Lead Opinion
Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge RANDOLPH.
Dissenting opinion filed by Circuit Judge WALD, in which Circuit Judge TATEL joins and Circuit Judge ROGERS joins as to Parts II and III.
Opinion dissenting in part filed by Chief Judge EDWARDS.
Opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part filed by Circuit Judge ROGERS.
This case is here on petitions for review of two orders of the Federal Communications Commission implementing section 10 of the Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992, Pub.L. No. 102-385, 106 Stat. 1460, 1486 (to be codified at 47 U.S.C. §§ 531, 532(h), 532(j), & 558). Petitioners are five organizations, some of whose members produce programming for cable “access” channels; an individual “access” programmer; and two other groups whose members watch cable television. The case was argued first to a panel of the court, which remanded it to the Commission on the grounds that sections 10(a) and 10(c) violated the freedom of speech clause of the First Amendment to the Constitution and that section 10(b), and the Commission’s regulations thereunder, posed such serious constitutional questions that the Commission ought to reconsider the matter in light of the unconstitutionality of sections 10(a) and 10(e). Alliance for Community Media v. FCC,
I
The Commission gradually began asserting jurisdiction over a form of cable television— community antenna television systems — in the early 1960’s. Through that decade and into the next, the pace of regulation intensified. By 1980, however, the trend had reversed itself. The cable industry experienced substantial federal deregulation, driven in no small measure by the Supreme Court’s decision in FCC v. Midwest Video Corp.,
The Cable Communications Policy Act of 1984 revived much of the agency-created system struck down five years earlier in Midwest Video. The 1984 Act compelled cable operators of systems with more than thirty-six channels to set aside between 10 and 15 percent of their channels for commercial use by persons unaffiliated with the operator. 47 U.S.C. § 532(b). On these “leased access” channels, the statute forbade the operator from exercising “any editorial control over” the programming, “except that an operator may consider such content to the minimum extent necessary to establish a reasonable price” for the use of the channel. 47 U.S.C. § 532(e)(2). In return, the 1984 Act exempted operators from criminal and civil liability arising from programs carried on leased access channels. 47 U.S.C. § 558 (amended 1992). While thus removing the operators’ control over and legal responsibility for leased access programming, the 1984 Act empowered local franchising authorities to bar or regulate such programming if, in the authority’s judgment, it “is obscene, or is in conflict with community standards in that it is lewd, lascivious, filthy, or indecent or is otherwise unprotected by the Constitution of the United States.” 47 U.S.C. § 532(h).
In “order to restrict the viewing of programming which is obscene or indecent, upon the request of a subscriber,” section 544(d)(2) required cable operators to provide equipment — commonly known as a “lockbox” — enabling the subscriber to block a channel during particular periods. 47 U.S.C. § 544(d).
In 1992, for reasons we describe below, see infra p. 117, Congress decided that revisions were needed in the 1984 Act’s treatment of leased access and PEG access channels. Section 10 of the Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992, which is set forth in the margin,
In early 1993, the Commission released two Reports and Orders adopting regulations to implement section 10. In the first, the Commission issued regulations implementing sections 10(a) and 10(b), the provisions applying to leased access channels. The Commission defined “indecent” programming in terms nearly identical to those contained in the statute: “programming that describes or depicts sexual or excretory activities or organs in a patently offensive manner as measured by contemporary community standards for the cable medium.” Implementation of Section 10 of the Cable Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992, 58 Fed.Reg. 7990, 7993 (1993) (to be codified at 47 C.F.R. § 76.701(g)). Leased access programmers were required to inform the cable operator which, if any, of their programs fell into that category. Id. (to be codified at 47 C.F.R. § 76.701(d)). Mirroring the statute, the regulations authorized private cable operators to refuse to carry indecent programming on leased access channels; or, if they decided to do so, to segregate that material on a blocked channel. Id. (to be codified at 47 C.F.R. § 76.701(a)). A cable operator must satisfy a subscriber’s written request to receive a blocked channel within thirty days. Id. (to be codified at 47 C.F.R. § 76.701(c)).
The Commission’s second Report and Order contained regulations implementing section 10(c), which applies to PEG access channels. These regulations authorized cable operators to prohibit programming on PEG access channels if it “contains obscene material, indecent material ..., or material soliciting or promoting unlawful conduct.”
II
A
Obscenity has no constitutional protection, and the government may ban it outright in certain media, or in all. R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul, — U.S. -, -,
So far as sections 10(a) and 10(c) and the corresponding regulations are concerned, the ease therefore turns on the presence or absence of “state action.” The First Amendment’s command that “Congress shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press” restricts only the government. It does not control private conduct. Before one may determine whether actions taken by cable operators with respect to indecent programming on leased and PEG access channels comport with the First Amendment, one must decide whether those actions may be attributed to the government.
Petitioners initially deny that the case presents any serious state action problem: Congress enacted section 10(a) and section 10(c), and a federal agency issued regulations putting the provisions into effect; these were official actions of the government; hence state action exists. Matters are not quite so simple, however. If the government had commanded a particular result, if it had ordered cable operators to ban all indecent programs on access channels, the operators’ compliance would plainly be attributable to the government. See Action for Children’s Television v. FCC,
The question remains whether section 10 and the regulations establish a “sufficiently close nexus” between the government and cable operators regarding indecent programming on access channels so that state action is present. Jackson v. Metropolitan
The question naturally arises — less indecent programming as compared to what? The status quo ante? If the state of affairs under the 1984 Act were the baseline from which to measure, as petitioners assume without stating why, their assessment of section 10’s impact might be accurate. The 1984 Act did not permit cable operators to decline indecent programming on access channels; after the 1992 amendment, they had that option. But what of the period before 1984? The Supreme Court’s 1979 decision in Midwest Video relieved cable operators of the obligation, then imposed by regulation, to provide leased access and PEG access channels. Under those early regulations, operators were required — with respect to both types of access channels — to establish rules prohibiting the “presentation of ... obscene and indecent matter.” 47 C.F.R. § 76.256(d)(1) — (2) (1976); see Midwest Video,
This, we believe, places in the proper perspective petitioners’ charge that section 10 of the 1992 Act “establishes” a “procedural scheme of private censorship.” Brief for Petitioners at 20, 27. If “censorship” is understood as editorial control, petitioners are partly correct, but their description does not translate into state action. The 1984 Act also initiated what may be described as a system of “private censorship.” From 1984 until 1992, Congress gave private parties in charge of programming on leased access channels complete control, free from any operators’ oversight, regarding what the cable television audience could see on these channels. During that eight-year period, programmers were the ones exercising control over the content of access programming. In petitioners’ terms, they were the ones acting as “private censors.” When the 1992 Act gave cable operators the option of vetoing decisions of access programmers to televise indecent programs, it simply adjusted editorial authority between two private groups.
As we see it, therefore, petitioners have merely discovered an inherent characteristic of cable systems: the more discretion a cable operator has over what will appear on its system, the less discretion resides in those who have been given access to the operator’s system (and vice versa). To suppose that whenever Congress restores to cable operators editorial discretion an earlier statute had removed, the operators’ exercise of this discretion becomes state action subject to the First Amendment, not only would disable the legislature from correcting what it perceives as mistakes in legislation, but also would deter it from experimenting with new methods of regulating. No analogous state action decision of the Supreme Court—including Reitman v. Mulkey,
Reitman may have leapt to mind because it too involved legislation modifying statutory restrictions on private parties. But not much can be made of the case for our purposes, certainly not nearly as much as the original panel made of it. Petitioners seem to share our judgment. Reitman is cited but once in their in banc briefs, and then only in a footnote to support the notion that it embodies a state action standard no different than Blum v. Yaretsky, which we will discuss more fully in a moment. Brief for Petitioners at 32 n. 16. Reitman began as a suit between private parties, with the plaintiffs claiming they had been denied an apartment on the basis of their race in violation of a state housing law. In 1964, while the suit was pending, California voters approved Proposition 14, a state constitutional amendment (Art. I, § 26) prohibiting the state or any subdivision or agency thereof from denying or limiting the right of any person to sell, lease or rent his real property to any “persons as he, in his absolute discretion, chooses.”
This has long been the accepted understanding of Reitman. See, e.g., David P. CuRRiE, The Constitution in the Supreme Court 420 (1990); LaureNCE H. Tribe, AMERICAN Constitutional Law 1700 (2d ed. 1988); Charles L. Black, Jr., The Supreme Court, 1966 Term — Foreword: “State Action,” Equal Protection, and California’s Proposition Ik, 81 Harv.L.Rev. 69, 75, 82 (1967); Robert J. Glennon, Jr. & John E. Nowak, A Functional Analysis of the Fourteenth Amendment “State Action” Requirement, 1976 Sup.Ct.Rev. 221, 247; Kenneth L. Karst & Harold W. Horowitz, Reitman v. Mulkey: A Telophase of Substantive Equal Protection, 1967 Sup.Ct.Rev. 39, 51.
Apparently recognizing this, petitioners invoke not Reitman, but the statement in Blum v. Yaretsky,
The “coercive power” element in the Blum formulation has no application here for reasons already suggested. Rather than coerce cable operators, section 10 gives them a choice.
As to the remaining portion of the Blum formula, petitioners offer three ways in which section 10 “has provided such significant encouragement” to cable operators not to carry indecent programming on their PEG and leased access channels that state action must be found. The first borrows from the original panel opinion’s assertion “that the immediate objective of the 1992 Act is to suppress indecent material and limit its transmission on access channels” and that “the government wishes to suppress” such material on access channels. Alliance for Community Media,
“The problem,” Senator Helms stated during the floor debate, “is that cable companies are required by law to carry, on leased access channels, any and every program that comes along,” including programs that consist of a wide variety of highly indecent material. 138 CoNG.Rec. S646 (daily ed. Jan. 30, 1992). The Senator described leased access programming in New York City that “depicts men and women stripping completely nude”; another featuring people performing oral sex; a channel with ads promoting “incest, bestiality, [and] even rape”; and a channel in Puerto Rico carrying the Playboy Channel. Id. As he also pointed out, leased access channels are “not pay channels, they are often in the basic cable package.” Id. Senator Thurmond mentioned leased access channels with “numerous sex shows and X-rated previews of hard-core homosexual films,” as well as channels with ads for phone lines letting listeners eavesdrop on acts of incest. Id. at S648. PEG channels were also being used, for example, “to basically solicit prostitution through easily discernible shams such as escort services, fantasy parties, where live participants, through two-way conversation through the telephone ... [solicit] illegal activities.” Id. at S649 (statement of Sen. Fowler); see also id. at S650 (statement of Sen. Wirth) (agreeing that public access “clearly ... has ... been abused”).
