Now that the dust has settled on the 84th Texas Legislature, voters are getting the first official look at which constitutional amendments they will be voting on come November.

Texas Secretary of State Carlos Cascos on Wednesday took the last step to place seven propositions on this fall’s general election ballot, all of which were approved by two-thirds of all state lawmakers during the just-ended session. Per state law, they are chosen randomly in a drawing to assign the order in which each proposition will appear on the Nov. 3 ballot.

All told, they run the gamut of state issues, from the serious to the mundane, and they create a narrative of the session that is not at all inconsistent with what really happened under the Pink Dome.

At the top of the list is the homestead exemption from school property taxes that the Senate and Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick carried through the session. Proposition 1 would increase the exemption amount by $10,000, from $15,000 to $25,000 – underscoring the importance of this session’s often raucous tax cut debate.

Another proposal, sponsored by state Sen. Donna Campbell, R-New Braunfels, would allow statewide elected officeholders to live in areas outside the state capital. The requirement that they reside in Austin has been in the state constitution since legislators and other officials used to travel by horse-drawn carriages, which was the main argument of proponents during the session.

If those seem dull, near the bottom of the list, there is another proposal that got both parties in both chambers talking a bit. Republican lawmakers saw it necessary this session to enshrine “the right of the people to hunt, fish and harvest wildlife subject to law that promote wildlife conservation.” That’s on the list as Proposition 6.

During the debate, supporters said 18 states have added similar protections to their governing documents, prompting one GOP lawmaker to beam with pride.

“By placing this on the November ballot, we have given all Texans the right to pass on our heritage to the coming generations,” Rep. Trent Ashby, R-Lufkin, said.

The only order-of-importance anomaly is Proposition 7 – a proposal that passed in the waning days of the session that would boost the Texas Department of Transportation’s budget for roads. That proposed amendment was part of a larger focus this session on transportation, particularly traffic congestion and road funding. And it’s an effort Gov. Greg Abbott called “historic” at the bills’ signing ceremony.

Overall, the resolution would amend the constitution to allow a portion of revenues from the state sales tax and the motor vehicle tax to be funneled to the State Highway Fund. The move would dedicate about $2.5 billion of sales tax revenue to the fund at the start of 2017.