Arvada City Ordinance No. 3590 prohibits nonresidents of Arvada, Colorado, from circulating initiative, referendum, or recall petitions in the City of Arvada. Arvada appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of four individuals who challenged the Ordinance’s constitutionality. Arvada contends the district court erred in declaring the Ordinance unconstitutional and enjoining its enforcement. Exercising jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we affirm, in part, and reverse, in part.
I. BACKGROUND
Dave Chandler, Robert Prokop, and Cheryl St. John are Arvada residents and *1239 qualified Arvada electors. Daniel Hayes, a registered Colorado elector, is not qualified to vote in Arvada because he is not an Arvada resident. Mr. Hayes, who owns land adjacent to Arvada, is a resident of unincorporated Jefferson County, Colorado. These Plaintiffs have participated in Arvada’s petition process to curb the City’s growth. They plan to promote ordinances which limit the City’s development and to use nonresident circulators to secure the number of signatures necessary to place a measure on the ballot.
Arvada is a home rule municipality under Article XX, § 6 of the Colorado Constitution. As such, Arvada has “plenary authority to regulate matters of local concern.”
City of Commerce City v. State,
On August 30, 1999, following a public hearing, the Arvada City Council passed Resolution No. R 99-187, placing Issue 2B-Arvada Residency Rule on the November 1999 ballot. Issue 2B asked Arvada voters:
SHALL THE CITY OF ARVADA REQUIRE THAT, IN ORDER TO CIRCULATE AN ARVADA INITIATIVE, REFERENDUM, OR RECALL .PETITION, A PERSON MUST BE A RESIDENT OF ARVADA AND QUALIFIED TO VOTE IN ARVADA ELECTIONS?
On November 2, 1999, over eighty-eight percent of the participating Arvada voters answered 2B affirmatively. After 2B’s passage, the Arvada City Council enacted Ordinance No. 3590, amending sections 11-2, 11-24, and 11-25 of the Arvada City Code (Ordinance No. 3590). In pertinent part, the Ordinance provides:
Section 11-2, Definitions.
Circulator means a person who maintains their principal or primary home or place of abode in Arvada as determined by the rules set forth in Section 1-2-102 C.R.S., as amended, who circulates a petition in an attempt to obtain signatures from qualified registered electors.
Section 11-25, Requirement for petition.
Any petition circulated within the city shall be circulated by an Arvada resident and shall be signed by registered electors. Each registered elector shall sign his or her own signature, after which he or she shall print his or her name; place of residence, including house or apartment number, street address, city; and the date of signing the petition. Signatures which do not contain all of the information required by this subsection shall be considered invalid. To each petition shall be attached a notarized affidavit of the circulator, stating the following:
(1) The circulator’s printed name.
(2) The Arvada address of the circulator. The affidavit shall affirmatively state that the circulator is a resident of the City of Arvada. Further the circulator shall provide evidence ver *1240 ifying such residency in a form which is acceptable to the city clerk.
(3) The circulator actually circulated the petition.
(4) Each signature on the petition was affixed in the circulator’s presence.
(5) To the best of the circulator’s knowledge and belief, each person signing the petition was at the time of the signing a registered elector.
(6) The date the circulator signed the affidavit.
(7) The circulator has not and will not in the future pay directly or indirectly any money or other thing of value to any signer for the purpose of inducing or causing such a signer to affix a signature to the petition.
(8) To the best of the circulator’s knowledge and belief, no other person has paid or will pay directly or indirectly any money or thing of value to any signer for the purpose of inducing or causing such signer to affix a signature to the petition.
(9) The circulator accurately represented the text of the ordinance to the signer.
(emphasis added).
Plaintiffs brought suit against Arvada under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, seeking a declaration Ordinance No. 3590 violates the First and Fourteenth Amendments and an injunction prohibiting Arvada from enforcing the Ordinance. The district court issued an unpublished order and memorandum of decision,
Chandler v. City of Arvada,
No. 00-N-0342 (D.Colo. Feb. 8, 2001), finding “Ordinance No. 3590 imposes a severe burden on political speech in Arvada, and, therefore, must be narrowly tailored to protect a compelling municipal interest.” Relying on
Buckley v. Am. Const. Law Found., Inc.,
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review the district court’s summary judgment order de novo, “utilizing the same legal standards employed by the district court.”
McGowan v. All Star Maint., Inc.,
III. DISCUSSION
A.