Before the Commission, many commenters recognized that indecent programs had been transmitted on cable access channels, both leased and PEG. Time Warner Entertainment informed the Commission that its New York City cable subsidiary carries a leased access program (“Midnight Blue”) which “in-elude[s] excerpts from sexually explicit video cassettes and films showing in graphic detail intercourse, masturbation and other sex acts,” and which advertises “sex-oriented products and services, such as ‘escort services,’ ‘dial-a-porn’ telephone lines and Screw Magazine (‘Midnight Blue’s’ print counterpart).” Comments of Time Warner Entertainment Co., L.P., at 3 (Dec. 7, 1992). The company reported that its leased access channel on which Midnight Blue appears is “usually fully booked with sexually explicit programming” every day “from 10:00 p.m. to 4:30 a.m.,” and “the demand for additional time remains high.” Id. The record before the Commission showed that indecent programming was also a problem on PEG channels. For example, the Commission was informed that programming transmitted over the public access channel serving the City of Tampa, Florida, included “visual depiction[s] of male and female nudity ... simulated sexual activity, and/or sexually related physical contact between performers and audience members.” Comments of City of Tampa, at 2 (Dec. 7, 1992). A Tampa viewer described turning on her local public access channel in prime time and seeing “[t]otally nude women ... squatting and gyrating so that their genitals were in full view,” and “a tape of a totally naked man dancing and screaming obscenities.” Comments of Virginia B. Bo-gue, at 1 (Dec. 4,1992). And one large cable operator noted that a public access channel
Congress could consider itself accountable for the appearance of these and other such programs. The 1984 Act made them possible by compelling cable operators to set aside leased access channels and, at the franchising authorities’ direction, PEG access channels, and by barring the operators from exercising any editorial judgment over what would be shown there. Whatever may be said in support of indecent programming on access channels,
We have no doubt that among the Members of Congress who voted for the 1992 Act there are those who would applaud any cable operator’s decision not to carry indecent programming on access channels, or for that matter, on any channel. Even if we equated the view of some Members with the view of a majority, and even if we pretended that their preferences had somehow manifested themselves in statutory language, this still would not be sufficient to transform a particular operator’s decision not to carry indecent programs on its access channels into a decision of the United States. “Mere approval of or acquiescence in the initiatives of a private party,” Blum reminds us, cannot “justify holding the State responsible for those initiatives,”
Nor does state action result simply because legislation “encourages” the private initiative in the sense of making it possible.
The second way in which section 10 satisfies the Blum formulation, according to petitioners, is by creating “financial incentives” for operators not to carry indecent programming. The idea is that rather than incurring the costs associated with section 10(b)’s requirements, cable operators will opt for the less expensive alternative of simply banning indecent programming from leased access channels.
Restricting indecent programming on leased access channels to a single channel and scrambling such programming to prevent reception unless the subscriber has affirmatively requested access will impose significant costs on the cable operator. If operators are not permitted to recover these costs in full, they will be forced, as a practical matter, to adopt instead a policy prohibiting all such programming. The single channel requirement would thereby be converted into a de facto ban.
Comments of Continental Cablevisions, Inc., at 10 (Dec. 7, 1992). One notices immediately the significant condition in the comment— “If operators are not permitted to recover these costs in full....” Nothing in section 10 specifies that the costs associated with segregation and blocking must be borne by cable operators, and the Commission has yet to consider the matter. The Commission has determined to take up this and related issues in its cable rate regulation proceeding upon the final resolution of this litigation. First Report and Order, 8 F.C.C.R. 998, 1003 ¶ 32 n. 29 (1993); In the Matter of Implementation of Sections of the Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992, Rate Regulation, 8 F.C.C.R. 5631, 5943 ¶502 n. 1293 (1993). The situation might well be different if the Commission were to adopt a policy that created a significant economic disincentive for operators to segregate and block indecent programming.
Judge Wald, in her dissent, also predicts that because section 10(b)’s segregation-and-bloeking arrangement is “technically and administratively cumbersome,” operators will choose to ban indecent speech. Dissent at 133. Hence, there is “state action” with respect to section 10(a) and leased access channels.
Time Warner’s request, which the Commission granted, to allow operators “to provide an additional blocked leased channel for indecent programming if the first channel becomes full,” is at odds with petitioners’ and Judge Wald’s prediction that the cost of implementing section 10(b) will force operators to ban indecent programming altogether. First Report and Order, 8 F.C.C.R. at 1009 ¶ 66. Even smaller cable systems were worried about their blocked leased access channels filling up, a concern that makes sense only if they anticipated carrying indecent programming. The burden was on petitioners, as the complaining parties, to show that because of section 10(b), the decisions of operators not to carry this material on leased access channels may be laid at the feet of the government. Blum,
Petitioners’ third way of establishing state action relies on section 10(d) of the 1992 Act, the provision removing the civil and criminal immunity of cable operators for obscene programming carried on their access channels.
B
Petitioners think that by calling leased access and PEG channels “public forums” they may avoid the state action problem and invoke the line of First Amendment decisions restricting governmental control of speakers because of the location of their speech. But a “public forum,” or even a “nonpublic forum,” in First Amendment parlance is government property. It is not, for instance, a bulletin board in a supermarket, devoted to the public’s use, or a page in a newspaper reserved for readers to exchange messages, or a privately owned and operated computer network available to all those willing to pay the subscription fee. The Supreme Court uses the “public forum” designation, or lack thereof, to judge “restrictions that the government seeks to place on the use of its property.” International Soc’y for Krishna Consciousness v. Lee, — U.S. -, -,
Petitioners nevertheless insist that even private property may sometimes be considered a “public forum” for First Amendment analysis. For this proposition they rest upon the italicized portion of the following statement in Cornelius v. NAACP Legal Defense & Educ. Fund,
Given the holdings of Hudgens and Lloyd, the dictum in Cornelius cannot serve as a basis for resurrecting this rejected doctrine. And it cannot support a determination that cable access channels are so dedicated to the public that the First Amendment confers a right on the users to be free from any control by the owner of the cable system. In saying this, we recognize that unlike our examples of supermarket bulletin boards and private computer networks, the government — in the 1984 Act — compelled cable operators to provide leased access and, if the franchising authorities so demand, PEG access channels. This had the effect, as the Commission found in its First Report and Order in this case, 8 F.C.C.R. at 1001-02 ¶ 22, and as the Supreme Court had anticipated in Midwest Video,
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Because we find no state action here and because that essential element cannot be supplied by treating access channels as public forums, we do not reach petitioners’ First Amendment attack on sections 10(a) and 10(c).
Ill
We turn now to section 10(b) of the 1992 Act. The provision applies to cable operators who decide to carry indecent programming on leased access channels. As implemented by the Commission’s regulations, section 10(b) directs these operators to segregate leased access programming “identified by program providers as indecent” on a particular leased channel (or channels, if more than one is needed) “available to subscribers only with their prior written consent....” Implementation of Section 10 of the Cable Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992, 58 Fed.Reg. 7990, 7993 (1993) (to be codified at 47 C.F.R. § 76.701(b)). Upon receipt of a subscriber’s “written request for access to the programming that includes a statement that the requesting subscriber is at least eighteen years old,” the operator must make the programming available within thirty days. Id. Petitioners detect four constitutional infirmities in this scheme: (1) section 10(b) is not the least restrictive means of achieving the government’s interest; (2) it impermissibly discriminates against indecent programming on leased access channels; (3) it constitutes an invalid prior restraint; and (4) it is unconstitutionally vague.
“All questions of government are ultimately questions of ends and means.” National Fed’n of Fed. Employees v. Greenberg,
In deciding this issue, it is essential to begin by comparing FCC v. Pacifica Foundation,
From Pacifica and Sable, we distill two principles applicable to this case. First, the constitutionality of indecency regulation in a given medium turns, in part, on the medium’s characteristics. Second, in fashioning such regulation, the government must strive to accommodate at least two competing interests: the interest in limiting children’s exposure to indecency and the interest of adults in having access to such material. As to the first, it is apparent that leased access programming has far more in common with the radio broadcast in Pacifica than with the telephone communication in Sable. Nearly fifty-six million households, more than sixty percent of all households with televisions, subscribe to cable service. H.R. Conf.Rep. No. 862,102d Cong., 2d Sess. 56 (1992), U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1992,1133. Most cable subscribers do not or cannot use antennas to receive broadcast television services. Id. at 57. Hence “[c]able television has become our Nation’s dominant video distribution medium.” S.Rep. No. 92, 102d Cong., 1st Sess. 3 (1991), U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1978, 1135. The cable audience, like the radio broadcast audience, “constantly tun[es] in and out,” so that prior warnings will not “completely protect the ... viewer from unexpected program content.” Id. Unlike services that subscribers affirmatively choose and pay for, such as dial-a-porn or cable pay-per-view and premium channels, leased access channels automatically come into all cable subscribers’ homes. Indecent leased access programming thus hardly qualifies as an “invited guest,” see Judge Wald, dissenting, at 139. A cable subscriber no more asks for such programming than did the offended listener in Pacifica who turned on his radio. Cable television now provides a vast amount of information in an easily accessible way. In this respect, it is similar to
In light of the nature of leased access programming, does section 10(b) represent the least restrictive means of furthering the government’s goal of protecting children from indecent programming? Petitioners say no, Congress could have accomplished what segregation and blocking achieve either by continuing to rely entirely on the 1984 Act’s provision giving cable viewers the option of voluntarily blocking indecent programming, 47 U.S.C. § 544(d)(2)(A), or by confining indecent programming to late at night — a “safe harbor.” We agree with the government that, given the pervasiveness of cable television and its accessibility to children, neither of these options would have achieved the government’s aims. As to subscriber-initiated blocking, the Commission concluded that the type of programming with which section 10(b) is concerned presents special problems such a system does not solve. Leased access programming “may come from a wide variety of independent sources, with no single editor controlling [its] selection and presentation,” placing a cable viewer in risk of being intermittently and randomly confronted with patently offensive displays of sexual or excretory activities or organs. First Report and Order, 8 F.C.C.R. 998, 1000 ¶ 15 (1993). To prevent exposing children to such programming under a voluntary blocking system, cable viewers would have two, equally unacceptable options. Either they could continually activate and deactivate their lockboxes, inevitably risking a slip up or a lapse that would expose their children to indecency, or they could install lockboxes permanently, thereby giving up leased access programming altogether. Id. at 1000-01 ¶ 15; cf. Dial Info. Servs.,
Given its effectiveness in limiting the exposure of children to indecent programming and its insignificant restriction of adults’ access to such materia], we conclude that section 10(b) passes the least restrictive means test.
