MISSOURI CHAMBER NOVEMBER 2016 | Page 30

cigarette taxes by 60 cents, with some cigarette wholesalers paying an additional new 67 cent tax. It could generate as much as $374 million per year. Part of the funding would go to smoking cessation programs for pregnant women and youth. As of this writing, this ballot issue was being challenged in court. Amendment 4: Blocking new sales taxes Adding this amendment to Missouri’s constitution would stop the state from expanding sales and use taxes to any services or transactions that were not taxed as of Jan. 1, 2015. This issue comes as some state lawmakers have discussed eliminating Missouri’s income tax in favor of more sales and use taxes. If this ballot item passes, it could make it more difficult to enact that change. Fueling Get your business idea ready for liftoff. Learn more: mochamber.com/bizliftoff our Communities We're proud to support Missouri Energy Initiative’s dedication to affordable, reliable and sustainable energy. Your passion fuels our communities. Cigarettes, soil and voter ID An eclectic set of ballot issues awaits Missouri voters BY TRACY KING M OUR PERSPECTIVE IS SIMPLE: That all Member-Owners are continuously connected to the grid, so all Member-Owners should pay evenly to maintain it. Special interest groups, however, have other ideas. LEARN MORE: 4EnergyFairness.com Missouri’s Electric Cooperatives 28 MISSOURI BUSINESS ost of the choices on the ballot this November involve deciding who should make laws for our state and nation. However, voters will also have several opportunities to make laws themselves this year. As many as six statewide ballot initiatives will be decided by voters this year — depending on whether legal challenges to some of the initiatives are successful. Some of the issues are constitutional amendments that state lawmakers placed on the ballot. Others arrived on the ballot via initiative petition, an increasingly popular process that circumvents the legislature and places statute and constitutional changes directly before voters. Keep reading to learn more about the ballot issues that Missouri voters will see this year. To see the exact ballot language for each issue, visit the Missouri Secretary of State’s website: sos.mo.gov/ petitions/2016BallotMeasures. Amendment 1: Funding for parks, soil and water In 1984, Missouri voters passed a onetenth of 1 percent sales and use tax to support Missouri’s state park system and soil and water conservation efforts. It’s been reapproved by voters three times since. The tax currently generates about $90 million annually. The ballot issue is a constitutional amendment that would allow the tax to continue for another 10 years. Amendment 2: Capping political contributions Also in court is a potential ballot issue to place limits on political contributions. Under the proposed rule, up to $2,600 could be donated to individual candidates and up to $25,000 to political parties. This potential constitutional amendment would also place new restrictions on corporate political donations and would change how political action committees operate. It would also stop candidates from using campaign committees to pass money back and forth. It would also forbid some, but not all, businesses from contributing to political act