Difference between revisions of "River Project sales tax"

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*Bill W. Hornaday, "LR Again Rolls the Dice: Downtown Revival $500 Million Price Tag on Main Street Plan a Hitch, and Developers Aren't on Same Page," ''Arkansas Democrat-Gazette,'' May 2, 2005.
 
*Bill W. Hornaday, "LR Again Rolls the Dice: Downtown Revival $500 Million Price Tag on Main Street Plan a Hitch, and Developers Aren't on Same Page," ''Arkansas Democrat-Gazette,'' May 2, 2005.
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*Kim McGuire, "Alltel: An Arena for All Arkansas; On Saturday the Public Gets Its First Real Look at the New $80 Million Facility," ''Arkansas Democrat-Gazette,'' September 26, 1999.
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*Jake Sandlin, "Riverfronts' Success Reflects 2 Cities' Work; Project Drew 175,000 in '97," ''Arkansas Democrat-Gazette,'' May 26, 1998.
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==

Latest revision as of 01:35, 9 September 2008

The River Project sales tax was a one-year, one-cent tax hike passed by Pulaski County voters in 1995. The tax raised $51 million dollars to build ALLTEL Arena in North Little Rock and $23 million to expand the Statehouse Convention Center in downtown Little Rock.

References

  • Bill W. Hornaday, "LR Again Rolls the Dice: Downtown Revival $500 Million Price Tag on Main Street Plan a Hitch, and Developers Aren't on Same Page," Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, May 2, 2005.
  • Kim McGuire, "Alltel: An Arena for All Arkansas; On Saturday the Public Gets Its First Real Look at the New $80 Million Facility," Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, September 26, 1999.
  • Jake Sandlin, "Riverfronts' Success Reflects 2 Cities' Work; Project Drew 175,000 in '97," Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, May 26, 1998.

External links