Petitioners’ second argument is that the segregation-and-blocking system unconstitutionally discriminates against programming on leased access channels. Section 10(b), according to petitioners, embodies “speaker-based discrimination” in violation of
From the perspective of those petitioners who show or wish to show indecent programs on these channels, the difference between the two systems amounts to this: under the 1984 Act, their material got into the home unless the subscriber locked it out; under the 1992 Act, their material does not get into the home unless the subscriber invites it in. Either way the programmers’ products are available to those who want to watch them. Of course, there will always be subscribers disinclined to any action regardless of what system is in place. Before 1984, their television sets would receive the indecent programs shown on these channels; after 1992, they would not. But we see no reason why leased access programmers should necessarily retain the advantage of such inertia, and we can conceive of no constitutional principle entitling them to do so. Furthermore, there is little difference between section 10’s treatment of indecent leased access programming and the 1992 Act’s handling of pay-per-view programming. Under current regulations, pay-per-view programs are, in effect, blocked and segregated: as the “negative option billing” provision requires, a subscriber will not receive such programs unless he or she specifically so requests. 47 U.S.C. § 543(f) (“A cable operator shall not charge a subscriber for any service or equipment that the subscriber has not affirmatively requested by name.”).
We reach 'the same conclusion when we consider the matter from the perspective of those petitioners who are cable subscribers. For the purpose of this analysis, subscribers may be divided into two classes — those who do, and those who do not, want to receive indecent programming on leased access channels. Before the 1992 Act, viewers in the do-not-want category always had to take the initiative and to bear the expense of blocking indecent programming from their homes. It was up to them to request their cable operators to provide lockboxes to them, and they paid for the equipment. With the 1992 Act, it is the do-want class who must take the initiative: they are now the ones who have to make a request, in writing, for
To say, as petitioners do, that section 10(b) distinguishes between indecent speech and other types of speech, or that it singles out leased access channels from other cable channels, supplies only a description, not an analysis. Of course section 10(b) does what petitioners say, but it does so for a particular, and for a constitutionally permissible reason — to protect children and to enhance the ability of parents to shield their children from the influence of “adult” programming. See Ginsberg v. New York,
Petitioners’ two remaining contentions regarding section 10(b) merit only brief discussion. That the Commission’s regulations give a cable operator up to thirty days to comply with a subscriber’s request to unblock a leased access channel does not entail a “prior restraint” in violation of the First Amendment.
Petitioners’ remaining argument is that section 10(b) is impermissibly vague because leased access programmers must identify for cable operators which of their programs are indecent. Programmers thus must “worry about what a cable operator may ‘reasonably believe’ to be indecent.” Brief for Petitioners at 46. The Commission’s definition of indecent programming essentially tracks the definition of broadcast indecency this court reviewed in Action for Children’s Television v. FCC,
Section 10(b)’s segregation and blocking requirements satisfy the least restrictive means test; do not impermissibly single out leased access programming for regulation; do not constitute a prior restraint on speech; and are not, because of the definition of indecency, unconstitutionally vague.
The petitions for review are denied.
WALD, Circuit Judge, with whom TA-TEL, Circuit Judge, and, with respect to Parts II and III, ROGERS, Circuit Judge, join, dissenting:
Lurid descriptions of programming that may well cross over the line into obscenity and merit no First Amendment protection at all should not obscure what this case really is about. See Majority opinion (“Maj. op.”) at 117-118. This ease is not about obscenity; it concerns significant restrictions on a class of speech that is unquestionably entitled to constitutional protection, although possibly offensive to some audiences. See Sable Communications of California, Inc. v. FCC,
The Denver Area Educational Television Consortium’s critically-acclaimed program The 90’s Channel, transmitted on the leased
“Indecency” is not confined merely to material that borders on obscenity — “obscenity lite.” Unlike obscenity, indecent material includes literarily, artistically, scientifically, and politically meritorious material. Indeed, by definition, it includes all “patently offensive” material that has any of these kinds of merit, and cannot be branded as obscene under the standard established by the Supreme Court in Miller v. California,
While we accept that the government may have a compelling interest in protecting children from indecent programming, we agree with Judge Edwards that that interest must be pursued in the context of helping parents to make viewing choices for their children as to the programming they watch inside the home.
I. State Aotion Is Involved in Sections 10(A) and (B)
The First Amendment commands that “Congress shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech....” Our state action analysis begins with the law that Congress has made in this case. Sections 10(a) and (b) of the 1992 Cable Act impose a disjunctive scheme regulating indecent speech. In tandem, they require that cable operators either ban or block “indecent” speech on leased access cable channels. The majority insists, however, that § 10(a) is exempt from constitutional scrutiny because it involves no state-imposed burden on speech. Instead, they say, § 10(a) merely restores to cable operators the “editorial control” taken away from them in the Cable Communications Policy Act of 1984, Pub.L. No. 98-549, 98 Stat. 2779 (“1984 Act”), which mandated the creation of publicly accessible leased channels and for
The purpose and effect of §§ 10(a) and (b) are clear enough. As their chief congressional sponsor explained, they “forbid, cable companies from inflicting their unsuspecting subscribers with sexually explicit programs on leased access channels.” 138 Cong.Rec. S646 (daily ed., Jan. 30, 1992) (statement of Sen. Helms) (emphasis added). That forthright statement would ordinarily end the state action inquiry. When Congress passes a statute whose avowed purpose, and effect, is to forbid or severely restrict communication of a certain category of speech defined by content, state action is usually conceded. Cf., e.g., Regan v. Taxation With Representation of Washington,
The majority argues, however, that because § 10(a) is couched in permissive language, not explicitly requiring the operator to ban indecent speech, there is no state action. Maj. op. at 113. But in effect, § 10 says “an operator may ban, or in the alternative must block.” To illustrate the effect of the “may” language of § 10(a) when used in the context of § 10(b), we point out that the operator’s options — and the burden on speech — would be no different if the regulation were expressed in any of the following terms:
1. “an operator must ban, or in the alternative must block”;
2. “an operator may block, or in the alternative must ban”; or
3. “an operator may ban, or in the alternative may block, but these alternatives are to the exclusion of all others.”
All these formulations, linguistically distinct, are logically and functionally equivalent. Each commands that the cable operator either ban or block indecent speech. Yet the §§ 10(a) and (b) option is no different in its effect. Only empty formalism would elevate Congress’ choice of the nominally permissive “may” language of § 10(a) to demonstrate the absence of state action, when § 10(b) lurks in the shadows, ready to pounce.
Senator Helms’s statements in floor debate that § 10 merely restores editorial control to cable operators do not do much to bolster the government’s anti-state action argument. See 138 Cong.Reo. S646 (daily ed., Jan. 30, 1992) (statement of Sen. Helms) (“this is not governmental action” but “action taken by a private party”); id. at S649 (statement of Sen. Helms) (in colloquy, responding affirmatively to the statement, “So this is not Government censorship”). In light of Sen.
The majority concedes that if the cable operator’s decision to ban indecent programming under § 10(a) is state action, the regulation is a form of state censorship and cannot survive First Amendment scrutiny. Maj. op. at 113. But they go on to cite Blum v. Yaretsky,
I do not think this case fits the Blum model. As Blum itself instructs, “[flaithful adherence to the ‘state action’ requirement ... requires careful attention to the gravamen of the plaintiffs complaint.” Id. at 1003,
As the Supreme Court explained in Lugar v. Edmondson Oil Co., Inc. — decided the same day as Blum — the point of the state action inquiry is to determine whether “the
Even if Blum did provide a legal analogy, which it does not, the factual record places it a galaxy apart. There is pressure in this scheme to push cable operators to ban indecent programming outright. Statements in the agency record by cable operators say that they view the § 10(b) segregation-and-bloeking arrangement to be so technically and administratively cumbersome as to render it highly unattractive and indeed for many “unworkable.” Joint Appendix (“J.A.”) 195-97, 200, 253. See also First Report and Order, 8 F.C.C.R. at 1009, ¶ 69 (acknowledging technical and administrative burdens of blocking scheme).
