This final legislative approval sends the measure to the ballot, since it does not need to be approved in the next legislative session. Only legislatively-referred constitutional amendments need to be voted on in two successive sessions to be sent to the ballot, according to the Nevada Constitution[4][5]

Timeline

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The following is a timeline of events surrounding the measure:

Event Date Developments
Vote April 12, 2011 The Senate Committee on Revenue voted unanimously to approve the measure.
Approval May 23, 2011 The state senate voted in favor of the measure, with a tally of 39 to 3.
Final Approval May 24, 2011 The Nevada Assembly voted in favor of the measure.

See also

By Al Ortiz
Ballot measure writer

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References


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