Thе City of Tulsa regulates the use of public property through a scheme of municipal ordinances. The Association for Community Reform Now (ACORN) challenges the validity of four of these ordinances before this court. These ordinances provide, inter alia:
Tulsa, Okla., Rev. Ordinances tit. 26, § 2 (1985).
It shall be an offense for any person to perform any of the following acts within any public park or other area under the control of the Park and Recreation Board unless the doing of such act is authorized by the said Board or the Park Superintendent.
(a) To give any theatrical entertainment, moving picture show, parade, procession, public gathering or public meeting of any kind, post or display any sign banner, or advertisement upon any tree, post, building or other structure.
Tulsa, Okla., Rev. Ordinances tit. 27, § 511 (1985).
A. It shall be an offense for any person to do any of the following acts upon any public street, highway, alley, public place or upon or to any other property, real, personal or mixed, belonging to the *737 City of Tulsa, regardless of the purpose for which such property was dedicated, acquired or purchased, without the consent of the Board of Commissioners of the City of Tulsa:
2. To take up one’s abode upon said property.
3. To build any structure of any kind upon any of said property.
Tulsa, Okla., Rev. Ordinances tit. 27, § 514 (1985).
It shall be an offense for any person to maintain, erect or permit the erection of any building, hut, hotel, shanty, tent or other structure under his control upon any street, sidewalk, alley or other public grounds.
Tulsa, Okla., Rev. Ordinances tit. 26, § 8 (1985).
No person shall camp, erect a tent, build a fire or park an automobile or other vehicle for the purpose of sleeping therein or under cover projecting therefrom, within any park or other area under the jurisdiction of the Park and Recreation Board, except at such place or places as may be designated and set aside for such purpоses.
ACORN appeals from a district court decision holding each of the ordinances facially constitutional. We affirm the decision holding sections 514 and 8 facially constitutional but reverse the decision holding sections 2 and 511 constitutional.
ACORN is a non-profit organization that seeks to advance the interests of low- and moderate-income people by engaging in various forms of community organization and activity. In the fall of 1982, ACORN planned a series of activities throughout the country to protest policies implemented by the Reagan Administration. The demonstrations were called “Rеagan Ranches” and were reminiscent of “Hoovervilles” of an earlier time. They included public rallies, speeches, assemblies, and the erection of tent cities to protest the Administration’s economic policies. The ACORN organization in Oklahoma planned to hold such an event in Tulsa on October 29 through October 31, the weekend before the November election. Plans for the Reagan Ranch in Tulsa included a symbolic burial service for Reaganomics, a Nancy Reagan fashion show, soup kitchens, a tent city, and a foreclosure of the ranch.
ACORN first planned to conduct its activities on Salvation Army property, but the Salvation Army decided against permitting the assemblies. ACORN then arranged to hold the demonstrations on property owned by a local Catholic church. That arrangement fell through on October 25, four days before the Reagan Ranch activities were to begin. ACORN attributes this denial to comments reportedly made by James In-hofe, the Mayor of Tulsa, to the effect that ACORN would not be able to hold its demonstration anywhere in the city.
On Wednesday, October 27, the organizing director for ACORN in Oklahoma, Jeff Murray, met with the Assistant Park Director of Tulsa, Max Wiens, to request рermission to erect a Reagan Ranch in Springdale Park from October 28 to October 30. Wiens checked with the Park Board’s legal department and showed Murray city ordinances prohibiting the erection of a dwelling or building on public property without the permission of the Tulsa Board of Commissioners and prohibiting the erection of a tent for the purpose of sleeping therein on public property. Wiens suggested that since he could not give ACORN permission to erect tents on public property, Murray should attend an informal Park Board meeting the following day.
