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- Q5020814 subject Q8242902.
- Q5020814 subject Q8336052.
- Q5020814 subject Q8797757.
- Q5020814 abstract "Proposition 39 was an initiative state constitutional amendment and statute which appeared on the November 7, 2000, California general election ballot. Proposition 39 passed with 5,431,152 Yes votes, representing 53.4 percent of the total votes cast. Proposition 39 was essentially a milder version of Proposition 26, which would have ended the Proposition 13 supermajority vote requirement altogether (imposing a simple majority vote requirement), but was defeated with 3,521,327 "Yes" votes, representing 48.7 percent of the total votes cast, in the March 7, 2000, California primary election.The main effect of Proposition 39 was to amend Proposition 13 by lowering the required supermajority vote necessary for voters to approve local school bonds, from two-thirds (2/3) of the votes cast, to fifty-five percent (55%) of the votes cast. Voter approved school bonds under Proposition 39 are paid off by raising property taxes above the 1% property tax rate limit established by Proposition 13. Proposition 39 also lowered, as it relates to school bonds, the voter approval requirement to incur debt from a two-thirds (2/3) vote to fifty-five percent (55%). The two-thirds vote requirement to incur debt is separate from the property tax limits Proposition 13, and had previously been part of the California Constitution since 1879. Proposition 39 further included statutory provisions relating to charter school facilities.Proposition 39 bonds are sometimes referred by taxpayers as Coupal Bonds. This is named after Jon Coupal who, as president of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association, was in charge of the unsuccessful opposition campaign to Proposition 39.".
- Q5020814 wikiPageWikiLink Q1041426.
- Q5020814 wikiPageWikiLink Q12241709.
- Q5020814 wikiPageWikiLink Q1347273.
- Q5020814 wikiPageWikiLink Q1362323.
- Q5020814 wikiPageWikiLink Q196195.
- Q5020814 wikiPageWikiLink Q5021214.
- Q5020814 wikiPageWikiLink Q53463.
- Q5020814 wikiPageWikiLink Q5919991.
- Q5020814 wikiPageWikiLink Q660064.
- Q5020814 wikiPageWikiLink Q669262.
- Q5020814 wikiPageWikiLink Q820655.
- Q5020814 wikiPageWikiLink Q8242902.
- Q5020814 wikiPageWikiLink Q8336052.
- Q5020814 wikiPageWikiLink Q8797757.
- Q5020814 wikiPageWikiLink Q99.
- Q5020814 comment "Proposition 39 was an initiative state constitutional amendment and statute which appeared on the November 7, 2000, California general election ballot. Proposition 39 passed with 5,431,152 Yes votes, representing 53.4 percent of the total votes cast.".
- Q5020814 label "California Proposition 39 (2000)".