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Most city and county bonds require voter approval in California, needing the support of at least two-thirds of voters to pass. [3] This requirement was put in place by Proposition 13 which was passed in 1978 and reduced property taxes. [4] In 2000, Proposition 39 reduced the supermajority to 55% to approve taxes for local school bonds. [4]
Proposition 2 is a bond measure that would allow the state to borrow $10 billion to help fund repairs and upgrades at thousands of public elementary, middle and high schools and community colleges ...
The proposition authorized the issuance of $10 billion in state general obligation bonds for repair, upgrade, and construction of facilities at K–12 public schools and community colleges; this also includes charter schools throughout the state of California. [3] The proposition also allowed for the authorization of the following: [3]
This is because bonds are paid off over decades — the district is still paying off multiple bonds dating back to Measure E from 1999. In 2024, a property owner will pay a rate of around $130 per ...
Only one of these have been put on the 2024 primary ballot: Proposition 1, the Behavioral Health Services Program and Bond Measure, will provide additional behavioral health services and issue up to about $6.4 billion in bonds to fund housing for homeless individuals and veterans. The measure would also, among others, shift roughly $140 million ...
School bond supporters say the LAUSD measure, which would increase property taxes, is needed to repair and modernize campuses in the nation's second-largest school system.
Nov. 16—Marysville Joint Unified School District and Wheatland Union High School District will pursue bond measures in the upcoming March 5, 2024, primary election in the hopes of funding new ...
2024 California Proposition 35; 2024 California Proposition 36 This page was last edited on 15 March 2024, at 05:56 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative ...