Chart of California’s November Ballot Measures and Their Status
There will be 10 measures facing voters in November
By Chris Micheli, July 3, 2024 10:16 pm
On Tuesday, November 5, 2024, the General Election in California, and across the nation, will take place. There originally were up to 14 measures that could be voted on by the statewide electorate at that time.
However, after actions over the past few weeks by initiative proponents, the Legislature, and the state Supreme Court, there will be 10 measures facing voters in November. The Secretary of State has assigned the numbers as of July 3.
The following chart provides a listing of those possible ballot measures and relevant updates as of Wednesday, July 3 (with those on the ballot in boldface type):
MEASURE | DESCRIPTION | STATUS | NOTES |
SCA 2 (Allen) | Public housing projects | Qualified for ballot | SCR 157 (Allen) withdrew this measure from ballot |
ACA 5 (Low) | Marriage equality | On the 11/5 ballot as Prop. 3 | Placed on the ballot by the Legislature |
ACA 1 (Aguiar-Curry) | Local government financing, affordable housing and public infrastructure voter approval | On the 11/5 ballot as Prop. 5 | Placed on the ballot by the Legislature; ACA 10 (Aguiar-Curry) makes changes to ACA 1 |
ACA 13 (Ward) | Voting thresholds | Qualified for ballot | AB 440 (Pellerin) moves it to 2026 |
21-0022A1 | Provides funding for pandemic detection and prevention by increasing tax on personal income over $5 million | Eligible for ballot | SB 164 (state gov’t budget trailer bill) language satisfied proponent who withdrew the measure |
21-0027A1 | Eliminates employees’ ability to file lawsuit for monetary penalties for state labor-law violations | Eligible for ballot | Legislature passed SB 92 (Umberg) and AB 2288 (Kalra); proponent withdrew ballot measure |
21-0042A1 | Limits ability of voters and state and local governments to raise revenues for government services | Eligible for ballot | CA Supreme Court unanimously decided to remove it from the ballot |
21-0043A1 | Raises minimum wage to $18 | On the 11/5 ballot as Prop. 32 | Placed on the ballot by initiative |
22-0006 | Referendum challenging 2022 law prohibiting new oil and gas wells near homes, schools, and hospitals | Eligible for ballot | Proponents withdrew it from the ballot |
22-0008 | Expands local governments’ authority to enact rent control on residential property | On the 11/5 ballot as Prop. 33 | Placed on the ballot by initiative |
23-0017A1 | Allows felony charges and increases sentences for certain drug and theft crimes | On the 11/5 ballot as Prop. 36 | Placed on the ballot by initiative |
23-0021A1 | Restricts spending by health care providers meeting specified criteria | On the 11/5 ballot as Prop. 34 | Placed on the ballot by initiative |
23-0022 | Adds one-semester personal finance course to high school graduation requirements | Eligible for ballot | AB 2927 (McCarty) enacts such a requirement in the Education Code; proponent withdrew measure |
23-0024A1 | Provides permanent funding for Medi-Cal health care services | On the 11/5 ballot as Prop. 35 | Placed on the ballot by initiative |
23-0029A1 | Expands state health care program for children with certain medical conditions | Eligible for ballot | Signatures verified on 6/21; SB 159 (budget trailer bill) reflects agreement; proponent withdrew measure |
SB 867 (Allen) | GO bond for climate programs funding | On the 11/5 ballot as Prop. 4 | Placed on the ballot by the Legislature |
ACA 8 (Wilson) | Prohibits slavery in any form | On the 11/5 ballot as Prop. 6 | Placed on the ballot by the Legislature |
AB 247 (Muratsuchi) | GO bond for education facilities | On the 11/5 ballot as Prop. 2 | Placed on the ballot by the Legislature |
CMM 7/3/24
November 5, 2024 Ballot Measure Numbers (10 measures total)
Prop. 2 – AB 247 (Muratsuchi) – education facilities GO bond
Prop. 3 – ACA 5 (Low) – Marriage equality
Prop. 4 – SB 867 (Allen) – climate programs GO bond
Prop. 5 – ACA 1 (Aguiar-Curry) – local government financing, affordable housing and public infrastructure voter approval
Prop. 6 – ACA 8 (Wilson) – prohibits slavery in any form
Prop. 32 – Raises minimum wage to $18
Prop. 33 – Expands local governments’ authority to enact rent control on residential property
Prop. 34 – Restricts spending by health care providers meeting specified criteria
Prop. 35 – Provides permanent funding for Medi-Cal health care services
Prop. 36 – Allows felony charges and increases sentences for certain drug and theft crimes
- California Local Agency Public Construction Act - November 24, 2024
- Alternative Procedures in Public Contract Bidding - November 23, 2024
- Coordination of Civil Actions in California - November 23, 2024
Hmmm…. I am “NO” on all but one.
Dig your own gold mine, Guv.Greaseball. Stay out of mine.