Overview
of November 2001 Ballot Measures
(Information from the Initiative & Referendum Institute,
www.ballotwatch.org)
Washington:
· Initiative 747, which limited property tax levy increases
to 1% per year (unless an increase greater than this limit is approved
by the voters), passed with 59%.
· Initiative 773, which imposed an additional sales tax on
cigarettes (making it the highest in the nation), passed by 65%.
· Initiative 775, which created a "home care quality authority"
to establish qualifications and standards for publicly funded individual
providers of in-home care services to elderly and disabled adults,
passed by 64%.
· Washington voters defeated a legislative referendum that
would have allowed the state to invest state funds in the stock market,
42% to 57%.
Colorado:
· Voters overwhelmingly defeated the citizen-initiated Amendment
26, which would have expended $50 million of Colorado's 2001 tax refund
revenues to fund a high-speed monorail. The measure lost 34% to 66%.
California:
· San Francisco voters overwhelmingly approved a $100 million
bond issue to pay for solar power in public buildings and authorized
city supervisors to underwrite renewable energy projects without voter
approval.
· Carson, a Los Angeles suburb, decided not to secede from
the troubled Los Angeles Unified School District. With 772,000 children,
the Los Angeles school district is the nation's second largest after
New York.
Florida:
· Miami Beach voters approved a measure providing employee
benefits to gay and heterosexual domestic partners.
Michigan:
· Voters in Traverse City and Kalamazoo defeated amendments
that would have prevented city officials from enacting policies protecting
gays from discrimination. In Huntington Woods, Michigan voters upheld
a city ordinance banning anti-gay discrimination.
Texas:
· In Houston, voters narrowly approved a measure to prevent
Houston from offering health benefits to partners of gay and lesbian
municipal employees.
Maine:
· In Portland, voters approved a non-binding resolution in
support of single-payer healthcare.
In addition to Colorado
and Washington, three other states had statewide legislative referendums
on the ballot. Maine voters approved six bond measures. New York voters
approved an amendment making the text of their state's constitution
gender-neutral. Texas voters approved 19 legislative referendums and
bond measures.