In addition, as the majority itself concedes, Maj. op. at 119-120, the Commission has yet to decide who will absorb the potentially high cost of the § 10(b) segregation-and-bloeking scheme. If the cost falls on cable operators, as it presumptively must at least temporarily until the Commission authorizes a shift to subscribers or lessees, operators have a strong financial incentive, as well, to ban rather than block. See J.A. 200-01 (comments of Community Antenna Televisión Association, Inc.). Somewhat puzzlingly, the majority argues that because the Commission has not yet decided whether to allow cable operators to shift these costs, we do not know if operators will have a financial incentive to ban rather than block, and therefore petitioners have not met their burden of showing state action. Maj. op. at 119-120. That seems to me a notion at odds with our traditional constitutional test for state action. Surely the agency’s delay in stating who will ultimately bear the financial burden of its scheme cannot postpone constitutional review indefinitely, once the scheme is in operation. And clearly the. present regulations do not authorize operators to shift the costs of segregation-and-bloeking to subscribers or léssees. See Implementation of the Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992: Rate Regulation, 8 F.C.C.R. 5631 ¶¶506, 516-20 (1993) (Commission sets maximum rates operators may charge lessees, based on annual calcula
On the basis of the combined technical, administrative, and financial burdens imposed on cable operators under § 10(b), I have no difficulty even under a Blum-type rationale in concluding that the § 10 regulatory scheme “significantly encourages” them to ban indecent speech, thereby converting the cable operator’s decision to ban under § 10(a) into state action.
In sum, §§ 10(a) and (b) in tandem constitute state action.
II. SECTIONS 10(A) AND (B) CAUSE A DEPRIVATION OF FIRST AMENDMENT
SPEECH Rights
The majority relies on the untenable notion that requiring adults to separately request “indecent” leased access programming in writing, wait up to 30 days to receive such service, and possibly be required to pay extra for it, poses no burden whatsoever on the speech rights of either the speakers or receivers of such speech. See Maj. op. at 127. This does not square with reality. If the government imposed similar restrictions on other categories of speech, such as speech concerning nuclear power or criticism of government officials, and required that citizens could receive it only after separately requesting it in writing and then waiting up to 30 days to receive it, we would almost surely say that the speech rights of both speakers and listeners were unduly burdened. In Lamont v. Postmaster General,
In the first place, such disparate treatment clearly implies governmental disapproval of the speech in question, and it is beyond cavil that some stigma attaches to a written request to receive it. Cf. Lamont,
More importantly, as the majority itself implicitly recognizes, only those who identify themselves as having a compelling interest in receiving the segregated category of speech are likely to take the special affirmative steps necessary to receive it. See Maj. op. at 126-127. Others with a milder level of interest or a lesser commitment to challenging the government’s disapproval may lack the boldness to step forward and request it, or the initiative to take the affirmative steps necessary to gain access to the sealed-off information. Some may never even become aware that the speech may be received upon special request. Almost certainly fewer people will ultimately hear such speech. And under the new economic realities of a diminished market for their product as a result of governmental intervention, potential producers of such controversial speech will be disinclined to create it. Thus can government-imposed access barriers effectively squelch constitutionally-protected speech.
Yet the majority insists that so long as those who want access to a content-based class of speech ultimately may receive it, the government may, without constitutional consequence, freely place obstacles in the way of their receiving it. As a general proposition, this is surely inconsistent with our constitutional traditions of free speech and the unimpeded flow of ideas. We would not so easily tolerate such direct governmental interference with other categories of speech. Cf. Lamont,
Finally, the majority’s arguments are fundamentally inconsistent with the realities of television viewing. The market for “indecent” speech does not break down neatly, as the majority suggests, into self-identified groups of those who want indecent speech in their homes, and those who do not. See Maj. op. at 127. Many viewers fall somewhere in between. They may not want a steady stream of “indecent” speech, and probably do not want to be perceived (even by their cable operator, much less anyone who might later acquire such information by subpoena or otherwise) as the kind of people who do. They therefore will not affirmatively write for access to the “indecent” channel even if they become aware of it. Yet given a free choice in the matter, they might prefer to have unimpeded, selective access to some but not all programs that fall within that broad umbrella designation. Not only aficionados of the arts or of politics but also the mildly curious might well decide to watch an “unvarnished” documentary on the Mapplethorpe exhibit if it is readily available, for example, but may not write to request an entire channel of indecency on the chance that this and similar programs will be included. They may want to shield their children from most “indecent” programming, yet may occasionally find it appropriate to expose older children to frank, even graphic discussions of sexuality and the AIDS epidemic, including some programs that might fall within the FCC’s definition of “indecency” (or at any rate are close enough to the line that cable operators will ban them altogether or relegate them to the “indecent” channel). Whether they are “channel surfers” who like to browse before settling on a program, or “appointment viewers” who prefer to study a program guide and watch pre-selected programs, this regulation makes it substantially more difficult for cable subscribers to selectively control the content of their viewing on a program-by-program basis. It thus places a substantial burden on their speech rights as adult television viewers, while adding nothing to their ability to exercise selective control over their children’s viewing. “At the heart of the First Amendment lies the principle that each person should decide for him or herself the ideas and beliefs deserving of expression, consideration, and adherence.” Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. v. FCC, - U.S. -, -,
III. SECTIONS 10(A) AND (B) Do NOT MEET the “Least Restrictive Means” Test
A. What Does the Test Require?
“Content-based regulations [of speech] are presumptively invalid,” R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul, — U.S. -, -,
Supreme Court precedent certainly rejects the notion that a content-based regulation of speech will survive regardless of the burden on speech simply because it is the most effective means to achieve a compelling state interest. Quite the opposite. In Sable, for example, the government argued that a total ban on telephone transmission of indecent speech was the most effective, indeed the only fully effective way to achieve the government’s compelling objective of protecting children.
B. What Are the Compelling Interests?
1. Protecting Children
The government asserts a compelling interest in “shielding minors from the harmful effects of indecent programming” entering their homes on cable television. Government Brief at 37. See also Sable,
If the justification for the ban-or-block scheme is that it will assist parents in monitoring their children’s viewing, § 10 is certainly not precisely crafted to do that job. Rather than enhance parental control, it merely deprives all adults as well as children of any choice if their cable operator exercises regulatory option (a) and bans indecent programming. Alternatively, if the cable operator does not ban indecent programming altogether, adult viewers are left with a single blanket choice under § 10(b), whether to affirmatively invite the complete repertoire of the “indecent” channel into their home (and perhaps to pay for it). They may either keep all indecent leased access speech out of their homes, or let all indecent programming in, thereby providing their children with unimpeded access to such programming.
In Bolger v. Youngs Drug Products Corp.,
As to the government’s second prong, a purist interest in protecting children, regardless of their parents’ desires — a justification about which we have grave doubts — the government has notably failed to build any record that parental control of children’s television viewing is not reliable by itself and must be supplemented or even overridden by a government censor. Congress and the FCC have in the past relied principally as a justification for regulating indecent cable programming on the need to aid parental supervision and guidance. See H.R.Rep. No. 934, 98th Cong., 2d Sess. 70 (1984), U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1984, 4655. Governmental restrictions directly interfering with parents’ rights to control the information their children receive are regarded with suspicion “regardless of the strength of the governmental interest.” See Bolger,
To the extent §§ 10(a) and (b) “protect” children at all, they do so by relying on cable operators to ban indecent speech entirely; or on parental inaction in not subscribing to the segregated channel. The degree to which children are protected is directly tied to the degree to which adult access is curtailed, contrary to the well-established principle enunciated in Butler v. Michigan that statutes designed to protect children may not “reduce the adult population ... to ... only what is fit for children,”
In this crucial respect, the provisions at issue here differ from the FCC’s regulations on indecent telephone communications,
2. “Uninvited Intruder”
The majority posits an additional governmental interest: protecting citizens from the uninvited “intruder” of indecent programming.
C. Do Sections 10(a) and (b) Meet the Least Restrictive Means Test?
The government has the burden of showing that the means adopted to achieve the compelling governmental interest are the “least restrictive.” See Sable,
As petitioners point out, however, nothing in the record establishes that cable lockbox-es — which cable operators are required to provide
Because the 1992 Cable Act indecency provisions were adopted in a series of floor amendments, without benefit of committee hearings or even substantial floor debate, their legislative history is exceedingly scant. But nowhere in that meager history is there a single comment that anyone in Congress thought cable lockboxes ineffective. See 138 Cong.Rec. S646 et seq. (daily ed., Jan. 30, 1992) (no mention of lockboxes in Senate floor debate); H.R. Conf.Rep. No. 862, 102d Cong., 2d Sess. 80 (1992) (no mention of lockboxes in conference report describing section 10).
The government nonetheless leans heavily on the analogy to telephone technology, suggesting that “voluntary blocking” techniques are ineffective as a means of shielding children from indecent speech. The FCC, however, promulgated its telephone indecency regulations based upon extensive and detailed findings that voluntary blocking was not effective in the context of telephone technology. See Regulations Concerning Indecent Communications by Telephone, 5 F.C.C.R. 4926 (1990). The Commission did not conclude that voluntary blocking was in principle unworkable across all technologies; nor did it reach any conclusions whatsoever about cable technology. Instead, the findings were based entirely on considerations specific to telephone technology. That technology is fundamentally different from cable.
First, the Commission found that in the telephone context voluntary blocking was ineffective because telephone companies were able to block only local dial-a-porn providers, and for technological reasons were incapable of blocking long-distance access to dial-a-porn services. Id. at ¶ 16 (telephone blocking technology works by recognizing first three digits of seven-digit local phone number, and blocking three-digit sequences assigned to dial-a-porn services); see also Information Providers’ Coalition,
Second, the Commission found that voluntary telephone blocking was ineffective because telephones, including pay phones, are ubiquitous and readily accessible to children outside the home. 5 F.C.C.R. 4926 at ¶ 16. Although cable television is widely available, it is not nearly as accessible to unsupervised children outside the home as is telephone
Third, the Commission found that voluntary blocking was ineffective in the telephone context because many parents were not even aware that dial-a-pom services existed, much less that voluntary blocking technology was available. Id. at ¶¶ 18, 20; see also Dial Info. Serv.,
The majority accepts — too readily, I think — the government’s contention that because the operator can establish no central editorial control on leased access channels, indecent speech comes into the home more “intermittently and randomly” on leased than on regular channels, thereby defeating the effectiveness of lockbox technology. See Maj. op. at 125. Because indecent programming can appear on leased access channels at any time, the FCC says, parents must either lock out leased access channels altogether (thus depriving adults in the household of all leased access speech), or monitor leased access channels continually, locking and unlocking the control boxes, risking “a slip up or a lapse” that exposes their children to indecent programming. Maj. op. at 125. Less drastic alternatives, however, immediately come to mind. Segregating indecent leased access programming, either by channel or by time (i.e., a reasonable “safe harbor” period), would actively facilitate parental control because parents could use lockbox technology more effectively, knowing which channels to lock out, and at which times, to protect their children. Neither Congress nor the FCC has considered whether segregation of indecent leased access programming, when combined with existing lockbox technology, might be an effective yet far less restrictive means of achieving the statute’s purported goals than the § 10 ban-or-block scheme.
