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SB 2238 - School Wind Turbine Electricity Purchase Credits 7/1/05

Introduced by Sen. Erbele, Wardner, Warner Introduced by Rep. Brandenburg, S. Kelsh, Kretschmar A BILL for an Act to create and enact a new section to chapter 57-33 and a new section to chapter 57-38 of the North Dakota Century Code, relating to a credit against rural electric cooperative gross receipts taxes and a credit against corporate income taxes for electricity purchased from school districts that generate electricity using wind turbines; and to provide an effective date.Read the full bill in PDF Format
Introduced: 01/17/05
Last Action: Second reading, failed to pass, yeas 017 nays 030
Final Bill Status: Failed

Related Topics

The following is a list of related topics or categories for this bill. Click on the topic title to view more legislation related to the same topic.

Effective Date Clause, Energy, Public Utilities, School Districts, Wind Energy

Voting Statistics

There was only one roll call vote on this bill in the Senate and the Second reading, failed to pass, yeas 017 nays 030

The following is a breakdown of the votes on this bill from the last roll call recorded for each legislative body.

Party Breakdown

The following is a breakdown by party:
Percent Voting For Bill
Republican
21.2%
Democrat
71.4%

House / Senate

The following is a breakdown by legislative body:
Percent Voting For Bill
House
0%
Senate
36.1%


East vs. West

Based on the geographic location of the district, we have tallied the votes by "East versus West" (view the East/West District map)
Percent Voting For Bill
Eastern Districts
36%
Western Districts
36.3%



District Votes



The following breaks down the percentage of ND Legislative Districts that were either fully In Support (voted Yea) on this bill, Fully Against (All Voted Nay) or Split (not all members of district agreed)
Percent Of Districts
Districts For
36.1%
Districts Against
63.8%
Districts Split
0%
How did your district vote on this bill? - Break the Votes Down by District


Demographic Breakdowns

We have gathered statistics on each legislative district and have grouped their votes into a number of categories. These statistics come from US Census Data and you can read more on our classification and grouping methodology here.

High Female Populations


Percent Voting For Bill
Higher Female Population
50%
Lower Female Population
31.4%



Low Graduating Rates


Percent Voting For Bill
Lower Graduation Rate
28.5%
Higher Graduation Rate
39.3%



High Native American Population


Percent Voting For Bill
High Native American Population
100%
Low Native American Population
30.2%



High Manufacturing Sector Jobs


Percent Voting For Bill
Higher Manufacturing Employment
44.4%
Lower Manufacturing Employment
34.2%



High Divorce Rate


Percent Voting For Bill
Higher Divorce Rate
37.5%
Lower Divorce Rate
35.8%



High Population in Poverty


Percent Voting For Bill
Higher Poverty Rate
75%
Lower Poverty Rate
28.2%



High Population Over the Age of 62


Percent Voting For Bill
Higher 62+ Population
47.0%
Lower 62+ Population
30.0%



High Veteran Population


Percent Voting For Bill
Higher Veteran Population
31.4%
Lower Veteran Population
50%



High Rural Population


Percent Voting For Bill
Higher Rural Population
43.4%
Lower Rural Population
29.1%



Roll Call Votes

The following is a list of House and Senate Roll Call Votes on this bill. The votes are listed in the order of the legislative day in which the vote was taken. The last two roll call votes normally will show the final status of the bill.

In order for a bill to "pass" it must acheive a Constitutional Majority in both the House and the Senate on th exact same version of the bill. This is why you will see more than two votes on many bills. If either body ammends (adds to) a bill, the vote must be re-taken in both houses.

A "Constitutional Majority" requires that greater than 1/2 of ALL legislators in a body must vote yea. Not just a majority of those present. In the house, this requires a total of 48 votes and in the senate, this requires a total of 24 votes

Body Question Yeas Nays Absent
Senate Day 27 - view the votes...
The question being on the final passage of the bill, which has been read, and is PLACED ON THE CALENDAR WITHOUT RECOMMENDATION, the roll was called and there were 17 YEAS, 30 NAYS, 0 EXCUSED, 0 ABSENT AND NOT VOTING
17 30 0

Recorded Actions

The following is a list of "Recorded Actions" taken on this bill as recorded in the house and senate journals

Date Body Action
01/17/05 Senate Introduced, first reading, referred Finance and Taxation
01/24/05 Senate Committee Hearing 09:00
02/09/05 Senate Reported back without recommendation y 006 n 000
02/10/05 Senate Second reading, failed to pass, yeas 017 nays 030

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