This blog is intentionally created to document important legislation that can be adopted by any courageous citizens to be put before their local legislature OR by direct citizens ballot initiative. The citizens initaitive process is the peoples method of putting legislation before the voters on the ballot, and empowering voters to become the lawmakers by a popular vote. More info is at http://www.activismtruth.com
Wednesday, June 26, 2013
Statute to Stop Traffic Cameras
This legislation was drafted for the city of Tucson but can be amended for any city.
We are looking for people to step up and assist getting this and other initiatives on the ballot.
http://www.activismtruth.com
Tucson, Arizona _____________
(Date)
Page 1 of 1
CITY OF TUCSON – INITIATIVE PETITION
To the Honorable Mayor and Council, and the City Clerk of the City of Tucson, State of Arizona:
We, the undersigned, residents of the City of Tucson, Arizona and duly qualified electors
therein, do hereby submit and propose to you, for adoption, the following ordinance, and
request that action be taken by you relative to the adoption or rejection of such proposed
ordinance, at the earliest possible moment, and that the same be forthwith submitted to a vote
of the people, to-wit:
OFFICIAL TITLE: TRAFFIC JUSTICE
AMENDING CHAPTER 20, ARTICLE I, SECTION 20-2 OF THE CITY CODE AND LIMITING THE
DEFINITION OF VIOLATION AND RESTRICTING CITY ACTIONS.
Text of the Proposed Amendment
Be it enacted by the people of the City of Tucson:
The following amendment to Chapter 20, Article I, Section 20-2 of the City Code
Sec. 20-2. Civil traffic violations
It shall be a civil traffic violation for any person, firm or corporation to violate any of the
provisions of article I, II, III, IV, V, or VI of this chapter.
Be amended by adding the following new paragraphs:
EXCEPT THAT IT SHALL NOT BE A VIOLATION IF EVIDENCE IS GATHERED THROUGH THE
USE OF ANY AUTOMATIC PHOTO RED LIGHT CAMERAS OR ANY AUTOMATIC PHOTO
SPEED CAMERAS SUCH AS WERE IN USE BY A PRIVATE CONTRACTOR FOR TRAFFIC
ENFORCEMENT ON BEHALF OF THE CITY IN 2012.
THE CITY SHALL NOT USE, OR CONTRACT FOR THE USE OF, SUCH TECHNOLOGY OR
ANY TECHNOLOGY FOR TRAFFIC CONTROL THAT DOES NOT PRODUCE A HUMAN, ON-
SITE, EYEWITNESS TO VIOLATIONS WHO IS ABLE TO TESTIFY IN COURT.
PETITION NUMBER ______________
Sunday, June 23, 2013
Right to a Binding Citizen Grand Jury Process.
Right to Citizen Grand Jury
This initiative would open up the rights for binding citizen grand jury's. Any state with the initiative process can implement this proposal and open the frontier of citizen checks and balances against crimes of the judicial system, the government, or major corporations when the current judicial system is ensuring the justice we need.Montana residents propose Citizen Grand Jury
The ballot title of the measure read:
This initiative amends the Montana Constitution to allow one-half of one percent of a county’s voters to summon by petition a citizen grand jury to investigate and charge crimes. A citizen grand jury can investigate any crime and can open certain proceedings to the public. A county attorney must prosecute any crime charged by a citizen grand jury or may be indicted for failing to do so. A citizen grand jury also may hire a private lawyer, paid by the county, to prosecute any crime it charges.[ ] FOR amending the Montana Constitution to allow citizens to summon by petition a grand jury to investigate any crime and prosecute any crime it charges.
[ ] AGAINST amending the Montana Constitution to allow citizens to summon by petition a grand jury to investigate any crime and prosecute any crime it charges.
Constitutional changes
Article II, Section 20 of the Montana Constitution would have been amended to read:[5]Section 20. Initiation of proceedings.
- (1) Criminal offenses within the jurisdiction of any court inferior to the district court shall be prosecuted by complaint. All criminal actions in district court, except those on appeal, shall be prosecuted either by information, after examination and commitment by a magistrate or after leave granted by the court, or by indictment without such examination, commitment or leave.
- (2) A grand jury shall consist of eleven persons, of whom eight must concur to find an indictment.
- (3) A grand jury shall be drawn and summoned at the discretion and order of the district judge or as follows:
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- (a) Whenever one-half of one percent of the registered electors of a county have signed a petition to summon a grand jury and have submitted the petition signatures to the county election administrator, a grand jury shall be summoned and empanelled by the judge of the district court for the county receiving the petition. A grand jury so summoned and empanelled shall:
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- (i) first consider any cause advanced by those who have brought and signed the petition, but the grand jury is the sole judge of its duration and the breadth and depth of its inquiry; and
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- (ii) conduct selected open proceedings to allow the public to present information or ask questions, and conduct other proceedings open or closed as it chooses, consistent with Article II, Sections 8,9, and 10 of the Constitution of the State of Montana.
