Utah 2018 ballot measures

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2020
2016

Seven statewide ballot measures were certified for the ballot in Utah on November 6, 2018. Five measures were approved, and two were defeated.

HIGHLIGHTS
  • Legislative referrals:Three constitutional amendments were referred to the ballot by the state legislature during the 2018 legislative session. Two were approved and one was defeated.
  • Initiatives:Three citizen-initiated measures were certified for the ballot. Proposition 2 was approved. It legalized medical use of marijuana. Proposition 3, which expanded Medicaid, was also approved. Proposition 4, which established an independent commission to recommend maps for redistricting to the state legislature, was approved by a margin of 7,000 votes.
  • Advisory question: In a compromise with the group behind an initiative to increase taxes to fund education, the legislature voted to put a non-binding advisory question on the ballot concerning a 10-cent gas tax increase. More than 65 percent of voters were opposed to the increase.
  • On the ballot

    Type Title Subject Description Result
    LRCA Constitutional Amendment A Taxes Changes the time of service required to qualify for the tax exemption
    Approveda
    LRCA Constitutional Amendment B Taxes Allows tax exemption for property leased by a government entity
    Defeatedd
    LRCA Constitutional Amendment C State legislatures Allows legislature to convene a special session with restrictions
    Approveda
    AQ Nonbinding Opinion Question 1 Taxes 10-Cent Gas Tax Increase for Education and Local Roads
    Defeatedd
    CISS Proposition 2 Marijuana Legalizes the medical use of marijuana
    Repealed, altered, or partially repealed
    CISS Proposition 3 Healthcare Expands Medicaid under the ACA
    Repealed, altered, or partially repealed
    CISS Proposition 4 Redistricting Creates an independent redistricting commission
    Repealed, altered, or partially repealed


    Getting measures on the ballot

    Utah allows citizen initiatives in the form of initiated state statutes and veto referendums. In Utah, initiated state statutes can be either directly or indirectly initiated. Signature requirements for directly-initiated statutes and referendum petitions are determined by calculating ten percent of the votes cast for president in the state in the last election. For indirectly initiated statute petitions, proponents must gather signatures equal to five percent of the votes cast for president in the state in the last election—a requirement of 56,572 for the 2018 ballot—to get the initiative before state legislators. A second, equal round of signatures is required if the legislature does not approve the initiative. The deadline to submit the first round of signatures for an indirect initiated state statute targeting the 2018 election ballot was November 15, 2017.

    For veto referendums and direct initiated state statutes, at least 113,143 valid signatures were required. The deadline to file signatures for the 2018 ballot was April 16, 2018, or 316 days after the petition was initially filed with the lieutenant governor, whichever came first.[1]

    The Utah Legislature can also place legislatively referred constitutional amendments and legislatively referred state statutes on the ballot. The legislature can put a proposed amendment on the ballot upon a two-thirds majority vote in both the legislative chambers. The amendment must then be approved by a majority of voters voting in the general election, not just a majority of voters voting on the amendment.


    Historical facts

    See also: List of Utah ballot measures
    • A total of 46 measures appeared on statewide ballots between 1995 and 2016.
    • From 1995 to 2016, an average of four measures appeared on the ballot for even-year elections in Utah.
    • The number of measures appearing on even-year statewide ballots between 1995 and 2016 ranged from one to seven.
    • Between 1995 and 2016, 86.96 percent (40 of 46) of statewide measures were approved by voters, and 13.04 percent (6 of 46) were defeated.

    Campaign contributions

    See also: Ballot measure campaign finance, 2018

    The following chart illustrates how much support and opposition committees had amassed in campaign contributions for each measure on the ballot:


    Ballot Measure:Support contributions:Opposition contributions:Outcome:
    Utah Proposition 3$3,790,008.59$54,858.12Repealed, altered, or partially repealed
    Utah Proposition 2$950,123.58$1,086,963.67Repealed, altered, or partially repealed
    Utah Constitutional Amendment C$0.00$0.00Approveda
    Utah Constitutional Amendment B$0.00$0.00Defeatedd
    Utah Nonbinding Opinion Question 1$1,299,964.54$0.00Defeatedd
    Utah Proposition 4$2,798,943.44$0.00Repealed, altered, or partially repealed

    Signature petition costs

    See also: Ballot measure signature costs, 2018

    The cost-per-required signature (CPRS) is a comparison of the amount of money spent on the petition drive to the number of signatures the state requires for an initiative to make the ballot. The following chart illustrates the CPRS for ballot initiatives. A total of $2.8 million was spent on the three successful initiative petition drives in 2018.


    Ballot Measure:Topic:Petition companyCostSignaturesCPRS
    Utah Proposition 3HealthcareAAP Holding Company$1,329,013.50113,143$11.75
    Utah Proposition 2MarijuanaGathering, Inc. and various individuals$473,798.75113,143$4.19
    Utah Proposition 4Redistricting measuresGrassroots Utah$1,040,087.00113,143$9.19
    Averages:N/AN/A$947,633N/A$8.38

    Not on the ballot

    See also: Proposed ballot measures that were not on a ballot

    The list below contains measures that were proposed and reached a certain stage in the initiative or referral process, but did not make the ballot.

    Type Title Subject Description Result
    LRCA SJR 16 Education Eliminates State Board of Education and gives Superintendent of Public Instruction Control over public education Proposed ballot measures that were not on a ballot
    CISS Allow Caucus-Convention Method for Party Nominations Initiative Elections and campaigns Allows caucus-convention method for party nominees Proposed ballot measures that were not on a ballot
    CISS Income and Sales Tax Increase for Public Education Initiative Taxes Increases the state income and sales taxes to provide additional education funding Proposed ballot measures that were not on a ballot
    CISS Direct Primary Elections for Party Nominations Initiative Elections Requires direct primary elections for party nominees Proposed ballot measures that were not on a ballot

    See also

    Utah

    State profile

    Demographic data for Utah
     UtahU.S.
    Total population:2,990,632316,515,021
    Land area (sq mi):82,1703,531,905
    Race and ethnicity**
    White:87.6%73.6%
    Black/African American:1.1%12.6%
    Asian:2.2%5.1%
    Native American:1.1%0.8%
    Pacific Islander:0.9%0.2%
    Two or more:2.6%3%
    Hispanic/Latino:13.4%17.1%
    Education
    High school graduation rate:91.2%86.7%
    College graduation rate:31.1%29.8%
    Income
    Median household income:$60,727$53,889
    Persons below poverty level:12.7%11.3%
    Source: U.S. Census Bureau, "American Community Survey" (5-year estimates 2010-2015)
    Click here for more information on the 2020 census and here for more on its impact on the redistricting process in Utah.
    **Note: Percentages for race and ethnicity may add up to more than 100 percent because respondents may report more than one race and the Hispanic/Latino ethnicity may be selected in conjunction with any race. Read more about race and ethnicity in the census here.

    Presidential voting pattern

    See also: Presidential voting trends in Utah

    Utah voted Republican in all six presidential elections between 2000 and 2020.


    More Utah coverage on Ballotpedia

    External links

    Footnotes

    1. The law sets April 15 as the signature deadline. But April 15 was a Sunday in 2018, and the deadline was pushed to Monday, April 16, 2018.