From Ballotpedia |
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The Nebraska Private Sector Endowment Fund Investment Amendment, also known as Amendment 2, was on the ballot in Nebraska on November 7, 2006, as a legislatively referred constitutional amendment, where it was defeated. The measure would have authorized the investment of public endowment funds in such manner as the governing body of political subdivisions determined.[1]
| Nebraska Amendment 2 (2006) | ||||
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| Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
| 292,456 | 56.90% | |||
| Yes | 221,499 | 43.10% | ||
Official results via: Nebraska Legislature
The question on the ballot:
| "A vote FOR this amendment will authorize the Legislature to permit political subdivisions to invest public endowment funds in the same manner as would a prudent investor acting with skill, care, and diligence and in such investments that the political subdivision, acting in a fiduciary capacity for the exclusive purpose of protecting and benefiting such investment, may determine, subject to limitations as the Legislature may provide.
A vote AGAINST this amendment will retain the existing, more limiting restrictions on a political subdivision’s ability to invest public endowment funds. A constitutional amendment to authorize the investment of the public endowment funds of cities, villages, school districts, public power districts, and other political subdivisions in such manner and in such investments as the governing body of such political subdivision may determine, subject to limitations by the Legislature."[2] [3] |
The primary objective of this proposition was to enable the Community Health Endowment of Lincoln (CHE) to invest its assets into stocks, with the expectation that its rate of return would be substantially increased. The CHE was formed in 1998 from the sale of publicly-owned Lincoln General Hospital to the privately-owned Bryan Hospital, and at the end of fiscal year 2006, it was worth $49,918,720. There are very few public endowment funds owned by political subdivisions of Nebraska, and this is by far the largest. The CHE has been allowed to increase annually slightly faster than the rate of inflation, and additional interest and donations, averaging approximately $1 million annually, have been used for various community health purposes.
The measure was sponsored by Nebraska state senator Chris Beutler, from Lincoln.[5]
Donors to the campaign for the measure:[6]
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State of Nebraska Lincoln (capital) | |
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Categories: [Nebraska 2006 ballot measures] [State and local government budgets, spending and finance, Nebraska] [State and local government budgets, spending and finance, 2006] [Historical ballots, 2015]
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