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- (b) An indictment brought by a grand jury must be prosecuted by the county attorney for the county in which an alleged offense occurred, regardless of prosecutorial discretion. A county attorney who fails to prosecute within 90 days an indictment being handed down by the grand jury may be indicted for obstruction of justice and official misconduct.
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- (c) If a grand jury summoned under this section is unable to obtain the prosecution of an indictment by the county attorney of the county where the alleged offense occurred, the grand jury may compel prosecutorial assistance from the attorney general or the grand jury may retain a private prosecutor whose fees shall be a lawful claim against the county where the alleged offense occurred.
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- (d) A grand jury summoned under this section may, in addition to indictments, seek court orders to remedy situations under its investigation and may hire counsel independent of the county attorney’s office.
- (1) Criminal offenses within the jurisdiction of any court inferior to the district court shall be prosecuted by complaint. All criminal actions in district court, except those on appeal, shall be prosecuted either by information, after examination and commitment by a magistrate or after leave granted by the court, or by indictment without such examination, commitment or leave.
- (2) A grand jury shall consist of eleven persons, of whom eight must concur to find an indictment. A grand jury shall be drawn and summoned only at the discretion and order of the district judge.
- Commentary on this proposal can be found here:
- http://www.flatheadbeacon.com/articles/article/in_conservative_circles_calls_for_citizen_grand_juries_grow/14634
- Much press will critisizing this system, however, we have only once choice when the current legal system is paid off and corrupted, either we take law into the hands of a civilized citizenry, or we continue to leave it in the hands of a select few good old boys who may be working for the interest of capital and corporations over basic fundamental rights.
Saturday, June 8, 2013
State Bank Initiative
Here are two State Bank Initiatives. The first was created by Jeff Heaton of California creator of an organization identical in goals as my group called Occupy the Elections. I will be looking for more legislation as I understand North Dakota has a State Bank that was created originally by citizen ballot initiative, not the politicians. This should be of no surprise. This is evidence that the most effective political actions have been carried out by citizen movement. The and People in Colorado have their own initiative posted below as well. I need more researches to help investigate any initiatives you would care about.
The state bank is important because it stops fractional reserve lending and debt based economies indebted to the Federal Reserve. North Dakota is the only state that is not in debt and they have a thriving agrarian economy.
The State Bank Initiative of North Dakota was created in the early 1900's as a result of upset farmers realizing they would loose their jobs to out of state grain deals through rail roads, financed by the Federal Reserve. They created a group called the Non-Partisan League and secured ballot access at a time when they needed 30%+ of the voters to sign the petitions, almost 600% more than today's requirement, all at a time before cars and phones. If they legally nullified the Federal Reserve, so can we. Our economies would be so much wealthier, we would have funding for students and local businesses, and society would thrive.
Thomas Jefferson said:
“The end of democracy and the defeat of the American Revolution will occur when government falls into the hands of lending institutions and moneyed incorporations.”
The FED finances wall street, not main street. A state bank would keep our states economy funneling resources into main street needs. It is the only solution short of electing an anti-federal reserve candidate as president several years from now. Why wait when we can nullify the FED on our own and save our economies?
Join me and learn about what I'm doing at http://www.ActivismTruth.com
The state bank is important because it stops fractional reserve lending and debt based economies indebted to the Federal Reserve. North Dakota is the only state that is not in debt and they have a thriving agrarian economy.
The State Bank Initiative of North Dakota was created in the early 1900's as a result of upset farmers realizing they would loose their jobs to out of state grain deals through rail roads, financed by the Federal Reserve. They created a group called the Non-Partisan League and secured ballot access at a time when they needed 30%+ of the voters to sign the petitions, almost 600% more than today's requirement, all at a time before cars and phones. If they legally nullified the Federal Reserve, so can we. Our economies would be so much wealthier, we would have funding for students and local businesses, and society would thrive.
Thomas Jefferson said:
“The end of democracy and the defeat of the American Revolution will occur when government falls into the hands of lending institutions and moneyed incorporations.”
The FED finances wall street, not main street. A state bank would keep our states economy funneling resources into main street needs. It is the only solution short of electing an anti-federal reserve candidate as president several years from now. Why wait when we can nullify the FED on our own and save our economies?
Join me and learn about what I'm doing at http://www.ActivismTruth.com
For More Info on the State Bank Initiative. Check out The Secret of Oz by Bill Still creator of the well known film exposing the Federal Reserve titled Money Masters.
