OPINION
This matter originally came before the Court on plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction. That motion is now moot and has been replaced by a request for a permanent injunction in connection with plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment. The defendants also have filed a motion for summary judgment. Upon consideration of plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment, defendants’ opposition, defendants’ motion for summary judgment, plaintiffs’ opposition, defendants’ reply and the joint stipulation of material facts agreed to by the parties, the Court concludes that plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment should be granted and defendants’ motion for summary judgment should be denied. A permanent injunction will issue.
I. BACKGROUND
On or about January 23, 2004, President Bush signed into law the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2004, Pub.L. No. 108-
Plaintiffs — the American Civil Liberties Union, Change the Climate, Inc., the Drug Policy Alliance, and the Marijuana Policy Project — are nonprofit organizations that seek to participate in public debate on issues relating to marijuana laws and policy. See Stip. at ¶ 4. Some plaintiffs place advertising relating to marijuana laws and policy to advocate their positions. See id. at ¶ 5. Plaintiff Change the Climate submitted several advertisements to WMATA in the fall of 2003 — prior to the effective date of the Act — which were displayed on and in buses and in Metrorail stations. See id. at ¶ 6. At least one of these advertisements had the subheading “Legalize and Tax Marijuana.” See id. WMATA also has displayed Office of National Drug Control Policy anti-drug advertisements. See id. at ¶ 7.
On or about January 24, 2004, plaintiffs sought to purchase advertising space on the WMATA system for a specific advertisement entitled “Marijuana Laws Waste Billions of Taxpayer Dollars to Lock up Non-Violent Americans.” See Stip. at ¶ 10; Motion of Plaintiffs for Preliminary Injunction (“PLMot.”), Exh. B. On or about February 5, 2004, WMATA informed plaintiffs that it had rejected plaintiffs’ advertisement. See Stip. at ¶ 11. The parties agree that WMATA rejected the advertisement because of its concern about jeopardizing its federal funding. See id.
II. DISCUSSION
Plaintiffs maintain that Section 177 violates their constitutional rights in multiple, independent ways:
(1) It imposes impermissible content- and viewpoint-based restrictions on speech in a public forum in an effort to silence one side’s message in a serious political debate;
(2) it imposes restrictions that are unconstitutionally vague and overbroad; and
(3) it is an unlawful exercise of Congress’ spending power because it violates an independent constitutional prohibition on the conditional grant of federal funds.
See Motion of Plaintiffs for Preliminary Injunction at 2. Plaintiffs seek an injunction that prohibits defendants Secretary of Transportation Norman Mineta and the United States from enforcing Section 177. See id. at 3.
A Construing Section 177 to Allow Advertisement
An Act of Congress ought not to be construed as violating the Constitution if any other possible construction remains available.
See, e.g., Rust v. Sullivan,
The Conference Report accompanying the Act explained that Section 177 “prohibits Federal transit grantees from obligating or expending funds that would otherwise be available in the Act, if the grantee is involved directly or indirectly with any activity, including displaying or permitting to be displayed advertisements on its land, equipment, or in its facilities, that promote the legalization or medical use of substances listed in schedule I of section 202 of the Controlled Substance Act.” H.R. CONF. REP. NO. 108-401, at 982 (2003), 2004 U.S.C.C.A.N. 3, 293. WMATA’s posting of a given advertisement is clearly an “indirect” promotion of the message it contains. Neither party has suggested an alternate construction that would avoid this conclusion. Even if the language of the statute were seen as ambiguous regarding the provision of advertising space to public policy groups, the legislative history of the statute makes clear that the congressional intent was specifically to eliminate the type of advertisements implicated by this case. The Conference Report noted “with displeasure that public service advertising space in Washington, DC’s Metropolitan Area Transit Authority rail stations and buses has been used to advocate changing the nation’s laws regarding marijuana usage.” Id. at 982, 2004 U.S.C.C.A.N. 3, 293.
There does not appear to be a reasonable statutory construction that can be used to avoid the constitutional questions raised by plaintiffs. Section 177 must be analyzed to determine whether it is unconstitutional under the First Amendment.
B. Unconstitutionally Vague and Overly Broad
Plaintiffs first argue that Section 177 is unconstitutionally vague and overly broad. Under the First Amendment, “speakers are protected from arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement of vague standards.”
National Endowment for the Arts v. Finley,
The courts are concerned with vague statutes in criminal and regulatory contexts where speakers — because they do not understand what the statute proscribes — will feel “compelled to steer too far clear of any ‘forbidden area.’ ”
See National Endowment for the Arts v. Finley
“[A] law that is overbroad may be perfectly clear but impermissibly purport to penalize protected First Amendment activity.”
Hastings v. Judicial Conference of the United States,
Although its legislative history indicates that Section 177 was intended to prevent advertising promoting the legalization of controlled substances, the language of the statute applies more broadly to all “activity” that “promotes,” directly or indirectly, the legalization of a controlled substance. Plaintiffs suggest that the statute is overly broad because it could force WMATA to regulate the viewpoints of its customers.
See
PI. Mot. at 13. The Court is unconvinced, however, that the sweep of Section 177 is sufficiently broad that WMATA could be seen as “promoting” the legalization of marijuana if, for example, a passenger (or many passengers) were to wear shirts or buttons endorsing that viewpoint.
See id.
Beyond that hypothetical, the Court has been presented with nothing “to indicate that the ordinance will have any different impact on any third parties’ interests in free speech than it has on [plaintiffs].”
Members of the City Council of the City of Los Angeles v. Taxpayers for Vincent,
C. Viewpoint- and ContenP-Based Discrimination
Plaintiffs’ primary argument is that Section 177 is unconstitutional because it is a content-based restriction on speech that discriminates against a particular viewpoint. “It is axiomatic that the government may not regulate speech based on its substantive content or the message it conveys.”