At the Thursday meeting, the Park Board infоrmed Murray that only the Tulsa Board of Commissioners had authority to allow ACORN to pitch tents. The Park Board also told Murray that he needed no permit to hold a demonstration if no tents were erected and if park curfews were obeyed. ACORN, however, was told that it was prohibited from posting any banners in the park. Murray asked Hugh McKnight, the Director of Parks and Recreation and a member of the Tulsa Board of Commissioners, to grant ACORN a permit. McKnight said he did not have the authority to grant a permit. The Board of Commissioners *738 met the next day, but ACORN made no request for a permit, apparently because Murray did nоt know the Board was meeting that day. ACORN erected its Reagan Ranch facilities on private property on Friday evening.
In 1983, ACORN sued the city, McKnight, and Inhofe for injunctive relief and damages, challenging the constitutionality of the four Tulsa ordinances. The district court dismissed the action against McKnight and Inhofe on the merits. The court then declined to consider ACORN’s arguments that the ordinances were unconstitutional as applied because ACORN had never asked the Board of Commissioners to grant a permit. The court held that the Tulsa ordinances are facially constitutional under the first and fourteenth amendments.
On appeal, ACORN alleges that the district court erred in holding the ordinances facially constitutional and in refusing to consider the constitutionality of the ordinances as applied. ACORN argues that each of the ordinances 1) vests undue discretion in city officials, 2) is unconstitutionally vague, 3) unduly interferes with protected constitutional activity, and 4) is unconstitutional as applied.
I.
We first consider the threshhold questions raised by the city: whether ACORN has standing to challenge the Tulsa ordinances and whether the challenge is ripe for decision. “Standing doctrine is designed to determine
who
may institute the assertеd claim for relief. Ripeness doctrine addresses a
timing
question:
when
in time is it appropriate for a court to take up the asserted claim.”
Action Alliance of Senior Citizens v. Heckler,
“The term ‘standing’ subsumes a blend of constitutional requirements and prudential considerations....”
Valley Forge Christian College v. Americans United for Separation of Church and State, Inc.,
The prudential limitations on standing have been developed to focus the questions presented for decision in the federal courts.
See, e.g., Secretary of State v. Joseph H. Munson Co.,
In
Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now v. Municipality of Golden, Colo.,
We hold that ACORN has satisfied the constitutional requirements for standing in this case as well. ACORN suffered actual injury as a result of section two
*739
when it was denied permission to post banners in the park. ACORN has not suffered actual injury as a result of the other ordinances, for ACORN never formally requested a permit for its proposed activities as required by section 511, nor did ACORN engage in any activities barred on city property by sections 514 and 8. However, ACORN has suffered a threatened injury from each of the ordinances. It has shown an unmistakable intention to engage in activities that are prohibited by each of the challenged ordinances. The city has demonstrated its resоlve to enforce the ordinances regulating the use of municipal property against ACORN. A plaintiff need not succumb to a criminal prosecution to challenge a statute if “the plaintiff has alleged an intention to engage in a course of conduct arguably affected with a constitutional interest, but proscribed by a statute, and there exists a credible threat of prosecution thereunder.”
Babbitt,
ACORN has also overcome the prudential limitations on standing. We said in
ACORN v. Golden,
In this case ACORN claims that its own First Amendment rights have been and will continue to be infringed by the challenged ordinance. Thus, we believe that there is no prudential reason why the federal courts should not entertain this suit. Other courts hearing challenges to laws requiring a permit before engaging in First Amendment activity have also found that the plaintiffs had standing.
The city argues that this case is not ripe because ACORN never asked the Board of Commissioners for permission to engage in the proposed activities on city property. Whether or not a question is ripe for decision requires an examination of “the fitness of thе issues for judicial decision and the hardship to the parties of withholding court consideration.”
Abbott Laboratories v. Gardner,
In
ACORN v. Golden,
we held that if a plaintiff has standing to bring a facial challenge for injunctive or declaratory relief, “[a]pplying for and being denied a license or an exemption is not a condition precedent to bringing a facial challenge to an unconstitutional law.”