12/24/11 Proposed Ballot Initiative
TO THE HONORABLE SECRETARY OF STATE OF CALIFORNIA
We, the undersigned, registered, qualified voters of California (“state”), residents of ______________ County (or City and County of _______________), hereby propose amendments to the Constitution of California, relating to the establishment and financing of a state-owned bank, and petition the Secretary of State to submit the same to the voters of California for their adoption or rejection at the next succeeding general election or at any special statewide election held prior to that general election or as otherwise provided by law. The proposed constitutional amendments (Establishment of the Peoples Bank of California) read as follows:
SECTION 1. The people find and declare the following:
(a) Access to money is vitally important for the health, security, and well-being of all individuals and businesses in the state.
(b) Under the current system of private ownership of the money creation process, the banks that own the Federal Reserve System periodically expand the money supply to create assets and then contract the money supply to acquire those assets, serving their own interests and leaving the assets of the majority of individuals and businesses at risk.
We, the undersigned, registered, qualified voters of California (“state”), residents of ______________ County (or City and County of _______________), hereby propose amendments to the Constitution of California, relating to the establishment and financing of a state-owned bank, and petition the Secretary of State to submit the same to the voters of California for their adoption or rejection at the next succeeding general election or at any special statewide election held prior to that general election or as otherwise provided by law. The proposed constitutional amendments (Establishment of the Peoples Bank of California) read as follows:
SECTION 1. The people find and declare the following:
(a) Access to money is vitally important for the health, security, and well-being of all individuals and businesses in the state.
(b) Under the current system of private ownership of the money creation process, the banks that own the Federal Reserve System periodically expand the money supply to create assets and then contract the money supply to acquire those assets, serving their own interests and leaving the assets of the majority of individuals and businesses at risk.
(c) The
State of North Dakota has established a highly successful model of a state bank
by creating and operating the Bank of North Dakota, which operates
counter-cyclically to the private banking system, resulting in the lowest
unemployment, highest budget surplus, least bank failures, and highest
concentration of community banks per capita in the U.S.
(d) Based on the North Dakota model, through
the establishment and operation of the Peoples Bank of California, the
Legislature and the residents of the State will have access to over $100 billion
in capital to encourage economic development policy initiatives in a responsive
and efficient manner.
(e) As
state and local governmental entities choose to deposit funds in the Peoples
Bank of California, adding to the bank's capital, the bank will be able to use
those funds to invest in the State's economy.
SECTION 2. Section 27.5 is added to Article XIII of the California Constitution, to read:
SECTION 2. Section 27.5 is added to Article XIII of the California Constitution, to read:
SECTION 27.5.
(a) The legislature, a majority of the membership of each house
concurring, shall impose a tax on all operators for the privilege of
extracting, by any means, oil or gas from the earth or water in the State. The tax shall be imposed at a
rate of not less than 1 percent of the gross value of the oil or gas extracted.
(b) As used in this section, an operator
is any person that, by virtue of ownership, or under the authority of a lease
or any other agreement, has the right to drill, operate, maintain, or control
any oil or gas well in the earth or water in the
State.
(c) An operator shall be solely liable for the tax and may not cause, either directly or indirectly, any other person to be liable or responsible for that tax. A violation of this subdivision shall be punishable by a monetary fine of not less than two times the amount of the tax liability and by any other sanction prescribed by statute.
(d) The tax to be imposed pursuant to this section shall be in addition to any other taxes imposed by law.
(e) All taxes, penalties, and other amounts collected pursuant to this section shall be transferred to the Peoples Bank of California, established by statute pursuant to Article XVII, to assure an adequate source of capital for the bank.
SEC. 3. Article XVII is added to the California Constitution, to read:
Article XVII. The Peoples Bank of California
SECTION 1. The State shall engage in the business of banking and, for that purpose, the Legislature, a majority of the membership of each house concurring, shall enact legislation establishing a system of banking that is owned, controlled, and operated by the State, which shall be known as the Peoples Bank of California (hereafter the Bank), pursuant to and consistent with the provisions of this article.
SECTION. 2. The mission and purposes of the Bank shall be to promote agriculture, education, community development, economic development, commerce, and industry in California. In this role, the Bank will act as a funding resource and regulatory advisor in partnership with other financial institutions, economic development groups, and guaranty agencies.
(c) An operator shall be solely liable for the tax and may not cause, either directly or indirectly, any other person to be liable or responsible for that tax. A violation of this subdivision shall be punishable by a monetary fine of not less than two times the amount of the tax liability and by any other sanction prescribed by statute.
(d) The tax to be imposed pursuant to this section shall be in addition to any other taxes imposed by law.
(e) All taxes, penalties, and other amounts collected pursuant to this section shall be transferred to the Peoples Bank of California, established by statute pursuant to Article XVII, to assure an adequate source of capital for the bank.
