The 2019-20 state budget is in the books, but state lawmakers still have another three months left in the legislative session.

There’s a lot the spending plan didn’t cover, and in the post-budget session, legislators are on more equal footing with the governor. Here’s what to watch for in the post-budget session:

Marijuana Legalization

The issue remains one of the more complex projects for state lawmakers and Gov. Andrew Cuomo. Originally ticketed to be in the state budget, differences and concerns quickly arose at the start of the year. Cuomo wanted to use some of the revenue to fund mass transit in New York City, part of an overall restructuring of the MTA, but lawmakers in support of the plan also wanted to use money generated by marijuana to aid communities affected by stiffer drug laws. Other lawmakers, primarily suburban legislators, raised concerns over traffic safety associated with marijuana legalization.

There is also a criminal justice component to legalization: Records of those with low-level offenses would be expunged.

Cuomo had sought to create a new bureaucracy for cannabis regulation in New York, a move that would have placed medicinal marijuana, hemp and commercial use under one government roof. Lawmakers rejected that idea.

It’s not yet clear if those differences can be ironed out by the end of June.

Rent Control

Regulations governing rent, primarily in New York City, are due to expire at the end of June. With Democrats in control of both the state Assembly and the state Senate now, the expectation is the proposal for renewing the regulations will be largely pro-tenant. There will likely be a push to end or at least limit vacancy decontrol, a move that Cuomo announced his support for in December.

However, one of the most powerful and well-funded lobbies in Albany is that of real estate interests, represented by the Real Estate Board of New York. Rent control renewal could be a comparatively easy chore given the Democratic composition of the legislature or a heavy lift.

Prevailing Wage

A provision that would have applied the prevailing wage to construction projects with any public funding faltered at the end of the budget talks. Cuomo this week at a press conference hailing the budget’s passage indicated the issue would be brought up again in the post-budget session. Prevailing wage advocates and opponents battled over the measure during the end of March. Construction unions had pushed to have it included; industry trade groups argued it hurt “open shop” firms that are not unionized in New York.

Public Financing of Elections

Wait — didn’t we just do that? The issue will be a dormant one until the commission created in the budget to assess election and campaign finance laws in New York releases its report on December 1. This could lead to the creation of publicly financed campaigns. It could also lead to the end of fusion voting, spelling trouble for entities like the Conservative Party and the Working Families Party. It also could force lawmakers back to Albany in December to make alterations to the report. The holiday season could be a messy one for Albany.

Wild Card

This has been an unusual legislative session given that the first half was front-loaded with legislative activity. Lawmakers passed new gun control measures as well a bill strengthening abortion rights. LGBT legislation was approved, as well as measures designed to close the LLC loophole in state election law. The budget took care of a lot more, including an extension of mayoral control for New York City schools by three years and a permanent cap on property tax increases.

That being said, Cuomo often has something else he may want from lawmakers by the time June rolls around, and that may not be known just yet — not even to him.