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in my dictionary english-german precinct is translated as pedestrian zone. If that is not wrong (obviously i am not english) you might want to add it. -- 134.130.243.106 12:11, 10 May 2006 (UTC)
g
The precinct isn't necessarily the smallest "minor civil division", at least not if that term includes townships, as the article suggests - for example, Boone County, Iowa is divided such that there are several townships in its rural precincts. -- 129.186.95.76 ( talk) 20:45, 27 November 2007 (UTC)
In Texas, there are two types of precincts, both of which are divisions of the county.
The first type of precinct is a "commissioners [sic] precinct." Each county is divided into 4 commissioners precincts for the purposes of electing the county commissioners court, which is the legislative body of the county government. Texas Constitution, Article 5, Section 18 (b).
The second type of precinct is the "justice of the peace and constable precinct". Each county may have as few as 1 and as many as 8 precincts of this type, depending upon that county's population. The county commissioners court determines the number of justice of the peace and constable precincts within the ranges allowed by the state constitution. In general, each such precinct established by the county commissioners court has 1 justice of the peace and 1 constable. In precincts and counties with larger populations, however, the county commissioners court may authorize up to 2 justices of the peace to serve in the same precinct. Texas Constitution, Article 5, Section 18 (a). There have been political movements to eliminate the office of constable, because the duties of a constable within a precinct duplicate those that the sheriff performs throughout the county. A compromise of sorts was reached that authorizes any county commissioners court to declare a constable's office to be dormant if no constable has legally served in that precinct for 7 consecutive years. During the dormancy, a constable may not be elected or appointed in that precinct. Texas Constitution, Article 5, Section 18 (h). Vereverde ( talk) 02:55, 7 December 2014 (UTC)
At the moment this article is a walking violation of WP:NOT, with more information about the word "precinct" than any encyclopedic concept. As one might expect, the incoming links reflect an unholy blend of meanings, including some not reflected on this page at all. Suggest following:
This is going to leave a ton of links to be cleaned up (although a fair number of the existing ones seem to be coming from {{ Voting}}), so I figure it would be a good idea to post here first. -- Visviva ( talk) 05:39, 27 January 2020 (UTC)
This article is rated Start-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | ||||||||||||||||||
|
in my dictionary english-german precinct is translated as pedestrian zone. If that is not wrong (obviously i am not english) you might want to add it. -- 134.130.243.106 12:11, 10 May 2006 (UTC)
g
The precinct isn't necessarily the smallest "minor civil division", at least not if that term includes townships, as the article suggests - for example, Boone County, Iowa is divided such that there are several townships in its rural precincts. -- 129.186.95.76 ( talk) 20:45, 27 November 2007 (UTC)
In Texas, there are two types of precincts, both of which are divisions of the county.
The first type of precinct is a "commissioners [sic] precinct." Each county is divided into 4 commissioners precincts for the purposes of electing the county commissioners court, which is the legislative body of the county government. Texas Constitution, Article 5, Section 18 (b).
The second type of precinct is the "justice of the peace and constable precinct". Each county may have as few as 1 and as many as 8 precincts of this type, depending upon that county's population. The county commissioners court determines the number of justice of the peace and constable precincts within the ranges allowed by the state constitution. In general, each such precinct established by the county commissioners court has 1 justice of the peace and 1 constable. In precincts and counties with larger populations, however, the county commissioners court may authorize up to 2 justices of the peace to serve in the same precinct. Texas Constitution, Article 5, Section 18 (a). There have been political movements to eliminate the office of constable, because the duties of a constable within a precinct duplicate those that the sheriff performs throughout the county. A compromise of sorts was reached that authorizes any county commissioners court to declare a constable's office to be dormant if no constable has legally served in that precinct for 7 consecutive years. During the dormancy, a constable may not be elected or appointed in that precinct. Texas Constitution, Article 5, Section 18 (h). Vereverde ( talk) 02:55, 7 December 2014 (UTC)
At the moment this article is a walking violation of WP:NOT, with more information about the word "precinct" than any encyclopedic concept. As one might expect, the incoming links reflect an unholy blend of meanings, including some not reflected on this page at all. Suggest following:
This is going to leave a ton of links to be cleaned up (although a fair number of the existing ones seem to be coming from {{ Voting}}), so I figure it would be a good idea to post here first. -- Visviva ( talk) 05:39, 27 January 2020 (UTC)