SEC. 3. Article XVII is added to the California Constitution, to read:
Article XVII. The Peoples Bank of California
SECTION 1. The State shall engage in the business of banking and, for that purpose, the Legislature, a majority of the membership of each house concurring, shall enact legislation establishing a system of banking that is owned, controlled, and operated by the State, which shall be known as the Peoples Bank of California (hereafter the Bank), pursuant to and consistent with the provisions of this article.
SECTION. 2. The mission and purposes of the Bank shall be to promote agriculture, education, community development, economic development, commerce, and industry in California. In this role, the Bank will act as a funding resource and regulatory advisor in partnership with other financial institutions, economic development groups, and guaranty agencies.
SECTION. 3. (a) The Bank shall be governed and
operated by an advisory board of directors, which shall consist of 11 voting
members, including the Treasurer of the State. The
Treasurer shall also serve as chairperson of the board.
(b) The Governor shall appoint ten members of the board of directors, other than the Treasurer. At least three members must be representatives from banks chartered in the state. At least three members must be residents of the state who are not employed by, serve on the board of directors of, or have a substantial ownership interest in any financial institution. The director is an ex officio member.
(c) (1) the members of the board of directors, other than the Treasurer, shall serve four-year terms. Five of the original board members must be appointed to serve an initial term of two years. All subsequent terms are for four years.
(d) The Governor may remove a board member, other than the Treasurer, for cause, as prescribed by statute.
(e) If a member of the board is removed or resigns before the end of his or her term, the Governor may appoint a new member to serve the remainder of that term.
(f) Members of the board of directors shall serve without compensation, except that the Legislature shall provide by statute for reimbursement of reasonable expenses.
(b) The Governor shall appoint ten members of the board of directors, other than the Treasurer. At least three members must be representatives from banks chartered in the state. At least three members must be residents of the state who are not employed by, serve on the board of directors of, or have a substantial ownership interest in any financial institution. The director is an ex officio member.
(c) (1) the members of the board of directors, other than the Treasurer, shall serve four-year terms. Five of the original board members must be appointed to serve an initial term of two years. All subsequent terms are for four years.
(d) The Governor may remove a board member, other than the Treasurer, for cause, as prescribed by statute.
(e) If a member of the board is removed or resigns before the end of his or her term, the Governor may appoint a new member to serve the remainder of that term.
(f) Members of the board of directors shall serve without compensation, except that the Legislature shall provide by statute for reimbursement of reasonable expenses.
SECTION. 4. (a) Except as otherwise provided in this article, the Bank may exercise any power or authority vested in a state-chartered bank.
(b) The President of the bank and executive staff shall locate and maintain the Bank's places of business, which shall be within the State. The Bank shall not outsource any of its operations to any correctional facility or to any bank not registered as a state chartered bank, or to any contractor in any other state or nation.
(c) The Bank may perform the functions and render the services of a clearinghouse for banks doing business in the State, including providing domestic and foreign exchange, and may rediscount debt instruments on such terms as the board shall provide.
(d) The President of the Bank and executive staff may adopt, by regulation, and enforce rules, policies, and procedures that it deems necessary or appropriate for the transaction of the business of the Bank, including, but not limited to, rules, policies, and procedures regarding the following:
(1) Management performance, customer service, and internal accounting methods, procedures, and operating policies.
(2) Eligibility for borrowing, criteria for evaluating loan applications, aggregate spending limits for a single borrower, and other limitations on loans, consistent with the Bank's mission, this article, and the statutes implementing this article.
(3) Accuracy of financial reporting and compliance with applicable laws and regulations.
(4) Overall risk management strategy.
(e) The Board of Directors may set policy; hire, evaluate or fire the bank
President and executive staff; and serve on committees that either operate the
board, or oversee audits.
SECTION. 5. (a) The Treasurer shall appoint a president of the Bank and additional Bank officers, who will be civil servants, and may remove the president or any officer for any reason. The board shall make recommendations to the Treasurer regarding the appointment of officers.
(b) The Legislature, by statute, shall establish the compensation of the Bank president and officers.
(c) A
director or officer of the Bank, while holding that position, may not borrow
money or otherwise receive any extension of credit from the Bank.
(d) The Bank shall indemnify and hold harmless each director, officer, and employee of the Bank against all reasonable and documented costs and expenses incurred by him or her in connection with the defense of any action, suit, or proceeding in which he or she is made a party by reason of his or her position as a director, officer, or employee of the Bank, except to the extent that he or she has been adjudicated in such action, suit, or proceeding to be liable by reason of willful misconduct in the performance of his or her duties. This indemnification shall not be exclusive of other rights to which a director, officer, or employee may be entitled as a matter of law or equity.