The majority also suggests that the cost of lockboxes may deter some parents from acquiring and using them. Maj. op. at 127. But again, if this is a real impediment (and there is no record support to show it is), less restrictive means than a ban-or-block scheme are at hand. Cost-spreading — raising everyone’s costs the small amount it would take to provide free lockboxes to all takers — would make lockboxes readily available. In fact, many cable operators have already converted to “addressable” systems that incorporate lockbox technology into the cable box that every subscriber receives. See J.A. 316-17. These addressable systems accomplish both cost-spreading and universal availability of lockbox technology. Neither Congress nor the FCC considered this new advance in technology.
Finally, neither Congress, the FCC, nor the majority has taken account of where the cost burden of the segregate-and-block scheme will fall, and with what implications for free speech. There are only a few prospects: the cable operators, producers of “indecent” speech, leased access programmers generally, subscribers to “indecent” speech, or subscribers generally. The majority concedes that if the cost is borne by cable operators, it could create sufficient incentives for operators to ban (rather than block) indecent programming so as to implicate state action, and therefore to invalidate § 10(a) as an indirect form of state censorship. See Maj. op. at 119. But the majority never considers that if the cost of segregation-and-blocking is placed entirely on programmers of “indecent” speech — or on those who wish to receive such speech — the regulation will place a direct and heavy burden on a con
IV. State Action Is Indeed in Section 10(C) and It Does Not Meet the “Least Restrictive Means” Test
A. Does State Action Inhere in Section 10(c)?
State action also inheres in the statutory scheme of § 10(c). In the 1984 Cable Act, Congress authorized local franchising authorities to require cable operators to set aside channels for noncommercial public, educational, and governmental use (“PEG access”), 47 U.S.C. § 531(b), and forbade cable operators from exercising any editorial control over programming on those channels, 47 U.S.C. § 531(e).
Quite plainly, the revised statutory scheme is on its face a content-based regulation of protected speech. “As a general rule, laws that by their terms distinguish favored speech from disfavored speech on the basis of their ... [content] are content-based.” Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. v. FCC, - U.S. -, -,
What reason could Congress possibly have for assigning operators and programmers different rights, duties, and procedures on
We thus have a congressionally-enacted statute that both facially discriminates on the basis of the content of speech, and has a “manifest purpose” to “burden ... speech of a particular content,” Turner Broadcasting, — U.S. at -,
When the § 10(c) statutory scheme works as intended, and cable programmers and adult audiences are deprived of opportunities to communicate and receive indecent speech, that deprivation is “caused by the exercise of some right or privilege created by the State,” Lugar,
As the Lugar Court explained, “[cjareful adherence to the ‘state action’ requirement preserves an area of individual freedom by limiting the reach of federal law and federal judicial power,” and “avoids imposing on the State, its agencies or officials, responsibility for conduct for which they cannot fairly be blamed.” Id. at 936,
B. Does § 10(c) Meet the Least Restrictive Means Test?
Section 10(c), which authorizes cable operators to ban indecent speech on PEG channels, is fatally flawed because the government has failed to show that the regulation will make any significant contribution toward furthering the government’s asserted interest in protecting children from indecent television programming, much less that it is the “least restrictive means” to achieve that purpose. Cf. Sable,
In addition, just as with the §§ 10(a) and (b) ban-or-block scheme, § 10(c) shields children from indecent programming only by simultaneously depriving programmers and adult viewers of their speech rights, without attempting to decouple children’s access from that of adults. Consequently, to the extent § 10(c) has any effect in shielding children from indecent programming, it also imper-missibly “reduee[s] the adult population ... to ... only what is fit for children.” Butler v. Michigan,
V. Conclusion
Because Section 10 is state action restricting constitutionally-protected speech, and because the government has not met its constitutionally-imposed burden of showing on this record that these provisions are the least restrictive means necessary to achieve the compelling governmental interest of protecting children in the context of the family unit, I respectfully dissent.
Notes
. Sec. 10. Children’s Protection From Indecent Programming on Leased Access Channels
(a) Authority to Enforce. — Section 612(h) of the Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. 532(h)) is amended—
(1) by inserting “or the cable operator" after “franchising authority”; and
(2) by adding at the end thereof the following: “This subsection shall permit a cable operator to enforce prospectively a written and published policy of prohibiting programming that the cable operator reasonably believes describes or depicts sexual or excretory activities or organs in a patently offensive manner as measured by contemporary community standards.”.
(b) Commission Regulations. — Section 612 of the Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. 532) is amended by inserting after subsection (i) (as added by section 9(c) of this Act) the following new subsection:
"(j)(l) Within 120 days following the date of the enactment of this subsection, the Commission shall promulgate regulations designed to limit the access of children to indecent programming, as defined by Commission regulations, and which cable operators have not voluntarily prohibited under subsection (h) by—
"(A) requiring cable operators to place on a single channel all indecent programs, as identified by program providers, intended for carriage on channels designated for commercial use under this section;
"(B) requiring cable operators to block such single channel unless the subscriber requests access to such channel in writing; and
"(C) requiring programmers to inform cable operators if the program would be indecent as defined by Commission regulations.
"(2) Cable operators shall comply with the regulations promulgated pursuant to paragraph (1).”.
(c) Prohibits System Use. — Within 180 days following the date of the enactment of this Act, the Federal Communications Commission shall promulgate such regulations as may be necessary to enable a cable operator of a cable system to prohibit the use, on such system, of any channel capacity of any public, educational, or governmental access facility for any programming which contains obscene material, sexually explicit conduct, or material soliciting or promoting unlawful conduct.
(d) Conforming Amendment. — Section 638 of the Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. 558) is amended by striking the period at the end and inserting the following: "unless the program involves obscene material.”.
Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992, Pub.L. No. 102-385, § 10, 106 Stat. 1460, 1486 (1992) (codified at 47 U.S.C. §§ 531, 532(h), 532© & 558).
.With respect to leased access channels, the 1992 Act also directed the Commission to determine the maximum reasonable rates for leased access use, to establish reasonable terms and conditions for such use, including those for billing and collection, and to create procedures for expedited resolution of rate or carriage disputes. Pub.L. No. 102-385, § 9, 106 Stat. 1460, 1484-86 (1992) (codified at 47 U.S.C. § 532(c)(4)(A)(i)-(iii)). The 1984 Act had permitted operators to negotiate with programmers the prices and terms for leased access. Daniel L. Brenner, et al„ Cable Television and Other Nonbroadcast Video § 6.05, at 6-50, 6-57 (1994).
For PEG access programming, the 1984 Act authorized local franchising authorities to determine minimum PEG requirements, including allocation of channel capacity to users, availability of equipment and facilities, charges for costs, and requirements that PEG access channels be included in the basic cable tier. Robert F. Cop-pie, Cable Television and the Allocation of Rega-latory Power: A Study of Governmental Demarcation and Roles, 44 Fed.Comm L.J. 1, 147-48 (1991). The 1992 Act explicitly authorized franchising authorities, when awarding a franchise, to “require adequate assurance that the cable operator will provide adequate public, educational, and governmental access channel capacity, facilities, or financial support.” Pub.L. No. 102-385, § 7(b), 106 Stat. 1460, 1483 (1992) (codified at 47 U.S.C. § 541(1)(4)(B)).
. The regulations define "material soliciting or promoting unlawful conduct” as "material that is otherwise proscribed by law." Implementation of Section 10 of the Cable Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992, 58 Fed.Reg. 19,623, 19,626 (1993) (to be codified at 47 C.F.R. § 76.702).
. An indecent program is one that “describes or depicts sexual or excretory activities or organs in a patently offensive manner as measured by con
. We express no view on whether the provisions of the 1984 and 1992 Acts requiring cable operators to set aside leased access channels and permitting franchising authorities to force operators to set aside PEG access channels infringe upon the First Amendment rights of cable operators or programmers.
. The panel opinion deemed it "not critical” that “Reitman involved an amendment to the state constitution that also banned future enactment of fair housing laws without an additional amendment of the state constitution." Alliance for Community Media,
. Judge Wald mixes apples and bricks in her four formulations of the combined effect of § 10(a) and § 10(b). Dissent at 5. Take for example, her number 1: " ‘an operator must ban, or in the alternative must block' " indecent programming on leased access channels. Operators who block are necessarily operators who have not banned indecent speech. They are carrying such programs on their systems and are leaving to their subscribers the choice of tuning in. Despite all the fancy footwork, the formulations merely report that (1) under these provisions operators now have the editorial discretion to carry or not to carry indecent programming on their leased access channels; and (2) if they opt to carry such programming, they have to comply with § 10(b). To conclude from this that the operators’ decisions are state action is the same as saying that if you are deciding whether to enter a particular line of business regulated by the state, your decision whether to enter the business is “state action.” You "must" comply with regulations, or you "must” stay out. Or closer to home, Judge Wald would find state action when an Indiana bar decides whether to have nude dancing — in her formulation, the bar either must ban nude dancing or it must block children and others who do not consent to watching the show. Cf. Barnes v. Glen Theatre, Inc.,
. “[T]here is surely a less vital interest in the uninhibited exhibition of material that is on the borderline between pornography and artistic expression than in the free dissemination of ideas of social and political significance....” Young v. American Mini Theatres, Inc.,
. In light of Crawford,
.For instance, it cannot be that because access channels came into existence as a result of governmental action, the private day-to-day decisions — by programmers or by cable operators— about what will be shown on those channels embody state action. The federal government may create corporations but the resulting quangos are not, for that reason alone, to be treated as governmental rather than private actors. Lebron v. National Railroad Passenger Corp., - U.S. -, -,
. Judge Wald would disregard Blum on the ground that the complaint there challenged the decisions of private actors, while the petition here challenges a federal statute and its implementing regulations. Dissent at 132-133. There is nothing to this. The private actors in Blum made their decisions pursuant to detailed state and federal regulations, Blum,
. This argument could not supply state action with respect to section 10(c)'s authorization to operators to prohibit indecent programming on PEG channels. Section 10(b)’s segregation and blocking requirement applies to leased access channels only. We cannot imagine how that requirement could influence an operator's decision about allowing indecent programming on PEG channels.
