Education tax measure makes the ballot
DENVER, Aug. 9, 2018 -- Colorado Secretary of State Wayne Williams announced today that a proposed constitutional amendment that boosts income taxes to raise money for education made the ballot.
Totals
Signatures received = 179,390
Invalid signatures = 49,368
Valid signatures = 130,022
Initiative 93 is the first citizen-initiated ballot measure to make the Nov. 6 general election ballot. It involves a complex formula for raising income taxes among the state's top earners to raise money for education.
Colorado law requires that ballot-measure backers turn in 98,492 valid voter signatures -- 5 percent of the total of votes cast for all candidates in the last Secretary of State general election, which was in 2014.
In addition, the voter-approved Amendment 71 in 2016 changed the requirements for proposed constitutional amendments. The education measure must pass with a 55-percent majority rather than a simple majority in November, and supporters were required to collect 2 percent of their signatures in each of the state's 35 Senate district. The attachment shows the breakdown in each Senate district.
Six other initiatives are still under review. The Secretary of State's office received five initiative petitions on Monday and one on Aug. 3. The results of the review must be announced by Sept. 5.
To examine the measures, go to the Initiative Filings, Agendas & Results link on the Secretary of State web page and the first set of measures marked "signature line review." When you click on each measure, there will be a link marked "hearing result." Click on that link and the ballot titles will say whether it is a proposed change to the Colorado Constitution or state statute.
Secretary of State Wayne W. Williams