(d) The Bank shall indemnify and hold harmless each director, officer, and employee of the Bank against all reasonable and documented costs and expenses incurred by him or her in connection with the defense of any action, suit, or proceeding in which he or she is made a party by reason of his or her position as a director, officer, or employee of the Bank, except to the extent that he or she has been adjudicated in such action, suit, or proceeding to be liable by reason of willful misconduct in the performance of his or her duties. This indemnification shall not be exclusive of other rights to which a director, officer, or employee may be entitled as a matter of law or equity.
SECtion. 6. (a) Except as may be provided in subdivision (b), all state funds shall be deposited in the Bank.
(b) (1) The Pooled Money Investment Account, the Public Employees' Retirement System, any other public retirement system, any municipal utility district, school district, hospital district, city, county, or city and county, and any other local governing body, taxing authority, or political subdivision of the State may establish and maintain an account with the Bank and may deposit any of its operating funds into that account.
(2) Any entity described in paragraph (1) may also establish and maintain a capital investment account with the Bank and may deposit any of its investment funds into that account as a capital investment.
(3) The Local Agency Investment Fund may establish and maintain a capital investment account with the Bank into which any funds in the Local Agency Investment Fund may be deposited.
(4) Funds deposited in accounts pursuant to this subdivision shall be expended by the depositing entity only as authorized by law.
(c) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (2), any private person or entity may establish and maintain an account with the Bank and may deposit any of its funds in that account.
(2) (A) The Bank may establish and maintain a demand deposit account or checking account for a resident of the State. To establish an account, a resident of the State shall appear in person at an office of the Bank.
(B) The Bank may establish and maintain a savings account, certificate of deposit, or investment account for any citizen of the United States.
(d) All funds deposited in the Bank shall be guaranteed by the State in a manner prescribed by statute.
(e) The Bank shall provide accountholders with electronic access to their accounts, subject to federal requirements.
(0 The obligation of the Bank to pay principal, interest, and any other return on investment shall not be subject to Section 1 of Article XVI.
(g) Nothing in this article shall alter the requirement applicable to state entities contained in Section 7 of Article XVI.
SEC. 7. (a) All income earned by the Bank for its own account on state moneys that are deposited in or invested with the Bank to the credit of the State shall be credited to and become a part of the revenues and income of the Bank.
(b) All moneys received by the Bank from the taxes, penalties, and other amounts imposed pursuant Section 27.5 of Article XIII shall become part of the revenues and income of the Bank and shall be used as operating capital, consistent with this article and the statutes implementing this article.
(c) The Bank's annual operating budget shall be subject to appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act.
(d) Notwithstanding Section 1 of Article XVI or any other provision of this Constitution, the Bank may borrow funds from the Federal Reserve System in times when, in the judgment of the board, the Bank requires additional operating capital.
(e) The Bank may invest its funds in any manner that ensures appropriate cash management and is consistent with the Bank's mission and purposes.
(f) The Bank shall be exempt from payment of any fees or taxes levied by the State or any political subdivision of the State.
(g) Except as provided in subdivision (c), all revenues, income, and other moneys of the Bank shall be continuously appropriated to the Bank for purposes of this article and the statutes implementing this article.
SEC. 8. (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Constitution, the Treasurer and the Controller may, when the balance in the General Fund is insufficient to meet anticipated authorized expenditures, execute and issue on behalf of the State evidences of indebtedness on the General Fund. As a condition precedent to the issuance and sale of the evidences of indebtedness, the Treasurer shall obtain a statement from the Controller and the Franchise Tax Board certifying that the anticipated General Fund revenues for the balance of the fiscal year in which the evidences of indebtedness are to be issued will exceed the principal amount and interest on the evidences of indebtedness to be issued. The Bank may, in turn, make loans to the General Fund by the purchase of the evidences of indebtedness. After any evidences of indebtedness have been sold to the Bank, the Treasurer shall establish a fund for the repayment of the indebtedness upon maturity and shall place all available General Fund revenues into the fund until the fund contains a sufficient balance for the repayment of the indebtedness when due, which moneys are hereby appropriated for that purpose. No interest shall accrue on any loans made pursuant to this subdivision.
(b) The Bank may purchase or refinance other outstanding evidences of indebtedness of the State at rates and upon such terms as approved by the board.
(c) The Bank may make loans to, or purchase, guarantee, or hold loans of, any bank doing business in the State.
(d) (1) The Bank may make loans, at favorable rates relative to prevailing market rates, to businesses and organizations seeking to finance viable projects that the Board of Directors deems to be consistent with the Bank's mission and purposes. The Board of Directors shall not oversee individual loans.
(2) In
its lending activities pursuant to this subdivision, the Bank may act in
partnership with other financial institutions, economic development groups,
research and development groups, governmental bodies, private businesses,
cooperative-owned businesses, individuals, families, and guaranty agencies.