.On this unfounded prediction, on this single assertion, rests the entirety of Judge Wald’s reasoning that § 10(a) constitutes state action for leased access channels. But what of PEG access channels, where operators have discretion under § 10(c) to cany indecent programming without any segregation and blocking? Judge Wald, without the support of Chief Judge Edwards, or Judge Rogers, offers a different rationale for detecting state action in § 10(c) — that the provision is a "content-based regulation of protected speech." Dissent at 143. Of course that thoroughly begs the question. The First Amendment protects speech not from private interference but only from governmental restraints. One cannot say of § 10(c) that operators might be restricting “protected speech” until one first makes the threshold determination that the actions of the operators are attributable to the government. Otherwise, whenever cable operators make content-based choices not to carry particular pro
. The Commission mentioned "technical” problems but these dealt with timing — that is, with how quickly operators could implement segregation and blocking. In order to avoid any such problems, the Commission allowed the operators 120 days to implement blocking mechanisms and procedures. First Report and Order, 8 F.C.C.R. at 1009. In this litigation the sufficiency of that time period is not challenged.
. Petitioners contend that section 10(d) is "particularly suspect" because it covers programming that merely "involves obscene material.” Brief for Petitioners at 31 n. 15 (italics added); see supra note 1. As petitioners acknowledge, however, the Commission's unchallenged interpretation of the statutory phrase is that operators lose immunity only for material that "is unprotected by the first amendment." First Report and Order, 8 F.C.C.R. at 1005 ¶ 44 n. 40.
. Three other courts of appeals have found no state action in comparable contexts. Dial Info. Servs. Corp. v. Thornburgh,
These decisions cannot be distinguished on the ground that with respect to cable television, operators must accept non-indecent access programming. What matters — in the dial-a-pom cases and in this one — is whether the government has so injected itself into the private actor's decision triggering federal regulation that the decision may, for purposes of constitutional analysis, be treated as the government's.
. See, e.g., International Soc’y for Krishna Consciousness v. Lee, - U.S. at -,
A list of Supreme Court opinions using the phrase "public forum” through the October 1983 Term is contained in Daniel A. Farber & John E. Nowak, The Misleading Nature of Public Forum Analysis: .Content and Context in First Amendment Adjudication, 70 Va.L.Rev. 1219, 1221 n. 15 (1984).
. Hudgens and Lloyd distinguished the company town case of Marsh v. Alabama,
. That finding necessarily entails the proposition that there are conversations unsuitable for children to hear.
. Section 10(b)'s regulatory scheme parallels the one Congress imposed on the dial-a-pom industry. Under 47 U.S.C. § 223(c)(1), telephone subscribers can obtain access to obscene or indecent telephone messages only by making a written request to their telephone carriers. The Second and Ninth Circuits have rejected constitutional challenges to this statute. Dial Info. Servs. Corp. v. Thornburgh,
. If the operator decides to offer a "premium channel” free of charge — that is a "pay service offered on a per channel or per program basis, which offers movies rated by the Motion Picture Association of America as X, NC-17, or R” the operator must give at least 30 days notice of the offering and block the channel at the subscriber's request. 47 U.S.C. § 544(d)(3).
. Viewers preferring "unimpeded, selective access to some but not all” indecent programming, see Judge Wald, dissenting, at 136, still have the option of requesting access to a blocked channel and installing a lockbox that enables them to block indecent programming they do not want their children to see. Judge Wald apparently agrees that lockboxes are effective means of restricting access to indecent programming. See id. at 140-41.
. Petitioners do not contend that any stigma attaches to a subscriber requesting unblocking or that subscribers would otherwise be deterred from making a request. Playboy's pay-per-view channel, to which subscribers must also request access, apparently has a large audience. See Comments of New York Citizens Committee for Responsible Media, at 11 (Dec. 29, 1992). Moreover, the 1984 Act and the 1992 Act contain provisions protecting the privacy of subscribers in their dealings with cable operators. Pub.L. No. 102-385, § 20, 106 Stat. 1460, 1497-98 (1992) (codified at 47 U.S.C. §§ 551(a)(2), 551(c)(2)); Pub.L. No. 98-549, § 631, 98 Stat. 2779, 2794-95 (1984) (codified at 47 U.S.C. § 551). Although the parties do not mention the case, it is worth noting that for these reasons Lamont v. Postmaster General,
.Operators have the power to impose a segregation and blocking system on the vast majority of their non-access channels, because their editorial control over such channels is unfettered by federal regulation. The only exception is for those channels they must set aside for local broadcasting to fulfill their "must-carry obligations." See generally 47 U.S.C. §§ 534, 535; Turner Broadcasting Sys., Inc. v. FCC, - U.S. -,
. Petitioners also contend that § 10 as a whole constitutes a prior restraint because cable operators are "pressured to censor" indecent programming according to a regulatory scheme that "dictates the contours of this censorship.” Although framed in different terms, this argument is essentially identical to petitioners' claim regarding state action, which we discussed and rejected. See supra pp. 112-121. We reiterate that cable operators who decide to prohibit indecent programming on access channels are not state actors. Consequently, their .banning of such material cannot constitute a prior restraint. Cf. Dial Info. Servs.,
. The FCC determined that a written request, rather than a telephonic one, was necessary to enable a cable operator to ascertain that the requestor is over eighteen years old. First Report and Order, 8 F.C.C.R. at 1009 ¶ 67.
. The regulations define “indecent” programming as programming “that describes or depicts sexual or excretory activities or organs in a patently offensive manner as measured by contemporary community standards for the cable medium.” Implementation of Section 10 of the Cable Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992, 58 Fed.Reg. 7990, 7993 (1993). The definition thus extends to any programming that includes "patently offensive” verbal descriptions or visual depictions of sexual or excretory activities, regardless of the literary, artistic, political, or scientific merit of the work as a whole. The regulations require leased access programmers to self-certify whether their work is "indecent” under this definition, at the risk of being barred from televising future work if they err in that judgment. First Report and Order, 8 F.C.C.R. 998, 1005 ¶ 43, 1007 ¶51, 1010 ¶75 (1993). That the regulations will likely result in overdet-errence by risk-averse programmers seeking to avoid the professional "death penalty” imposed for certification errors seems quite apparent. The result will inevitably be an extremely broad class of programming silenced by the regulations.
. We note that the Supreme Court has never actually passed on the FCC's broad definition of “indecency.” See Action for Children's Television v. FCC,
. Although the majority does not say so expressly, its analysis of § 10(b) as the "least restrictive means” for protecting children presumes that state action is implicated. Yet, if § 10(a) does not implicate state action, it is difficult to see why § 10(b) does either, since the cable operator is no more required to segregate-and-block indecent programming under § 10(b) than it is to ban indecent programming under § 10(a). In either case, the operator can avoid one provision entirely by "voluntarily” electing to submit to the other provision.
. The confusion may stem from the way the argument was posed and addressed in the original panel opinion. There, the government conceded that if cable operators’ decisions to ban indecent programming under §§ 10(a) and 10(c) were state action, the statute would impose a constitutionally impermissible censorship regime. Alliance for Community Media v. FCC,
The majority might better have argued that although the statute itself is plainly state action, it effects no abridgement of freedom of speech because it does nothing more than restore editorial control to cable operators. In that regard, they might have a stronger argument if the statute withdrew governmental restrictions on cable operators' control over leased and PEG access channels evenhandedly and across the board, without itself imposing differential regulations discriminating (as this statute does) on the basis of content in order to suppress a particular content-defined category of speech. See infra, Part IV.A. But instead of pursuing that line of reasoning, the majority would immunize the statute itself from constitutional scrutiny on grounds that cable operators' decisions under §§ 10(a) and 10(c) are not state action.
. As Justice White explained in his concurrence in Blum, the private parties’ decisions there were not based on any rule imposed by the state.
. The Commission noted that "the new blocking requirements may be difficult for some cable systems that are not as technologically advanced as addressable systems" and "may require considerable adjustments ... in terms of rearranging existing services...." First Report and Order, 8 F.C.C.R. at 1009 ¶ 69. See also J.A. 253 (comments of Time Warner Entertainment Company, noting “technological problems" faced by nonaddressable systems). "In addition, the new regulations will require cable operators to establish new procedures for subscriber notification ... and for the processing of requests of leased access users and of subscriber requests for this channel, etc.” 8 F.C.C.R. at 1009 V 69. Finally, the Commission noted the special difficulties faced by "systems that require trapping devices to circumscribe access to these services.” Id. Some "trapping" technology would require the operator to send out employees to place signal-interdicting "traps” at each subscribing household, and to remove them when the subscriber requested the blocked service. See J.A. 244 (comments of National Cable Television Association, Inc.). Nor are the incentives created by these complexities simply a matter of whether the costs are recoverable. Even if cable operators were allowed to recover their costs under the § 10(b) blocking scheme, cancelling out its cost disadvantages, opting for the § 10(b) blocking scheme would still require the cable operator in many cases to hire, train and supervise additional personnel, invest in new equipment, and develop and implement additional recordkeeping procedures. See J.A. 200. Sound management principles suggest that if either alternative would produce the same net revenue, the less technically and administratively complex option would be preferred.
