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As of Oct. 16, no individual or organization has reported spending on State Question 833, according to Oklahoma Ethics Commission filings. Pre-election spending reports are due on Oct. 28.
SQ 833 would permit municipalities to create public infrastructure districts. Here's a breakdown of what the ballot measure means. OK State Question 833: What is a public infrastructure district?
State Question 833 was put on the ballot by the Oklahoma Legislature. It would allow for 100% of property owners in a proposed public infrastructure district to vote to create a district for financing infrastructure development. [28]
Oklahoma State Question No. 833. State Question 833 is a legislative referendum, meaning it was put on the ballot by the legislature rather than an initiative petition by citizens. It would add ...
Question 833 Allows municipalities to create infrastructure districts with the ability to issue bonds Nov 5 >50% 559,982 38.89% 898,526 61.61%: Legislature: Approved [4] Question 834 Prohibits the state and local governments from allowing noncitizens to vote Nov 5 >50% 1,207,520 80.73%: 288,267 19.27% South Carolina: Legislature: Approved [5 ...
November 2010 general election Proposal Passed YES votes YES % NO votes NO % Description State Question 744: No 189,164 18.59 828,589 81.41 mandated that the Oklahoma Legislature spend no less than the average amount spent by "neighboring states" (those states which border Oklahoma: Missouri, Texas, Kansas, Arkansas, Colorado and New Mexico) on "common education" (defined as grades pre ...
Oklahoma State Question No. 833. State Question 833 is a legislative referendum, meaning it was put on the ballot by the legislature rather than an initiative petition by citizens. It would add ...
(Photo by Emma Murphy/Oklahoma Voice) There will be two state questions on your November 5 ballot. They are both legislative referendums, in other words, put on the ballot by the Legislature.