(e) Notwithstanding subdivision (d), the Bank shall not make a new loan to any entity if 20% or more of total employee compensation is paid to employees or contractors who reside outside the State.
(f) The Bank may make low-interest loans to a municipal utility district, school district, hospital district, city, county, or city and county, or any other taxing authority within the State to finance new construction or maintenance of facilities consistent with the Bank's mission and purpose.
(g) The Bank shall not engage in proprietary trading or securitization of residential loans or debt instruments, as well as trading in commodities, futures and similar speculative instruments.
SECTION. 9. (a) By December 1 of each year, the Treasurer shall submit a report to the Legislature regarding the operations of the Bank during its most recently completed fiscal year. The report may include recommendations by the Treasurer to improve the Bank's operations with respect to achieving the Bank's mission and purposes. The Legislature may, by statute, enact changes to the Bank's mission consistent with that report and this article. The President of the Bank and executive staff may enact changes to the Bank’s operation consistent with that report and this article.
(b) The Bank shall be subject to examination by the Department of Financial Institutions according to the standards and requirements applicable to a state-chartered bank. The Bank shall reimburse the Department of Financial Institutions for its reasonable costs in conducting any examination.
SEC. 10. (a) The board shall meet regularly as a board, and with the officers of the Bank, to review Bank operations. Meetings of the board shall be subject to open meeting laws applicable to state agencies. Any meeting of the board that is open to the public may be broadcast on the Internet or on public access television.
(b) To ensure the transparency of the Bank's operations, and in addition to any other requirements applicable to state agencies relating to access to public records, the following shall be made publicly available on the Internet or by other similar means:
(1) Weekly summaries of Bank transactions, subject to applicable laws regarding confidentiality of personal information of Bank clients.
(2) An annual statement of the salary of each officer and employee of the Bank, and the aggregate compensation of all officers, as a group, together with the Bank's annual financial statements.
(3) The annual report to the Legislature pursuant to Section 9.
(e) Notwithstanding subdivision (d), the Bank shall not make a new loan to any entity if 20% or more of total employee compensation is paid to employees or contractors who reside outside the State.
(f) The Bank may make low-interest loans to a municipal utility district, school district, hospital district, city, county, or city and county, or any other taxing authority within the State to finance new construction or maintenance of facilities consistent with the Bank's mission and purpose.
(g) The Bank shall not engage in proprietary trading or securitization of residential loans or debt instruments, as well as trading in commodities, futures and similar speculative instruments.
SECTION. 9. (a) By December 1 of each year, the Treasurer shall submit a report to the Legislature regarding the operations of the Bank during its most recently completed fiscal year. The report may include recommendations by the Treasurer to improve the Bank's operations with respect to achieving the Bank's mission and purposes. The Legislature may, by statute, enact changes to the Bank's mission consistent with that report and this article. The President of the Bank and executive staff may enact changes to the Bank’s operation consistent with that report and this article.
(b) The Bank shall be subject to examination by the Department of Financial Institutions according to the standards and requirements applicable to a state-chartered bank. The Bank shall reimburse the Department of Financial Institutions for its reasonable costs in conducting any examination.
SEC. 10. (a) The board shall meet regularly as a board, and with the officers of the Bank, to review Bank operations. Meetings of the board shall be subject to open meeting laws applicable to state agencies. Any meeting of the board that is open to the public may be broadcast on the Internet or on public access television.
(b) To ensure the transparency of the Bank's operations, and in addition to any other requirements applicable to state agencies relating to access to public records, the following shall be made publicly available on the Internet or by other similar means:
(1) Weekly summaries of Bank transactions, subject to applicable laws regarding confidentiality of personal information of Bank clients.
(2) An annual statement of the salary of each officer and employee of the Bank, and the aggregate compensation of all officers, as a group, together with the Bank's annual financial statements.
(3) The annual report to the Legislature pursuant to Section 9.
Article
XIII.
SECTION. 5. (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the Attorney General shall defend the constitutionality of this act.
(b) The provisions of this act are severable. If any provision of this act or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.
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This is the Colorado Initiative.
SECTION. 5. (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the Attorney General shall defend the constitutionality of this act.
(b) The provisions of this act are severable. If any provision of this act or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.
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This is the Colorado Initiative.
