Five citizen-initiated election petitions were filed Monday with the Colorado secretary of state’s office by the deadline, bringing to 11 the number of statewide measures that could appear on the November general-election ballot.

Two initiatives delivered Monday — 98 and 140 — deal with the ability of unaffiliated voters to cast ballots in a primary election, the latter initiative specifically dealing with presidential primaries, which it looks to set each March.

Two others — 75 and 78 — focus on laws and regulations around hydraulic fracturing for oil and natural gas. The former deals with local control over a number of oil-and-gas issues, while the latter would require mandatory setbacks for any new development near areas such as schools, homes, playgrounds and drinking water sources.

Initiative 143 proposes a $1.75-per-pack tax increase on cigarettes and a 22-percent hike on other tobacco products to raise state revenues for health-related programs.

These and three other initiatives that have been filed await signature review before they can move to the next stage of verification.

Initiative 96, to make it more difficult to amend the state’s constitution, was turned in last week, a day after Initiative 145 — the right-to-die from a legally obtained prescription — was delivered. Initiative 101, to raise the minimum wage to $12 an hour, was handed in last month.

The office will conduct a 5 percent random sample of submitted signatures to determine whether the proposals meet the threshold to make the ballot. To get on the ballot, proponents need to submit 98,492 valid voter signatures — 5 percent of the total votes cast for all candidates for Colorado Secretary of State in the last general election.

The office has until Sept. 7 to announce whether a proposal has made the ballot.

One citizen-led proposal, Initiative 69, known as “ColoradoCare,” has been validated for the ballot. The General Assembly referred Amendment T, regarding servitude, and Amendment U, regarding property taxes, to voters statewide.

Additionally, the Denver Metro Scientific and Cultural Facilities Board put Ballot Issue 4B, a sales-and-use tax measure, on ballots in Adams, Arapahoe, Broomfield, Boulder, Denver, Douglas (except Castle Rock and Larkspur) and Jefferson counties.