June 2024
Go Into the Weeds on Our Blog
Sponsors of seven potential ballot issues have filed organizing paperwork with the Arkansas Ethics Commission, a requirement that kicks in when a group has raised or spent at least $500 on their ballot issue.

Below are links to basic information about each proposal, along with names of groups supporting and opposing them. You will also find ballot issue group websites with information about signature collection events.








You can also find information about Issue 1, a proposed amendment referred by the Legislature to expand lottery scholarships, at uaex.uada.edu/issue1.

Have Questions?
What are you wondering about these potential ballot issues? Have specific questions? Share those questions with us via this anonymous space.
Casino Update
The Arkansas Racing Commission on Thursday awarded the last of four casino licenses included in a constitutional amendment voters approved in 2018.

Cherokee Nation Entertainment received the license, which has been the source of several lawsuits since the passage of Amendment 100. The Cherokee Nation plans to build a casino and hotel on 325 acres it owns near Russellville.

Voters in 2018 approved Amendment 100 to the Arkansas Constitution by a vote of 470,954 in favor to 399,530 against. Opponents of the Pope County casino location have tried since before the 2018 election to stop construction.

Most recently, opponents formed a ballot issue committee named Local Voters in Charge to collect voter signatures for this November's ballot. Their proposal would remove Pope County from Amendment 100 and would require any future casino locations to be approved by voters at a countywide election.

"We're not publicly releasing any numbers on our petition drive before turn-in next week, but we always want to mention how grateful we are for the hard work of our canvassers to bring this important issue to the voters of Arkansas," said Hans Stiritz, a member of Local Voters in Charge, on Thursday.

Their proposed constitutional amendment recognizes that the Arkansas Racing Commission may have issued a license before the election. The amendment, if passed by voters, would cancel the license issued Thursday by the Commission.
Ballot Issue Lawsuits
Lawsuit Dismissed
The Arkansas Supreme Court dismissed a lawsuit filed by sponsors of a proposal to use paper ballots for voting. Conrad Reynolds and the Arkansas Voter Integrity Initiative wanted the Supreme Court to void a law that returned the ballot title review process back to the Attorney General's Office, as well as to find a new 50-county signature requirement unconstitutional.

The Supreme Court did not rule on either issue and agreed with state attorneys to dismiss the lawsuit that was filed in February. In the court opinion, justices said the court can't act on a proposed ballot measure until the Secretary of State's Office has acted on voter petitions. No signature gathering had been done for the paper ballot proposal.


Signature Lawsuit
A lawsuit over the state's new requirement to collect voter signatures in 50 counties - up from 15 counties - remains active in Pulaski County Circuit Court but no court records or decisions have been filed since April.

The state has asked for the case to be dismissed while the plaintiffs, Sen. Bryan King and the League of Women Voters, have asked Judge Herbert Wright to find Act 236 unconstitutional.


On the 2024 Ballot - From the Legislature
For the first time since 1986, Arkansas legislators referred only one constitutional amendment to voters.

Issue 1 - A constitutional amendment to provide that lottery proceeds may be used to fund or provide scholarships and grants to Arkansas citizens enrolled in vocational-technical schools and technical institutes. The current law only includes two-year and four-year colleges and universities.
PPC on Social Media
We're now on LinkedIn, where we share information and resources about Arkansas ballot issues and our programs all month long.

Voter Education Resources
#ARballot

State Ballot Issues
Access Our Information

Voter Resources

Local Ballot Issues
Access Local Election

Blog
Read our department blog at Strengthening Arkansas Communities


Ballot Issue Tracker
Links to AG Opinions for 2024 ballot

Archive
Research past Arkansas ballot issues in our Archive

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The Public Policy Center was established in 2004 to provide Arkansans with timely, credible, unaligned and research-based information and education about public issues. Public issues are defined as pressing and emerging issues that involve multiple points of view and have widespread consequences.

Our goals are to:
  • Increase citizen knowledge, awareness and understanding of public issues;
  • Enhance public participation in decisions regarding public issues, and
  • Help citizens craft, evaluate and implement alternative solutions to public issues.

We are part of the Community, Professional and Economic Development unit at the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture, Cooperative Extension Service in Little Rock.

News & Notes Volume 11, Issue 6. This e-mail newsletter is shared with Cooperative Extension Service agents, subscribers from the general public and election officials or educators identified by the Public Policy Center. To unsubscribe, click below on "instant removal with SafeUnsubscribe."

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