Colorado voters will be asked in November to decide whether or not to legalize psychedelic mushrooms and healing centers where they can be administered to the public. Initiative 58, known as the Natural Medicine Health Act, has qualified for the Nov. 8 general election ballot, the Colorado Secretary of State’s Office announced Thursday. “After reviewing a 5% random sample of the submitted signatures, the Elections Division of the Secretary of State’s Office projected the number of valid signatures to be 138,760, greater than 110% of the total number of signatures required for placement on the ballot,” a statement said. If it passes, the Natural Medicine Health Act would effectively set the stage for a legal mushroom market by tasking Colorado regulators with creating rules around the cultivation, manufacturing, testing, transport, sales and purchase of psilocybin and psilocin.