State v. Buncich
Annotate this CaseIn 2014, the General Assembly enacted Ind. Code 3-11-1.5-3.4 (the Statute), which created a Small Precinct Committee in Lake County and directed it to identify precincts with 500 active voters or fewer that may be amenable to consolidation. This measure was intended to reduce the cost of election administration in a county that contains more than fifteen percent of the State’s small precincts. Several precinct committeepersons sought declaratory judgment and an injunction, asserting that the Statute violated the State Constitution. The trial court concluded that the Statute is an impermissible special law and a violation of separation of powers principles. The Supreme Court reversed, holding (1) the Statute is constitutionally permissible special legislation; and (2) the Statute does not offend Indiana’s separation of powers clause.
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