The First Amendment, made applicable to the states via the Fourteenth Amendment,
Gitlow v. New York,
Plaintiffs in this case, like the initiative proponents in
Meyer,
“seek by petition to achieve political change in Colorado; their right freely to engage in discussions concerning the need for change is guarded by the First Amendment.”
Petition circulators are akin to handbill distributors in that each seeks to garner public support for his/her viewpoint.
Am. Const. Law Found., Inc. v. Meyer,
Our analysis of election-related legislation “turn[s] in large measure on whether the regulation at issue is subject to a balancing test or strict scrutiny.”
Citizens for Responsible Gov’t State Political Action Comm. v. Davidson,
Strict scrutiny demands state regulations “impos[ing] ‘severe burdens’ on Speech ... be narrowly tailored to serve a compelling state interest.”
ACLF,
This case, therefore, turns on whether Ordinance No. 3590 is narrowly tailored.
2
Because we think Ordinance No. 3590 is not narrowly tailored to serve Arvada’s compelling interest, but for different reasons than those articulated by the district court, we note at the outset “[w]e are free to affirm a district court decision on any grounds for which there is a record sufficient to permit conclusions of law, even grounds not relied upon by the district court.”
Smith v. Plati,
“Predictability of decisions [in the election law arena] is certainly important, but unfortunately there is no bright line separating severe from lesser burdens.”
ACLF,
Arvada asserts Ordinance No. 3590 is narrowly tailored to prevent fraud, malfeasance, and corruption in municipal elections within the City. The Ordinance is constitutional in the eyes of Arvada because, without it, the Arvada City Clerk has no authority to subpoena nonresidents for a petition protest hearing; and, therefore, Arvada cannot adequately regulate nonresidents to prevent them from improperly influencing the City’s elections. 4
*1243 The petition protest hearing, according to Arvada, is an administrative procedure that is essential to policing the integrity of the petition process. One may challenge, for example, inaccurate, incomplete or illegible names, addresses, dates or signatures; failure of the circulator to include all the necessary information in the circu-lator’s affidavit; or failure to have the circulator affidavit notarized. If an Arva-da citizen files a protest to the sufficiency of a petition, the Arvada City Clerk “or his/her designee,” must conduct a protest hearing to determine the petition’s sufficiency. Arvada, Colo., Code §§ 11-27, 11-28. Arvada insists the hearing officer will often need the petition circulator’s testimony at a petition protest hearing because many matters are solely within a circulator’s “sphere of knowledge,” for example,
the date of the circulator’s signature, the circulator’s belief that signers were registered voters at the time of signing, whether the circulator who signed was the individual who actually circulated the petition, the circulator’s belief that no person paid the signers to sign, and the number of signatures on the petition when it was transmitted to the petitioner’s committee.
Plaintiffs counter that Arvada possesses adequate authority to protect the integrity of its petition process without the Ordinance’s absolute ban on nonresident petition circulators. To support their contention, Plaintiffs cite the Arvada City Code, various state statutes, and argue, relying on
Citizens Against Rent Control/Coalition for Fair Hous. v. City of Berkeley,
Plaintiffs also direct our attention to Arvada’s Resolution No. R 99-187, placing Issue 2B on the November 1999 ballot. The preamble to that resolution stated, “in 1998 a citizen initiated charter amendment petition was circulated and 82% of the signatures collected were by circulators who lived outside the City of Arvada.” While this statement cannot illustrate Ar-vada’s petition process generally, the practical effect of Ordinance No. 3590 is to reduce the pool of eligible petition circula-tors and limit political conversation and association. Arvada’s prohibition on nonresident petition circulators, then, is similar in effect to the requirement petition circulators be registered voters, found unconstitutional in
ACLF.
The requirement circulators be registered “decreases the pool of potential circulators as certainly as that pool is decreased by the prohibition of payment to circulators,” held unconstitutional in
Meyer. ACLF,
Our examination of the record reveals no evidence Ordinance No. 3590 is vital to ensuring the integrity of Arvada’s petition process. In response to a question by the panel at oral argument, counsel for Arvada said, “there is certainly no evidence that
based on past experience
this [Ordinance No. 3590] is necessary.” Nevertheless, we construe all inferences in favor of Arvada and therefore defer to the City’s contention the power to subpoena nonresidents is essential.
See Pirkheim,
B.
