They’re making a tokin’ effort.

With state lawmakers deadlocked on legalizing recreational marijuana during the last scheduled day of the session in Albany, legislators on Wednesday renewed a push for decriminalization instead.

“I think the decriminalization bill is still under consideration in a variety of different directions,” legal-pot supporter state Sen. Liz Krueger said on Wednesday.

Sources say even that measure — which reduces monetary penalties, expunges certain marijuana-related arrests and changes the Department of Health’s definition of “smoking” — faces an uncertain future in the Senate.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo urged lawmakers to pass the proposal on Wednesday.

“I understand the desire to end session today as planned, and will give the legislature a message of necessity to expedite passage if required,” Cuomo said in a statement.

State bills and amendments require three days to “age” before a vote can be held — giving lawmakers time to familiarize themselves with new measures. Cuomo’s “message of necessity” allows pols to amend the measure as needed and put it to a vote Wednesday without waiting for the bill to mature for three days.

Officials first tried to adopt legalization in the recent budget, but kicked the can down the road after reaching an impasse. Then they took the legislative route, but got stuck in the weeds over technical details about which jurisdictions could opt out.

Meanwhile, suburban reps threw water on the fire by raising concerns over “high driving.”

Krueger on Tuesday admitted the effort had gone up in smoke and laid partial blame on Cuomo for waffling in support of the proposal

“It’s a combination of we ran out of time, [and] the governor was very inconsistent with whether he wanted it or not and what he wanted,” she said. “And because we couldn’t actually lay out a final ‘This is what everybody thinks we agree to,’ it’s hard to sincerely get a vote count.”

She tweeted Wednesday morning that the legalization bill’s failure was “only a delay.”

The session is slated to end Wednesday, but legislators have said they could stay as late as Friday to push decriminalization through.