Proposed Constitutional
Amendment for the State of Colorado To Establish a Publically-Owned State Bank
To be Numbered as Article X,
Section 22
Be it Enacted by the People of
the State of Colorado:
Preamble
WHEREAS, the State of Colorado
desires to build an economy independent of the ups and downs created by the
speculators and financiers that control the money creation and credit
regulation processes of the United States; and
WHEREAS, many of the original 13
colonies of the United States and the current state of North Dakota, as well as
many nations worldwide, have shown that true prosperity comes from public tax
monies deposited into public banks and leveraged in the public interest; now
therefore
In the constitution of the
state of Colorado, add section 22 to Article X as follows:
(1) ESTABLISHMENT OF STATE-OWNED BANK. THE STATE OF COLORADO HEREBY ESTABLISHES A BANK TO BE OWNED BY THE
STATE OF COLORADO. THE BANK IS AUTHORIZED TO LEND MONEY AT INTEREST OR AT
NO INTEREST TO PROMOTE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT, COMMERCE, INDUSTRY, AND AGRICULTURE
IN THE STATE AND TO PROMOTE HOME OWNERSHIP,
MAINTENANCE AND CONSTRUCTION OF NEEDED
INFRASTRUCTURE, EDUCATION, PUBLIC HEALTH AND SAFETY, AND OTHER PURPOSES FOR THE GENERAL
WELFARE OF THE CITIZENS OF THE STATE OF COLORADO. THE BANK SHALL HAVE ALL THE POWERS AND AUTHORITY OF
OTHER BANKS CHARTERED BY THE STATE OF COLORADO. THE DEBTS AND OBLIGATIONS OF THE BANK ARE BACKED BY THE
FULL FAITH AND CREDIT OF THE STATE OF COLORADO. THE REVENUE AND INCOME OF THE BANK SHALL NOT BE LIMITED, NOR SHALL
EXPENDITURES AND MANAGEMENT OF ITS REVENUE,
INCOME,
AND ASSETS BE RESTRICTED, EXCEPT UPON
SOUND FINANCIAL AND PUBLIC POLICY CONSIDERATIONS. ALL PROVISIONS OF THIS SECTION
ARE SELF-EXECUTING AND SEVERABLE AND SUPERSEDE CONFLICTING STATE CONSTITUTIONAL, STATE STATUTORY, STATE CHARTERED, OR OTHER STATE
OR LOCAL PROVISIONS.
(2) GOVERNANCE OF STATE BANK: ELECTED OFFICIALS:
THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE BANK SHALL
CONSIST OF FIVE MEMBERS WHO SHALL BE ELECTED AS FOLLOWS: (A) THE STATE
LEGISLATURE SHALL, IN A TIMELY FASHION NOT TO EXCEED THREE MONTHS
FOLLOWING THE EFFECTIVE DATE OF THIS AMENDMENT, DIVIDE THE STATE INTO FIVE
DISTRICTS, BY GROUPING THE STATE HOUSE DISTRICTS INTO FIVE CONTIGUOUS DISTRICTS OF
ROUGHLY EQUAL POPULATION, WITH DUE RESPECT TO THE RURAL AND URBAN CHARACTERISTICS
OF SAID DISTRICTS. (B) THE INITIAL ELECTION SHALL BE IN AN ODD-NUMBERED YEAR
AND INCLUDE CANDIDATES FOR ALL FIVE DISTRICTS, TWO OF WHOM SHALL BE ELECTED FOR
AN INITIAL TERM OF TWO YEARS AND THREE OF WHOM SHALL BE ELECTED FOR A TERM OF
FOUR YEARS. TWO YEARS LATER, WHEN THE TWO-YEAR TERMS EXPIRE,
SAID TWO DISTRICTS SHALL ELECT MEMBERS TO
TERMS OF FOUR YEARS. FOUR YEARS AFTER THE INITIAL VOTE, SAID THREE
DISTRICTS SHALL ELECT MEMBERS FOR FOUR YEAR TERMS. THEREAFTER, ALL TERMS FOR
ALL DISTRICTS SHALL BE FOR FOUR YEARS,
(C) CANDIDATES MUST BE CITIZENS OF THE
STATE OF COLORADO FOR AT LEAST FIVE YEARS BEFORE THEY CAN DECLARE THEIR CANDIDACY
AND MUST BE RESIDENTS OF THEIR DISTRICT FOR TWO YEARS. (D) TO BE
INCLUDED ON THE BALLOT, CANDIDATES SHALL REGISTER WITH THE SECRETARY OF STATE’S OFFICE, WHICH SHALL
PROVIDE AN AUTOMATED ONLINE PROCESS THAT INCLUDES THE OPPORTUNITY FOR EACH
CANDIDATE TO LIST THEIR QUALIFICATIONS AND REASONS WHY THEY WANT TO SERVE. (E) IN THE
EVENT THAT NO CANDIDATE WITHIN A DISTRICT RECEIVES A MAJORITY OF VOTES FROM THAT DISTRICT, THE SECRETARY OF STATE SHALL HOLD A RUN-OFF
ELECTION BETWEEN THE TWO CANDIDATES RECEIVING THE MOST VOTES.
