ALBANY — Legislators in both houses are scheduled to vote on a flurry of bills meant to expand ballot access on Monday, the session's second day.

Bills to be considered include early voting, same-day voter registration, voting by mail, and consolidating federal and state primary days, Democratic lawmakers confirmed Wednesday.

"I think it'll be the first day. You'll know; you'll hear," Assemblyman David Weprin, of Queens, said.

"I certainly think it's on our agenda for next week, I can't speak for the Senate," said Assemblywoman Deborah Glick, D-Manhattan. "Clearly we have a very robust list of bills that we are anxious to get done, many of which we have voted on and passed in the past."

The reforms have the support of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, who included all four measures in a pre-session address outlining his agenda in December.

"The federal government is working to disenfranchise voters; we have to do the exact opposite and improve our democracy," he said.

The governor also proposed making Election Day a state holiday.

While the Assembly has passed dozens of electoral reform bills over the years, and the legislation has been through an extensive committee review process. But Republican leadership in the Senate never allowed the bills to advance, which means they never received the same scrutiny in the upper chamber.

While some items have a budgetary component, the price tag is not prohibitive, according to early cost estimates.

Last year, Cuomo allocated $7 million to establish early voting. Consolidating the state's double primary election days is projected to save the state $25 million. Controversies may arise over which day is selected to be the combined primary day.

Assemblyman Felix Ortiz said that the Legislature may also consider voting on campaign finance measures like closing the LLC loophole, which allows companies to circumvent campaign finance limits.

A spokesman for the Senate Democrats declined to confirm whether the bills were slated for Monday, but Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins, in her opening remarks on Wednesday, topped her list of legislative priorities with electoral and campaign finance reform.

"We are finally going to give New Yorkers the honest, functional, ethical government they deserve," she said.

Assembly Speaker Carl E. Heastie also declined to comment on Monday's agenda, saying he did not want to overshadow Stewart-Cousins, who was sworn is as the state's first female Senate majority leader on the session's opening day.

"We are going to do a joint statement pretty soon." Heastie told reporters on Wednesday "I've got to let Andrea celebrate her day."

Advocates who gathered at the Capitol on Wednesday, said were excited about the momentum around electoral reform.

"It's exciting that it's happening and it's a reflection of a very strong demand that the residents of New York State have shown that we shouldn't be the last in voter participation in the nation," said Jonah Minkoff-Zern, campaign director with Public Citizen's Democracy Is For People Campaign.