Texas Constitution:Article III, Section 48-e: Difference between revisions

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{{DISPLAYTITLE:Article III, Section 48-e of the Texas Constitution (''<small>"Emergency Services Districts"</small>'')}}{{Texas Constitution|text=As amended November 2, 1999:
{{DISPLAYTITLE:Article III, Section 48-e of the Texas Constitution (''<small>"Emergency Services Districts"</small>'')}}{{Texas Constitution|text=As amended November 2, 1999:


Laws may be enacted to provide for the establishment and creation of special districts to provide emergency services and to authorize the commissioners courts of participating counties to levy a tax on the ad valorem property situated in said districts not to exceed Ten Cents (10¢) on the One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) valuation for the support thereof; provided that no tax shall be levied in support of said districts until approved by a vote of the qualified voters residing therein. Such a district may provide emergency medical services, emergency ambulance services, rural fire prevention and control services, or other emergency services authorized by the Legislature.
'''Laws may be enacted to provide for the establishment and creation of special districts to provide emergency services and to authorize the commissioners courts of participating counties to levy a tax on the ad valorem property situated in said districts not to exceed ten cents (10¢) on the one hundred dollars ($100.00) valuation for the support thereof; provided that no tax shall be levied in support of said districts until approved by a vote of the qualified voters residing therein. Such a district may provide emergency medical services, emergency ambulance services, rural fire prevention and control services, or other emergency services authorized by the Legislature.'''


|editor=
|editor=


The purpose of this section is to allow emergency services districts–subject to voter approval–to collect a property tax.
The central purpose of this section is to allow emergency services districts–subject to voter approval–to collect a property tax.


Added in 1987, it has been amended once. The 1999 modification was part of a "constitutional cleanup amendment."
Added in 1987, the section has been amended once. The 1999 modification was part of a "constitutional cleanup amendment."


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|seo_title=Article III, Section 48-e of the Texas Constitution ("Emergency Services Districts")
|seo_title=Article III, Section 48-e of the Texas Constitution ("Emergency Services Districts")
|seo_keywords=Article 3 Section 48-e, emergency services, property tax
|seo_keywords=Article 3 Section 48-e, emergency services, property tax
|seo_description=Laws may be enacted to provide for the establishment and creation of special districts to provide emergency services.
|seo_description=Laws may be enacted to provide for the establishment and creation of emergency services districts.
|seo_image=mod_Texas_Constitution_of_1876_Article_3.jpg
|seo_image=mod_Texas_Constitution_of_1876_Article_3.jpg
|seo_image_alt=Article III: Legislative Department
|seo_image_alt=Article III: Legislative Department

Latest revision as of 14:08, June 12, 2024

As amended November 2, 1999:

Laws may be enacted to provide for the establishment and creation of special districts to provide emergency services and to authorize the commissioners courts of participating counties to levy a tax on the ad valorem property situated in said districts not to exceed ten cents (10¢) on the one hundred dollars ($100.00) valuation for the support thereof; provided that no tax shall be levied in support of said districts until approved by a vote of the qualified voters residing therein. Such a district may provide emergency medical services, emergency ambulance services, rural fire prevention and control services, or other emergency services authorized by the Legislature.

Editor Comments

The central purpose of this section is to allow emergency services districts–subject to voter approval–to collect a property tax.

Added in 1987, the section has been amended once. The 1999 modification was part of a "constitutional cleanup amendment."

Attorney Steve Smith

Recent Decisions

None.

Historic Decisions

None.

Library Resources

Online Resources