(3) GOVERNANCE OF STATE BANK: MANAGEMENT, EMPLOYEES,
AND ADVISORS: THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS SHALL RECEIVE ADVISORY INPUT ON
THE GENERAL DIRECTION OF THE BANK FROM A NINE-MEMBER
BOARD OF ADVISORS WHOSE MEMBERS REPRESENT A BROAD CROSS-SECTION OF THE STATE, INCLUDING
BUSINESS AND INDUSTRY, FARMING, TECHNOLOGY, FINANCE,
SMALL BUSINESS, EDUCATION,
LABOR, AND EMPLOYMENT, TO BE
APPOINTED BY THE GOVERNOR, SUBJECT
TO CONFIRMATION BY A MAJORITY OF THE SENATE
OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY
OF THE STATE OF COLORADO. MEMBERS
OF THE BOARD OF ADVISORS SHALL BE NOMINATED BY VARIOUS GROUPS WITHIN EACH AREA
OF INTEREST IN A MANNER TO BE DETERMINED BY THE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY. THE
BOARD OF DIRECTORS SHALL ALSO RECEIVE REGULAR FINANCIAL REPORTS, NO LESS THAN ONCE A MONTH, FROM
THE MANAGEMENT OF THE BANK.
THE FINANCES OF THE BANK
SHALL BE AUDITED ANNUALLY BY AN INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTING FIRM FREE FROM ANY
CONFLICTS OF INTEREST WITH THE BANK OR STATE. EXCEPT
FOR THE PRESIDENT OF THE BANK, WHO SHALL BE APPOINTED BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND SERVE AT
THEIR PLEASURE, THE MANAGEMENT AND EMPLOYEES OF THE
BANK SHALL BE HIRED ACCORDING TO THE STANDARDS OF THE STATE PERSONNEL SYSTEM, WHICH SHALL ENDEAVOR TO HIRE THE BEST QUALIFIED PERSONS AND
COMPENSATE THEM ACCORDINGLY BY SALARY. NO
EMPLOYEES OF THE BANK SHALL RECEIVE COMPENSATION IN THE FORM OF COMMISSIONS AND
BONUSES. THE PRESIDENT
OF THE BANK MUST HAVE SUBSTANTIAL EXPERIENCE IN BANKING. THE MANAGEMENT OF THE BANK SHALL BE RESPONSIBLE FOR THE
DAY-TO-DAY
OPERATIONS OF THE BANK, WHICH SHALL FOLLOW THE GENERAL
OBJECTIVES SET BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS.
(4) RULES AND REGULATIONS OF STATE BANK. AFTER PASSAGE OF THIS AMENDMENT AND THE
INITIAL ELECTION OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS, THE
INITIAL MANAGEMENT OF THE BANK,
CONSISTING OF THE TOP
FIVE OPERATING OFFICIALS OF THE BANK, INCLUDING
THE PRESIDENT APPOINTED BY THE BOARD OF
DIRECTORS AND THOSE HIRED BY THE PRESIDENT
UNDER THE PROTOCOLS OF THE STATE PERSONNEL SYSTEM, SHALL
BE CHARGED WITH DRAFTING THE RULES AND REGULATIONS OF THE BANK, SUBJECT TO CONSIDERATION OF RECOMMENDATIONS BY THE ADVISORY
BOARD AND APPROVAL OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE BANK. PRIOR TO SUCH APPROVAL, THE
RULES AND REGULATIONS PROMULGATED BY SAID FIVE OPERATING OFFICIALS SHALL BE
EFFECTIVE ON AN INTERIM BASIS.
(5) CAPITALIZATION OF STATE BANK: THE
CAPITALIZATION OF THE BANK SHALL INCLUDE ALL TAX AND OTHER REVENUES AND FUNDS
OF THE STATE, INCLUDING OTHER FUNDS SUCH AS MAY BE
COLLECTED CURRENTLY FOR
THE STATE BY OTHER BANKS, SUBJECT TO SOUND BANKING PRACTICES AND THE RULES AND REGULATIONS
OF THE STATE BANK. SPECIFICALLY ALLOCATED FUNDS AND OTHER
ASSETS OF THE STATE NORMALLY HELD BY FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS SHALL BE DEPOSITED
AND HELD BY THE STATE BANK.
(6) TRANSFER
OF FUNDS FROM THE STATE BANK TO THE GENERAL FUND OF THE STATE OF COLORADO. THE STATE BANK MAY TRANSFER FUNDS,
FROM TIME TO TIME, TO THE GENERAL FUND OF THE STATE OF COLORADO. SUCH AMOUNTS SHALL NOT BE SUBJECT TO OR
COUNTED AGAINST ANY LIMITATIONS IMPOSED BY ANY STATE CONSTITUTIONAL, STATE STATUTORY, STATE CHARTERED, OR OTHER STATE OR LOCAL PROVISIONS.
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