Oklahoma State Question No. 734 was on the
November 7, 2006 ballot in
Oklahoma as a
legislatively-referred constitutional amendment, where it was
approved.
[1]
Election results
| Question No. 734 |
|---|
| Result | Votes | Percentage |
a Yes | 540,816 | 63.1% |
| No | 316,188 | 36.9% |
Ballot wording
The official ballot summary reads:
This measure amends the Oklahoma Constitution. It amends Section 6A of Article 10. This section provides an exemption from property tax. The exemption applies to goods that are shipped into the state, but which do not remain in the state for more than ninety days. This is sometimes known as the freeport exemption. This measure would allow laws to be enacted. The laws could provide for an application process to claim this exemption. The laws could require the application to be filed by a certain date. The laws could require certain information to be included with the application. The application would be filed with the county assessor.[2]
See also
External links
References