Although the Supreme Court in
ACLF
did not decide whether a state residency requirement for petition circulators offends the First and Fourteenth Amendments, Plaintiffs submit the Court’s opinion suggests such a requirement would be upheld.
See ACLF,
Relying on
Jaeger,
nonresidents remain free to contribute to campaigns supporting or opposing an initiated measure, to advocate for the passage or defeat of an Arvada initiative or referendum as they see fit, to give their support and assistance in the petition process (save for acting as circula-tors), and to coordinate, organize, train and even accompany the circulators.
In light of
Meyer,
we are not persuaded by Arvada’s argument. In
Meyer,
the Court observed: “[t]hat appellees remain free to employ other means to disseminate their ideas does not take their speech through petition circulators outside the bounds of First Amendment protection.”
C.
Invalid portions of an ordinance may be severable.
Essence, Inc. v. City of Federal Heights,
*1245 As a general rule, if a[n] ... ordinance is constitutional in one part and unconstitutional in another, the constitutional provision may be sustained and the unconstitutional stricken.... Whether unconstitutional provisions are excised from an otherwise sound law depends on two factors: (1) the autonomy of the portions remaining after the defective provisions have been deleted and (2) the intent of the enacting legislative body.
City of Lakewood,
Sec. 1-7. Severability of parts of Code.
It is hereby declared to be the intention of the city council that the sections, paragraphs, sentences, clauses and phrases of this Code and of any other ordinance of the city are severable, and if any phrase, clause, sentence, paragraph or section of this Code or of any other ordinance of the city shall be declared unconstitutional or invalid ... such unconstitutionality or invalidity shall not affect any of the remaining phrases, clauses, sentences, paragraphs and sections of this Code or other ordinance of the city....
Arvada, Colo., Code § 1-7. We reflect on the general rule of severability because Ordinance No. 3590 amended sections 11-2, 11-24, and 11-25 of the Arvada City Code. Section 11-24 reads:
Sec. 11-24. Ballot title and submission clause.
(2) If any person submitting a petition claims that the ballot title and submission clause do not fairly express the intent and meaning of the proposed measure, such person shall file a request for an administrative hearing with the city clerk not later than three business days after the ballot title and submission clause are fixed by the city clerk. The city clerk or designee shall appoint a hearing officer. An administrative hearing on the ballot title and submission clause shall be held within seven business days from the date of the request for hearing. If the hearing officer finds that the ballot title and submission clause fairly express the intent and meaning of the proposed measure, the person aggrieved by such decision may appeal such decision to the district court as set forth in the Colorado Rules of Civil Procedure.
Arvada, Colo., Code § 11-24. The district court struck down Ordinance No. 3590 in its entirety. Section 11-24, however, does not offend the First Amendment, can stand on its own after sections 11-2 and 11-25 are stricken, and is therefore sustained.
IV. CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM the district court’s holding unconstitutional Arvada City Code sections 11-2 and 11-25, as amended by Ordinance No. 3590. To the extent the court found the amendment of section 11-24 unconstitutional, we REVERSE.
Notes
. Our review of Ordinance No. 3590 requires us to keep in mind Colorado's express reservation of the power of initiative and referendum to the people of the State of Colorado, Colo. Const, art. V, § 1(1), and further, to the registered electors of every city and municipality. Colo. Const, art. V, § 1(9).
.
Ward v. Rock Against Racism,
. In both
Buckley v. Am. Const. Law Found., Inc.,
. The district court's principal reliance on Arvada, Colo., Code § 11-28, to hold the Ar-vada City Clerk may "enforce subpoenas 'ex-traterritorially' through Colorado district courts” is misplaced. Section 11-28 purports to provide the City Clerk with power to enforce subpoenas beyond Arvada's borders via Colorado's district courts.
See
§ ll-28(a) ("Upon failure of any witness to obey the subpoena, the hearing officer may petition the [state] district court for an order compelling the witness to appear and testify or produce documentary evidence.”). Colorado law, however, does not permit Arvada to create jurisdiction in a state district court, absent a grant of jurisdiction in the Colorado Constitution or Colorado Statutes.
Cf.
Colo.Rev.Stat. § 31-2-223 (granting state district court jurisdiction to enforce subpoenas issued by hearing officers in protest hearings relating to initiatives to adopt, amend, or repeal a city charter).
See also City & County of Denver v. Bridwell,