. For the reasons detailed in Part IV.B. infra, I believe § 10(a) would be constitutionally impermissible even if it stood alone — which, of course, it does not. Given the structure of the statutory provisions affecting leased access programming, and their avowed purpose to "forbid cable companies from inflicting their unsuspecting subscribers with sexually explicit programs on leased access channels,” 138 Cong.Rec. S646 (daily ed., Jan. 30, 1992) (statement of Sen. Helms), I do not think § 10(a) is severable from § 10(b). The "relevant inquiry in evaluating severability is whether the statute will function in a manner consistent with the intent of Congress." Alaska Airlines, Inc. v. Brock,
. The majority also rejects petitioners’ alternative argument, that because leased and public access channels are a "public forum" for purposes of First Amendment analysis, the government may not authorize private parties to censor speech there.
It is a close question. While the legislative history of the 1984 Cable Act uses the term "public forum" in describing leased and public access channels, admittedly there is no clear indication that Congress was using that term in its technical First Amendment sense, classifying cable access channels with such traditional public fora as parks and streets. However, I disagree with the majority's suggestion that a public forum can never exist on private property. See Maj. op. at 121-123. In some circumstances private property dedicated to public uses could become a limited public forum, through some combination of legally binding use restrictions and an established tradition of use for speech purposes. A land swap, zoning approval, or building permits, for example, might be made conditional on a private property owner’s agreement to permanently set aside part of his property for public access and use, including traditional First Amendment speech activities, either to substitute for or to supplement "traditional” public fora like parks and streets. Such use restrictions, perhaps in combination with a tradition of actual use for such speech purposes, might create a public forum. Similarly, Congress might create a public forum by insisting that privately owned communications media dedicate a portion of their capacity to unrestricted public access for speech purposes. Nonetheless, I would not reach the question of whether Congress created a public forum in this case because I find state action present in the statutory scheme itself.
. Attempting to distinguish Lamont, the majority misstates the "narrow ground” upon which the Supreme Court relied. See Maj. op. at 127 n. 23. The passage more fully reads:
We rest on the narrow ground that the addressee in order to receive his mail must request in writing that it be delivered. This amounts in our judgment to an unconstitutional abridgement of the addressee’s First Amendment rights. The addressee carries an affirmative obligation which we do not think the Government may impose on him.
Lamont,
. The Court said that while technological means of protecting children from indecent telephone messages might not be "fail-safe” or "foolproof,"
. Parents who elect to receive indecent programming can still use “lockboxes” to lock out selected channels, of course. But in that case, it is the lockbox and not the § 10(b) blocking scheme that is doing all the useful work in shielding children from indecent programming. See infra Part III.C.
. Senator Helms argued on the Senate floor that the § 10(b) segregation-and-blocking requirement "is precisely the same method that Congress used to block dial-a-porn lines,” a method which the courts had "validated." 138 Cong.Rec. S646 (daily ed., Jan. 30, 1992). The Commission similarly argued that "[t]he blocking scheme upheld in these [telephone] cases is, in all relevant respects, identical to that required by section 10(b).” 8 F.C.C.R. at 1000 ¶ 13. These comparisons, however, are highly inaccurate. As the Ninth Circuit observed in Information Providers’ Coalition v. FCC,
. The government argues in a footnote to its brief that this is a "legitimate” governmental interest, but nowhere does it suggest that it rises to the level of a “compelling” interest. See Government Brief at 37, n. 16. Since only a compelling governmental interest can sustain a content-based restriction of speech, the government must be deemed to have waived the argument that this justification is sufficient to support the challenged statute and regulation, although the argument had been advanced at the agency level, see 8 F.C.C.R. 999-1000, and on the Senate floor, see 138 Cong.Rec. S648 (daily ed., Jan. 30, 1992) (remarks of Sen. Thurmond). I address the question here, however, in response to the majority’s reliance on this rationale.
. The majority correctly points out that more than 60% of all households with televisions subscribe to cable. The majority then adds that “[mjost cable subscribers do not or cannot use antennas to receive broadcast services," perhaps inadvertently leaving the mistaken impression that without cable, most current subscribers would be left with no television at all. In fact, the quoted passage merely indicates that while subscribing to cable, most households do not simultaneously receive over-the-air broadcasts. See H.R.Conf.Rep. No. 862, 102d Cong., 2d Sess. 57 (1992). Although some consumers are in areas without broadcast service, many (probably most) of these households could and would receive television broadcasts if they terminated cable service.
. In Pacifica, the Supreme Court rejected the argument that an individual offended by indecent broadcasts might simply turn off her set, which the Court analogized to "saying that the remedy for an assault is to run away after the first blow.”
. The 1984 Cable Act requires each cable operator to "provide (by sale or lease) a device by which the subscriber can prohibit viewing of a particular cable service during periods selected by that subscriber." 47 U.S.C. § 544(d)(2)(A). These in-home devices, known as "lockboxes” or "parental keys," allow subscribers at their own discretion to block reception of any channels they do not wish to receive, either indefinitely or for shorter periods of time. Lockboxes thus allow parents to restrict their children’s access to selected channels "whether or not parents are physically present and actively supervise." FCC 90-264, 5 F.C.C.R. 5297, 5305 (1990).
. Senator Helms did erroneously attribute to the Supreme Court the view that "mandatory blocking" in general “is constitutional and far more effective than voluntary blocking,” 138 Cong.Rec. S647 (daily ed., Jan. 30, 1992). In fact, the opinion he cited, Dial Info. Serv. Corp. v. Thornburgh,
. Section 531(e) contains an exception, however: cable operators may under certain circumstances ban programming that is "obscene or ... otherwise unprotected by the Constitution of the United States." 47 U.S.C. § 544(d)(1).
. Although our emphasis is properly on the statutory scheme of § 10(c) itself, which petitioners challenge here, it is also clear that the nature of the cable operator's decision to ban indecent programming under § 10(c) is of an entirely different character from the exercise of professional medical judgment at issue in Blum v. Yaretsky. As the Blum Court explained, those medical judgments were made "according to professional standards that are not established by the State,"
. The "impetus” for the suppression of disfavored speech thus clearly comes in the first instance from the state, and not a private actor. Cf. Moose Lodge No. 107 v. Irvis,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting in part:
I agree with the judgment reached by the dissent — that sections 10(a) and 10(b), together, constitute state action and do not provide the least restrictive means to further the Government’s asserted interest in promoting the well-being of children. According to the Government, children face harm from exposure to “indecent” programming on leased access cable television, so it is contended that Congress may lawfully act to ban such programming. There is not one iota of evidence in the record, however, to support the claim that exposure to indecency is harmful — indeed, the nature of the alleged “harm” is never explained. This being the case, there is little doubt in my mind that the statute as presently written fails constitutional scrutiny.
I write separately because I do not entirely agree with the analysis underlying Judge Wald’s dissent. Frankly, I think that Congress may properly pass a law to facilitate parental supervision of their children, i.e., a law that simply segregates and blocks indecent programming and thereby helps parents control whether and to what extent their children are exposed to such programming. However, a law that effectively bans all indecent programming — as does the statute at issue in this case — does not facilitate parental supervision. In my view, my right as a parent has been preempted, not facilitated, if I am told that certain programming will be banned from my cable television. Congress cannot take away my right to decide what my children watch, absent some showing that my
Because the foregoing propositions seem self-evident to me, I will refrain from an elaborate constitutional analysis of section 10’s provisions. It is not so much the constitutionality of these provisions that I find perplexing, but rather the shortsightedness of Congress in enacting a scheme that does so little to deal with the ills of television. At bottom, I think this case is much ado about nothing much.
H* sj: s}: ^ ‡
I agree with the majority that section 10(c) does not constitute state action and, therefore, does not pose any constitutional problems. Section 10(c) merely directs the FCC to allow cable operators to prohibit the use of their PEG-access channels for programming which contains obscenity, sexually explicit conduct, or material soliciting or promoting unlawful conduct. Cable operators’ decisions to allow or prohibit such speech are their own; their action or inaction does not trigger any alternative regulatory regimes. In section 10(c), Congress merely returns some editorial control to cable operators, and this is not the least bit objectionable in my view.
Sections 10(a) and 10(b), however, constitute state action. These two provisions, read together, do not merely return some editorial control to cable operators, they tend to mandate a preferred result. Section 10(a) allows cable operators to ban indecent speech, and section 10(b) mandates that those cable operators who do not prohibit indecency must segregate and block the indecent programming. While the language of these two provisions contains a choice — indeed, the majority focuses on this “choice” — the choice is of little moment. Judge Wald’s dissent is persuasive on this point.
If the statute did not contain section 10(b), I would agree with the majority that, section 10(a), itself, does not constitute state action, for the same reasons that section 10(c) is unobjectionable. Section 10(a), standing alone, merely directs the FCC to allow cable operators to prohibit indecent programming. But section 10(a) does not stand alone. Section 10(b) hinges on section 10(a): it speaks only to those who “have not voluntarily prohibited under subsection ([a])” and mandates that they segregate and block indecent programming.
In analyzing sections 10(a) and 10(b) separately, the majority effectively ducks the question of incentives. But I cannot comprehend how this issue can be avoided in any decision regarding the legality of the Act. If you are a cable operator interested in making money and you are faced with the virtually cost-free option of banning indecency or the likely costly option of segregating and blocking indecent programming, which option would you choose? The answer seems easy. However, the majority declines to indulge the obvious, contending that “the Commission has yet to consider the matter” of whether the costs associated with segregating and blocking must be borne by the cable operator. The majority also finds that petitioners have not met their burden of proving that the costs of implementing section 10(b) would drive cable operators to ban indecent speech under section 10(a), a conclusion that seems a bit circular given that the Commission has not yet considered the matter. Nevertheless, the majority admits that “[t]he situation might well be different if the Commission were to adopt a policy that created a significant economic disincentive for operators to segregate and block indecent programming.” I think that financially minded cable operators will have little doubt which option to choose. Because sections 10(a) and 10(b) are linked — indeed the costs associated with section 10(b) will prompt financially minded cable operators to choose section 10(a) — the majority’s attempt to divide and conquer is not ultimately persuasive.
