OPINION
¶ 1 The Committee for Preservation of Established Neighborhoods (“CPEN”) appeals the superior court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Donna Riffel, the Town Clerk for the Town of Wickenburg, and In-tervеnor Wickenburg Country Club Estates, LLC, (‘WCC”), on CPEN’s special action complaint. CPEN argues that the court erred by ruling as a matter of law that CPEN’s referendum petitions failed to comply with Arizona Rеvised Statutes (“A.R.S.”) section 19-101(A) (2002). For the reasons that follow, we disagree with CPEN and therefore affirm.
BACKGROUND
¶ 2 On April 20, 2006, CPEN filed with the Office of the Wickenburg Town Clerk signed referendum petitions challenging a Wickеn-burg town ordinance that rezoned approximately fifty-four acres of real property. On May 9, after the filing period had expired, Donna Riffel, in her capacity as town clerk, rejected the petitions. Riffel reasoned that the petitions did not comply with the referendum requirements set forth in A.R.S. § 19-101(A) because a description of the measure tо be referred was stapled to the petitions rather than inserted into the petitions.
¶ 3 In May, CPEN filed a special action complaint in the superior court against Riffel in her оfficial capacity. CPEN sought to compel Riffel to place the referendum on the election ballot and requested that the court order Riffel to appear and show cause why the referendum should not be placed on the ballot. Shortly thereafter, CPEN and Riffel filed a stipulation to permit WCC to intervene as a defendant, which the court allowed.
DISCUSSION
¶ 5 CPEN argues that the alleged petition defeсts should not prevent the referendum from going forward because the stapled referendum description and the information describing the ordinance meet the constitutional аnd statutory principles required for referendum petitions. WCC and Riffel counter that the petitions are invalid because referendum proponents are required to strictly comply with constitutional and statutory referendum provisions, and CPEN’s failure to insert the descriptive language into the petitions meant that CPEN did not strictly comply with the requirements set forth in A.R.S. § 19-101(A).
¶ 6 The рarties neither dispute the facts of this case nor disagree that the strictcomplianee standard, which requires nearly perfect compliance with constitutional аnd statutory referendum requirements, is applicable in this ease. W. Devcor, Inc. v. City of Scottsdale,
¶7 At issue is whether CPEN strictly complied with the referendum requirements in A.R.S. § 19-101(A) when it stapled the referendum description tо its petitions. Section 19-101(A) details the form a referendum petition must take and the information about the measure being referred that must be included with the petition. Subsection (A) providеs in relevant part as follows:
The following shall be the form for referring to the people by referendum petition a measure or item, section or part of a measurе enacted by the legislature, or by the legislative body of an incorporated city, town or county:
Referendum Description
(Insert a description of no more than one hundred words of the principаl provisions of the measure sought to be referred.)
Notice: This is only a description of the measure sought to be referred prepared by the sponsor of the measurе. It may not include every provision contained in the measure. Before signing, make sure the title and text of the measure are attached. You have the right to read or exаmine the title and text before signing.
We must initially determine whether attachment of the referendum description to the petitions constitutes an insertion of the description as required by § 19-101(A).
¶ 8 “In interpreting statutes, we look to the plain language as the most reliable indicator of meaning.” Powers v. Carpenter,
¶ 9 We first examine the plain languаge of the statute and will ascribe plain meaning to its language unless the context suggests otherwise. Byers-Watts v. Parker,
¶ 10 Other language in § 19-101(A) supports a conclusion that the descriptive language must be directly inserted into the body of the petition rather than attached to it. J.L.F. v. Ariz. Health Care Cost Containment Sys.,
¶ 11 For all these reasons, we conclude that the superior court correctly ruled that A.R.S. § 19-101(A) requires placement of a refеrendum description directly into the text of petitions.
¶ 12 OPEN acknowledges that it did not type the referendum description on the face of its petitions. Nonetheless, it argues that аbsent allegations that it abused the referendum process or that the stapled description hindered electors’ ability to comprehend the petition, the referendum сan proceed and still satisfy the striet-eomplianee standard. OPEN contends that “[i]f citizens must exercise the right of referendum perfectly, it amounts to no right at all.” Under the circumstаnces, we disagree.
¶ 13 The provisions of section 19-101(A) regarding insertion of the referendum description obviously serve to ensure that petition signers are informed about the doсument they are signing and the measure being referred. By requiring circulators to include a brief description of the referred measure in the petition itself, rather than by stapling it to the front, the legislature ensures that cir-culators cannot abuse the referendum process by later removing the stapled description and attaching a different description to the signatures. See Direct Sellers Ass’n v. McBrayer,
¶ 14 In summary, A.R.S. § 19-101(A) requires referendum proponents to insert a referendum description directly into the text
Notes
. Although the parties raise additional arguments concerning the propriety of the court’s ruling, based on our resolution of this matter on the above-described grounds, we need not address these arguments.
