Got Questions?
Everything you need to know about the campaign, SRP elections, and how you can help.
SRP uses a land-based voting system established in 1903. To vote, you must own land within the SRP service area that has water rights—or be a registered voter living on such property. This excludes most renters and many homeowners.
Use SRP's official tool to check if you're eligible: Find Your District
The SRP Council election is April 7, 2026. SRP elections happen every two years, with different districts on the ballot each cycle.
SRP's voting system gives more votes to people who own more land. One acre = one vote. Large landowners and corporations can accumulate significant voting power, while most residents—especially renters—have no voice at all.
Even if you can't vote, you can make a huge difference:
SRP Council has three seats representing District 6. One new voice can be outvoted. Two voices working together can actually shift policy. John and Sara are running as a team because that's how change happens—through coordinated effort, shared preparation, and mutual support. They're partners at home, and they'll be partners in fighting for ratepayers.
We're running as independent ratepayer advocates. SRP elections are non-partisan, and we think that's how it should be. High energy bills don't care about your party registration. Neither does your ability to go solar, or whether your water supply is sustainable.
Our focus is simple: represent the people who pay the bills, not the special interests who profit from them.
We're funded by small donations from District 6 neighbors and ratepayers—people like you. We're not backed by utility PACs, corporate interests, or large industrial users. That independence is exactly why we can ask the hard questions that incumbents won't.
A lot. The SRP Council sets electric rates, approves infrastructure investments, decides water allocation policy, and determines how the utility treats solar customers. Unlike APS (which is regulated by the Arizona Corporation Commission), SRP has no external oversight. The elected board IS the oversight. That's why these elections matter so much.
SRP makes money selling electricity. When you generate your own power, you buy less from them. Their response has been to impose fees and demand charges that make solar less economical—even in one of the sunniest places on Earth. We believe Arizona should be leading the nation in solar adoption, not discouraging it.
APS is a for-profit utility regulated by the Arizona Corporation Commission—an elected body that reviews rate requests and holds hearings. SRP is a quasi-governmental entity with its own elected board and no external regulator. Your APS neighbors have state officials reviewing utility decisions. SRP customers have only the board—which is why who sits on that board matters so much.
Sign up on our volunteer form and let us know what you're interested in: door knocking, phone banking, hosting an event, sharing on social media, or displaying a yard sign. We'll follow up within 48 hours with next steps.
Visit our donation page. Every dollar helps—$25 prints 100 flyers, $50 buys 10 yard signs. Contributions are not tax-deductible. Arizona law requires reporting contributor name, address, occupation, and employer for donations of $50+.
Fill out the volunteer form and check the "Host yard sign" option. We'll coordinate delivery or pickup once signs are available.
We'd love to hear from you. Reach out and we'll get back to you as soon as we can.
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