Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
No official argument against Proposition 6 was submitted to the California Secretary of State and no opponents were listed on the ballot. [5] However, public polling has shown the oppose side leading. [9] The oppose side has not established an official campaign and raised $0 as of October 30, 2024. [4]
In Stanislaus County, about 65% of voters rejected a ballot measure in the Nov. 5 election that sought to end forced labor in prisons and jails in California. Proposition 6, which was defeated ...
Prop 6 was put on the ballot with a two-thirds vote of the state ... usually thick with contrasting arguments from different interest groups, no one even submitted a public case against Prop 6.
Prop 6., which had no opposition filed while it was being voted upon in the state legislature, and in the ballot guide when it was put before voters, would have removed language in the California ...
California Proposition 6 may refer to: Briggs Initiative Prop 6 (1978): REJECTED; Proposed ban of gays and lesbians from working in California public schools. California Proposition 6 (1998): PASSED; Felony to kill a horse, donkey or mule for human consumption. California Proposition 6 (2008): REJECTED; Safe Neighborhoods Act and The Runner ...
For the record: 12:39 p.m. Nov. 1, 2024: An earlier version of this article stated there were nearly 60,000 prisoners with jobs in California, based on incorrect data provided by prison officials ...
California Proposition 6, also known as the Safe Neighborhoods Act and The Runner Initiative, is a statutory initiative that appeared on the November 2008 ballot in California. This proposition was rejected by voters on November 4 of that year. Proposition 6 would have placed additional penalties on gang related and drug crime.
November 11, 2024 at 6:27 PM Californians voted down Proposition 6, a ballot measure that eliminates the state’s constitutional provision that allows involuntary servitude for incarcerated workers.