Colorado voters will decide whether the Legislature should have more control over how money from legal settlements and the federal government is spent after a third and final measure qualified to be on the statewide ballot in November.

The signatures turned in to the Colorado Secretary of State’s Office by proponents of Initiative 19 were deemed sufficient Aug. 31.

To get their question on the Nov. 2 ballot, backers needed the signatures of 124,632 registered voters, including a minimum of 2% of registered voters from each of Colorado’s 35 state Senate districts.

The two other questions on the statewide ballot in November are:

Initiatives 19 and 27 are being pushed by Colorado Rising Action, a conservative fiscal group.

Initiative 25 has bipartisan support, though the marijuana industry and the state’s largest teachers union have expressed concern about the measure.

Colorado Education Association President Amie Baca-Oehlert said her organization has anxieties over the implementation of the out-of-school learning program under the measure and whether students will truly be able to access aid in their communities.

There are no other groups seeking to place measures on the November ballot.

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