The other two ballot questions this year are easy calls: Proposals 2 and 3 offer fine changes to the state Constitution.

On each, a yes is a no-brainer.

Proposal 2 would give judges the right to trim or revoke pensions of elected officials and other public employees if they’re convicted of felonies related to their official positions.

The public overwhelmingly backs this — and has for years. Naturally: When public officials abuse their office to commit crimes, they forfeit any moral claim on the taxpayers for a pension.

It’s clear what took so long to get the proposal before voters: Lawmakers didn’t want to risk losing their pensions even for grotesque abuse.

The taxpayers had already handed millions in pension payments to convicted ex-lawmakers since 2000. But then came the prosecutions of Sheldon Silver and Dean Skelos — the leaders of the state Assembly and Senate when they were nabbed.

Each is now guaranteed nearly $100,000 a year for life — even if their convictions are restored on retrial. That outrage is what finally forced the Legislature to give the public a chance for change.

Proposal 3 would amend the Constitution’s “forever wild” clause to let towns use small parcels of the Adirondacks and Catskills “forest preserve” for vital projects, like laying electric lines, digging wells or eliminating roadway hazards.

In exchange, the state would buy 250 acres of private land to add to the preserve. If towns need more later, the state could buy more.

It’s a sensible idea: In the past, towns have had to work out individual deals and present them, one by one, as ballot proposals making tiny changes to the Constitution — which takes years.

Prop 3 paves the way for vital projects to get done sooner and at lower cost, without shrinking the size of the forest preserve. The only losers are the fixers who profit from the current crazy system.