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Massachusetts voters will see three questions on their ballot when they head inside the polling booths in November 2018.

Bill Galvin, the state's elections chief, assigned the numbers to the ballot questions.

A look at the general election ballot is available here.

Here are the ballot questions:

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QUESTION 1. Patient-nurse limits

A "yes" vote would limit how many patients can be assigned to each nurse in hospitals and other health care facilities across the state.

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QUESTION 2. Election spending

A "yes" vote would allow the creation of a commission to consider amendments to the US Constitution "to establish that corporations do not have the same Constitutional rights as human beings and that campaign contributions and expenditures may be regulated," according to a summary from Galvin's office.

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QUESTION 3. Transgender anti-discrimination

A "yes" vote on this referendum keeps in place a law, passed in 2016 and signed by Gov. Charlie Baker. The law prohibits discrimination of gender identity in places of public accommodation, like retail stores. A "no" vote would repeal the law.

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Secretary of State Bill Galvin (Photo: Gintautas Dumcius/MassLive)

The proponents had to submit the final round of signatures, totaling 10,792, by July 3.

Galvin's office plans to send out a "Information for Voters" booklet, which lays out arguments for and against the ballot questions submitted by proponents and opponents, to Massachusetts residents before the November 2018 election.

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Gov. Charlie Baker signs a bill into law. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

What about the other questions that were going to be on the ballot?

A number of other questions that were initially headed for the 2018 ballot were knocked off through a court decision or legislative action that took them off the table.

The Supreme Judicial Court ruled in June that a constitutional amendment could not be placed on the ballot. The amendment, sometimes called the "Fair Share Amendment" or the "millionaires' tax," would have raised the tax rate on incomes over $1 million. Proponents said it would've brought in $1.9 billion and earmarked it for state education and transportation accounts.

The ruling was a blow to a coalition of left-wing groups, including labor unions and religious organizations, that had been pushing for the ballot question.

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The 'grand bargain'

Proposed ballot questions on the state minimum wage and paid leave, as well as a reduction in the state sales tax, won't be on the ballot due to the so-called "grand bargain" signed into law by Gov. Baker.

The law, passed by state lawmakers in a bid to avoid the proposed ballot questions, increases the minimum wage to $15 from $11, while phasing out time-and-a-half pay and implementing a paid family and medical leave program through a payroll tax.

The law also sets up an annual sales tax holiday starting in 2019.

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Read more:

Nurse staffing ratios: What is the 2018 Massachusetts ballot question all about?

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Opponents of transgender anti-discrimination law launch ballot campaign to repeal it

SJC strikes down 'millionaire's tax' ballot question

What does the minimum wage 'grand bargain' in Massachusetts actually do?