If the statute did not contain section 10(a), I might agree with the majority that section 10(b) passes constitutional muster. The Government claims that the statute is meant to protect children from the harmful effects of indecent programming. Had the Government offered some evidence of the harmful effects of indecent programming on children,
The Government might have suggested that section 10(b)’s segregate-and-block scheme was meant to further a compelling interest in facilitating parental supervision of the cable programs their children watch. Indeed, in a case argued the same day as this one, the Government described its interest in promoting the well-being of children as encompassing both the interest in shielding children from indecency and facilitating parental supervision. See Brief for Respondents at 16-17, ACT v. FCC (No. 93-1092). This second interest undoubtedly finds ample support in Supreme Court case law. See, e.g., Ginsberg v. New York,
In fact, I might find that section 10(b), standing alone, is the least restrictive means of furthering the Government’s interest in facilitating parental supervision of children. A segregate-and-block system can help parents monitor the programming their children watch. For those parents who want to keep all indecent programming out of the house, it provides an easy mechanism to do so. For those parents who wish to expose their children to the myriad of leased-access programming, section 10(b) allows them to subscribe to the segregated channels. For those parents who wish to do their own screening, it undoubtedly helps to know that all of the leased-access “indecent” programming is located on one channel. Those parents can control their children’s viewing either by instructing them about what they may not watch or by using a lockbox or some such device which gives television owners control over unwanted programs. As Judge Wald notes, the segregate-and-block methodology embraced by section 10(b) is a rather unsophisticated approach to achieve a goal of parental supervision: surely Congress has reason to know that there are more efficient technological devices available to segregate and block categories of programs and thereby facilitate parental choices of preferred programming. Despite the legislative failure to adopt more efficient alternatives, I would still find section 10(b) unobjectionable if it stood alone and if the Government justified it as a means to facilitate parental supervision. What I might think if the statute were written differently, however, does not help me deal with what is now before the court.
As I see it, sections 10(a) and 10(b) are connected parts of a whole, which work in tandem to produce an absolute ban on indecent speech. A ban does nothing to facilitate parents’ supervision of their children, unless we assume that all parents’ views are not only identical to each other, but also the same as the Government’s. This assumption is preposterous, and the Constitution simply
* * * * * *
There is one other aspect of the majority opinion that I find troubling. In a somewhat obscure line of analysis, the majority intimates that cable should be subject to the same First Amendment protections as broadcast. To advance this point, the majority argues that “the constitutionality of indecency regulation in a given medium turns in part, on the medium’s characteristics” and that “it is apparent that leased access programming has far more in common with radio broadcast in Pacifica than with the telephone communication in Sable.” This simple equation is superficially appealing, but it does not produce the result suggested by the majority.
For many reasons that need not be addressed here, I surely agree with the majority that it makes no sense to treat broadcast and cable differently. It does not follow from this, however, that the First Amendment protections afforded to cable should be reduced to the level normally reserved for broadcast. See FCC v. Pacifica,
We address ... the ... contention that regulation of cable television should be analyzed under the same First Amendment standard that applies to regulation of broadcast television.... [T]he rationale for applying a less rigorous standard of First Amendment scrutiny to broadcast regulation, whatever its validity in the eases elaborating it, does not apply in the context of cable regulation.
Turner Broadcasting, — U.S. at -,
Content-based regulations of cable television programming must satisfy exacting First Amendment scrutiny. And a regulation premised on a claim that “indecent” programming causes harm to children must be justified by some evidence of the harm claimed.
POSTSCRIPT
This court has spent a great deal of its energy analyzing section 10: the court has now heard the case twice; and it has produced opinions of considerable length, analyzing a great deal of constitutional case law. And yet, I cannot help but wonder what Congress is doing. Why has Congress chosen to regulate “indecency” on leased-access and PEG-access channels, as opposed to all cable channels? Congress claims it is concerned with protecting children from the ills of televised indecency. Is there any viewing individual who would suggest that leased-access and PEG-access channels constitute the principal sources of our indecency problems on television? While, as the majority states, “there is no constitutional rule forbidding Congress from addressing only the most severe aspects of this problem,” it is ridiculous to believe that leased-access and PEG-access present the most severe aspects of the indecency problem on television in American society.
The majority acknowledges that “there undoubtedly is indecent programming on other cable channels,” but notes that “[ojperators have the power to impose a segregation and blocking system on the vast majority of their non-access channels, because their editorial control over such channels is unfettered by federal regulation.” While cable operators may have that option, there is nothing to suggest that they are voluntarily segregating and blocking indecent programming in the absence of the Government’s regulatory hand. And if Congress really believes that indecent programming is harmful to children, why are commercial cable operators given a free hand to do as they see fit? This makes no sense whatsoever.
The majority quotes the FCC, stating that cable operators generally may provide indecent programming through “per-program or per-channel services that subscribers must specifically request in advance, in the same manner as under the blocking approach mandated by section 10(b).” However, this is no answer at all, because the current arrange-
Even more curious is Congress’s failure to address violence on television. One recent poll revealed that eighty percent of Americans surveyed agreed that violence on TV shows is harmful to society. See 139 Cong. Reo. S5050-52 (daily ed. Apr. 28, 1993) (summary of Times Mirror poll). And there is significant evidence suggesting a causal connection between viewing violence on television and antisocial violent behavior.
It is not my role as a judge to legislate, I understand. But it is hard to restrain from comment when one is asked to spend so much time on something of so little consequence in terms of its overall effect on society. From my vantage point, Congress seems to have sent the FCC on a fool’s errand. Even if section 10 were constitutional — as the majority holds that it is — one still would be tempted to ask, “so what?”. I cannot dismiss the importance of the First Amendment rights at stake, however, so I dissent. In my view, sections 10(a) and 10(b) of the Act as presently written offend the Constitution.
. See, e.g., Albert Bandura, Aggression: A Social Learning Analysis 72-76 (1973); William A. Bel-son, Television Violence and the Adolescent Boy (1978); George Comstock, The Evolution of American Television 159-238 (1989); Monroe M. Lef-K0W1TZ ET AL., GROWING Up TO BE VIOLENT: A LONGITUDINAL Study of the Development of Aggression (1977); L. Rowell Huesmann, et al., The Effects of Television Violence on Aggression: A Reply to a Skeptic, in Psychology and Social Policy 191 (Peter Sued-feld & Philip E. Tetlock, eds., 1992); David Pearl, Familial, Peer, and Television Influences on Aggressive and Violent Behavior, in Childhood Aggression and Violence: Sources of Influence, Prevention, and Control 231, 236-37 (David H. Crowell et al., eds., 1987).
Concurrence in Part
concurring in part and dissenting in part:
Because the court is in agreement that § 10(b) constitutes state action,
The court, however, has an obligation to save rather than destroy as much of the statute as is constitutional, see Tilton v. Richardson,
The standard for determining the sever-ability of an unconstitutional provision is well established: Unless it is evident that the Legislature would not have enacted those provisions which are within its power, independently of that which is not, the invalid part may be dropped if what is left is fully operative as a law.
Alaska Airlines, Inc. v. Brock,
This presumption is not rebutted with respect to the three remaining subsections— (a), (e), and (d). It is true, as Judge Wald notes, that one purpose of § 10 was to “forbid cable companies from inflicting their unsuspecting subscribers with sexually explicit programs on leased access channels.” 138 Cong.Rec. S646 (daily ed. Jan. 80, 1992) (Senator Helms). See dissenting opinion of Judge Wald at 134 n. 7. Senator Helms’ statement quoted by Judge Wald, however, is not the only statement of Congressional intent with respect to § 10. Congress also intended to free cable operators from the burden of being required to carry indecent materials on both leased access and PEG channels. The clear purpose of § 10(c) is to empower cable operators to exercise editorial judgment over their PEG channels to prohibit sexually explicit conduct and materials soliciting or promoting unlawful conduct.
Once § 10(b) is severed, § 10(a) no less than § 10(c) would be constitutional. See generally majority opinion Part II;
Accordingly, I concur in the judgment of the court upholding §§ 10(a), 10(e) and 10(d), but I dissent from the holding in Part III that the government has met its burden to show that § 10(b) is the least restrictive alternative; in that regard I join Parts II and III of Judge Wald’s dissenting opinion.
. See majority opinion at Part III; dissenting opinion of Judge Wald at Part I; dissenting opinion of Chief Judge Edwards at 146.
. Senator Fowler offered § 10(c) in order to remove the restriction on the authority of cable operators to prohibit indecent programming on PEG channels. 138 Cong.Rec. S649 (daily ed. Jan. 30, 1992). He referred to the use of PEG channels to "basically solicit prostitution through easily discernible shams.” Id. Senator Wirth, also deciying the abuse of PEG channels, spoke in support of § 10(c) as "giv[ing] a very clear signal to the cable companies that, in fact, they can police their own systems, which they cannot do now. This is a service not only to the public, but, also, to the cable companies themselves." Id. at S650.
. In introducing what became §§ 10(a) & (b), Senator Helms explained that "[t]he problem is that cable companies are required by law to carry, on leased access channels, any and every program that comes along....” 138 Cong.Rec. S646 (daily ed. Jan. 30, 1992) (regarding § 27 of the Senate bill). He explained that his amendment had two parts:
Under my amendment, cable operators will have the right to reject such filthy programming, and if they do not reject it, consumers have the right to reject such programming from being fed into their homes.
... First, the pending amendment will allow a cable company to decline to carry on leased access channels programs that "describe or depict sexual or excretory activities or organs in a patently offensive manner.”
The second part of the pending amendment ... requires the FCC to set rules [to segregate and block] unless a subscriber requests in writing such channel to be unblocked.
Id. In support of Senator Helms' amendment, Senator Thurmond also expressed a desire to relieve cable operators of the obligation of carrying indecent programming. "The problem is that cable companies are required by current law to carry on these leased channels any program that may come along.” Id. at S648.
. I agree with the reasoning in Part II B only to the extent that the court concludes that petitioners have failed to show here, on this record, that the leased access and PEG channels are "public forums.” See dissenting opinion of Judge Wald at 134 n. 8.