The city relies on
Williamson County Regional Planning Comm. v. Hamilton Bank,
We emphasize, however, that our holding that ACORN has stаnding to challenge these ordinances and that this case is ripe for decision does not expand the substantive issues that we should address beyond those appropriate to a challenge to the facial validity of the ordinances. The standards to be applied in a case involving the application of a regulation, ordinance, or statute to a particular set of facts are quite different from the standards we apply to the general question of the facial constitutionality of these ordinances. In determining the facial validity of a statute or ordinancе the court does not consider any specific type of conduct. Rather, the facial validity of a statute is decided by reference to all of the conduct that is proscribed by the statute. This court must evaluate the constitutionality of each of these ordinances in light of the effect that their provisions have on any use of city property, not those uses apparently intended by ACORN.
II.
Sections 2 and 511 allow certain conduct on city property if a license is obtained from the city. An ordinance that imposes a license requirement in order to engage in communicative conduct must include clear guidelines for the official who decides whether to issue a license. Unfettered discretion in the licensing official raises concerns that a license may be denied for reasons unrelated to the government interest in regulating the conduct,
see Shuttlesworth v. City of Birmingham,
Permissible licensing standards can be found in “the words of the ordinance itself,” “the interpretations the court below has given to analogous statutes,” and “perhaps to some degree, the interpretation of the statute given by those enforcing it.”
Grayned v. City of Rockford,
The Park Board has the authority to allow various acts that are otherwise prohibited on city property by section two. Hugh McKnight, the Park Director, testified concerning his approach to allowing activities in city parks. He testified that in many instances there is no need for a permit, while in other cases a permit is required and is conditioned on other city regulations, such as Health Department sanitatiоn requirements. He said that the Park Board would rely on the advice of its attorney in deciding if a certificate of insurance *741 should be required, but that he was unaware of any guidelines followed by the attorney. McKnight said that a group that wanted to exclude the general public from a city park would need a permit. He said that the use of a bullhorn would be allowed only if it was compatible with the surrounding neighborhood, but that the Park Board would rely primarily on its own judgment in determining whether a use was compatible or not. In regard to ACORN’s proposed activities, McKnight said he was concerned about having an оpen fire and serving food as part of a soup kitchen in a park, but that he would have no problem if a platform was laid on the ground for a speaker to use as a podium. He also testified that the Park Board lacked the authority to allow the erection of tents in the parks.
We hold that the informal interpretations of section two offered by the city do not establish the clear standards required by the first amendment. At best, McKnight’s testimony identified those situations in which a permit would be necessary and those situations in which it would not. Regarding those situations in which a permit would be needed, McKnight exрlained only a few reasons that he has used to grant or deny a permit, and there is no suggestion that those reasons would provide the exclusive standards in deciding whether to issue a permit. In essence, the Park Board relies on its own intuitive judgment; however well exercised, it is an insufficient standard to be applied in determining the permissibility of first amendment activities. Despite ACORN’s contention that Mayor Inhofe intimidated city officials so they would deny a permit for a Reagan Ranch, we have no reason to doubt McKnight’s testimony that he has never denied a permit to a group because of the message the group wanted to convey. But in the absence of clear standards the city retains “the
power
to enforce the ordinance in a manner that favors some viewpoints over others.”
ACORN v. Golden,
The Tulsa Board of Commissioners has the authority to permit the building of a structure on city property pursuant to section 511. The record does not contain any evidence of the standard the Board of Commissioners employs in deciding whether to grant a permit to build a structure. Accordingly, section 511 is unconstitutional because of the unlimited discretion it gives to the Board.
ACORN argues that section 511 is also invalid because the prohibition on the building of any “structure” is unconstitutionally vague. We hold that the term “structure” in this context is not vague.
Compare Juluke v. Hodel,
*742 III.
Section 514 absolutely bans the erection or maintenance of “any building, hut, hotel, shanty, tent or other structure” on city property. ACORN argues that this prohibition is unconstitutional because of its potential application to expressive conduct protected by thе first amendment. The erection of some structures does qualify as expressive conduct within the free speech guarantee of the first amendment.
See Students Against Apartheid Coalition v. O’Neil,
Conduct that is intended and reasonably perceived to convey a message falls within the free speech guarantee of the first amendment.
