There is no New York City constitution. Only states have constitutions. However, the city of New York does have some ordinances that apply only to New York City and not to other cities. It makes things pretty confusing for New York City, because state laws apply in New York City, too.
No, no, and absolutley not. City ordinances fall to both the state and federal constitutions.
This can be an example sentence with the use of the word city-state. "People from different city-state have different norms and values."
Philadelphia
This can be an example sentence with the use of the word city-state. "People from different city-state have different norms and values."
The county clerk manages elections and maintains the state's records.
no it is not, missouri is a different state the capitol of this state is jeferson city
it is different because a creek city state is a creek and a city is a huge place filled with houses and neiborhoods and people. a creek city-state has people but it doesn't have neiborhoods or houses. its just a creek with people and trees and grass and a creek with lots of water.
Depends on where one lives. The tax rates are different from city to city, and state to state.
That depends on how much the tax is. Every state, city, and county has different taxes. Even in the same state, city, county, and store, different items may have different tax rates.
No it was not. It was a large part of land that housed many different city-states. :)
Each state and city has different requirement for property casualty. You need to find that info about your city and state for that info. You do that online or contact your state or city office.
yes