See, e.g., Clark v. Community for Creative Non-Violence,
ACORN relies on the following test stated in
Clark:
“Symbolic expression of this kind may be forbidden or regulated if the conduct itself may constitutionally be regulated, if the regulation is narrowly drawn to further a substantial governmental interest, and if the interest is unrelated to the suppression of free speech.”
These cases uniformly make clear that the analysis of a facial invalidity challenge differs from the analysis of the constitutionality of the application of an ordinance. Rather than attempting to decide if section 514 could be constitutionally applied to each of the myriad structures that the ordinance could prohibit, we must consider the facial validity of section 514 under a different test: whether the ordinance is substantially overbroad.
Where expressive conduct is involved, “the overbrеadth of a statute must not only be real, but substantial as well, judged in relation to the statute’s plainly legitimate sweep.”
Broadrick v. Oklahoma,
*743
“Substantial overbreadth” is a criterion the Court has invoked to avoid striking down a statute on its face simply because of the possibility that it might be applied in an unconstitutional manner. It is appropriate in cases where, despite some possibly impermissible application, the “ ‘remainder of the statute ... covers a whole range of easily identifiable and constitutionally proscribable ... conduct....’ CSC v. Letter Carriers,413 U.S. 548 , 580-581,93 S.Ct. 2880 , 2897-2898,37 L.Ed.2d 796 (1973).” Parker v. Levy, 417 U.S. [733], at 760, 94 S.Ct. [2547], at 2563 [ (1973) ] [41 L.Ed.2d 439 ]. See also New York v. Ferber,458 U.S. 747 , 770, n. 25,102 S.Ct. 3348 , 3362, [n. 25]73 L.Ed.2d 1113 (1982). In such a case, the Court has required a litigant to demonstrate that the statute “as applied” to him is unconstitutional. Id., at 774,102 S.Ct., at 3364 .
Munson,
In
Finzer v. Barry,
The second situation identified by the court in
Finzer
in which substantial over-breadth occurs is where the government action “was premised on an unsupported assumption that purported to tie its means to its ends.”
Nor is the ordinance substantially overbroad within the meaning of
Broad-rick
and
Munson.
The pоssibility of an impermissible application of a law does not in itself mean the law is substantially over-broad. A statute is substantially over-broad only if the number of applications of the statute to protected conduct is substantial in relation to the number of applications to conduct that has no expressive content.
See Munson,
ACORN, therefore, must demonstrate that section 514 is unconstitutional as applied to its activities.
See Munson,
ACORN also argues that section 514’s absolute ban on the erection of structures on city property in Tulsa is unconstitutionally vague in relation to the provisions in section 511 permitting such structures if a license is first obtained. If the provisions of section 511 are the only basis for finding section 514 vague, our holding that section 511 is unconstitutional eliminates any previously existing conflict and thus moots the vagueness challenge. We therefore hold that section 514 is not unconstitutionally vague.
IV.
Finally, ACORN argues that section eight is unconstitutionally vague because it conflicts with section 514. Section
*745
eight allows camping on city property in designated places while section 514 seems to prohibit camping on any city property. We must attempt to harmonize these sections,
see, e.g., A.H. Robins Co. v. Piccinin,
V.
We reverse the decision of the district court that sections 2 and 511 are constitutional. We affirm the decision of the district court that sections 514 and 8 are constitutional.
Notes
. ACORN also contends that section 511 is unconstitutionally vague because the standards for issuing a permit are not defined. "A law’s vagueness or ambiguity may be responsible for
*742
vesting municipal officials with unguided discretion.”
ACORN
v.
Golden,
. There is an obvious overlap between parts of the
Clark
test and the substantial overbreadth test: both examine the nature of the government’s interest and the means by which the government attempts to satisfy that interest. But the
Clark
requirement that the regulation be narrowly drawn to further a substantial government interest is by definition limitеd to cases involving the application of a regulation to specific expressive conduct.
But see Pursley v. City of Fayetteville,