Rosenberger v. Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia,
Restrictions on the basis of a particular viewpoint are even more suspect than viewpoint-neutral content-based restrictions. When the government targets particular viewpoints taken by speakers, “the violation of the First Amendment is all the more blatant.”
Rosenberger v. Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia,
Section 177 is not a viewpoint-neutral restriction. It does not seek to stop the mass transit grantee from expressing all views about controlled substances; rather, it prohibits only the promotion of the “legalization or medical use” of any controlled substance. While there is wider latitude to exclude certain subject matter in so-called nonpublic forums and in designated but limited public forums than there is in traditional public forums like public streets and parks,
see infra
at Part D.2.a., even that exclusion still must be viewpoint-neutral.
See Perry Education Ass’n v. Perry Local Educators’ Ass’n,
The tenets discussed above, however, assume a direct restraint on speech. Were the Court presented with a government regulation that directly placed prohibitions on speech advocating the legalization of marijuana, but allowed the opposite point of view, that regulation unquestionably would be unconstitutional. For example, if WMATA, a government actor, had a policy of accepting advertisements promoting increased sentences for drug offenders, but refusing advertisements advocating the legalization of controlled substances, such a regulation would be unconstitutional. This case, however, does not present the issue of such a direct regulation on speech. Instead, Congress seeks to affect the views expressed on WMATA’s buses, bus stops, subway cars and subway stations through its spending power. The constitutionality of that type of restriction is not so easily determined. Because this case involves a condition placed by Congress on a federal appropriation, plaintiffs’ argument that Section 177 is unconstitutional because it is facially viewpoint discriminatory cannot be addressed independently from the doctrine surrounding the exercise of the congressional spending power.
D. Congressional Spending Power
While the reach of Congress’ spending power is broad and Congress
1. Relation to Federal' Interest
Plaintiffs argue that Section 177 is illegitimate because it is unrelated to the purpose of the appropriation, the funding of mass transit.
See
PI. Mot. at 15. The Supreme Court noted in
Dole
that “our cases have suggested (without significant elaboration) that conditions on federal grants might be illegitimate if they are unrelated to the federal interest in particular national projects or programs.”
South Dakota v. Dole,
Although Congress does have an interest in ensuring that federal funds are not used to facilitate activity that Congress does not wish to promote, the suppression of messages aimed at legalizing controlled substances seems quite far removed from the government’s interest in funding and promoting mass transit. Defendants maintain that “Congress may permissibly decide that federally-funded equipment or facilities may not be used to facilitate or promote activity that is contrary to federal law or that may encourage, even in subtle ways, conduct that Congress has found poses a significant threat to the public welfare.” Def. Mot. at 16. By way of example, the government cites cases upholding funding restrictions in the context of anti-discrimination statutes.
See Davis v. Monroe County Board of Education,
2. Independent Constitutional Bar
a. Mass Transit Grantees’ Compliance with Section 177
A condition imposed on the receipt of federal funds may be impermissible where there is an independent constitutional provision which is violated by the condition.
See South Dakota v. Dole,
The Supreme Court has recognized that there are three types of forums that may be implicated in a First Amendment analysis: (1) the traditional public forum, (2) the designated public forum, and (3) the nonpublic forum. A traditional public forum is one that has traditionally been available for public expression, such as public streets and parks, and any restriction on speech in such a forum is subject to strict scrutiny.
See International Society for Krishna Consciousness v. Lee,
Whether a mass transit facility is a traditional public forum, a designated public forum (limited or unlimited), or a nonpublic forum depends on the characteristics of the forum. In a plurality opinion, four justices of the Supreme Court agreed that “car card” advertising spaces on public buses and streetcars were not a traditional public forum and that a transit system therefore legitimately could decline political advertising while accepting commercial advertising.
See Lehman v. City of Shaker Heights,
[A] streetcar or bus is plainly not a park or sidewalk or other meeting place for discussion, any more than is a highway. It is only a way to get to work or back home. The fact that it is owned and operated by the city does not without more make it a forum.... [I]f we are to turn a bus or a streetcar into either a newspaper or a park, we take great liberties with people who because of necessity become commuters and at the same time captive viewers or listeners.
Id.
at 306-07,
The Court therefore turns to the more difficult question of the subway stations themselves. It is not disputed that WMATA in the past has accepted public issue advertisements, and that WMATA has chosen to “convert[] its subway stations into public fora by accepting other political advertising.”
Lebron v. WMATA
749 F.2d.893, 896 (D.C.Cir.1984);
see also Community for Creative Non-Violence v. Turner,
The necessity for the airport/bus distinction was eliminated by the Supreme Court’s decision in
International Society for Krishna Consciousness v. Lee,
which resolved a split in the circuits and concluded that an airport terminal, like a bus, was a nonpublic forum.
See International Society for Krishna Consciousness v. Lee,
The government argues that a mass transit grantee’s decision to open itself up as a designated public forum cannot invalidate otherwise constitutional funding restrictions enacted by Congress.
See
Def. Mot. at 11; Def. Reply at 9-10. The Court agrees. WMATA’s choice to open itself as a designated public forum is not dispositive and certainly not binding on Congress as it makes funding decisions. So long as a designated public forum remains open, it is bound by the same standards as apply in a traditional public forum, but “a State is not required to indefinitely retain the open character of the facility.”
Perry Education Ass’n v. Perry Local Educators’ Ass’n,
460 U.S. at
The Court is satisfied that it. is possible for WMATA and the other mass transit grantees to comply with the restrictions of Section 177 by implementing certain advertising’ policy changes without themselves violating the First Amendment. 5
b. Viewpoint Discrimination
Because this Court has concluded that it is possible for WMATA to comply with Section 177 without running afoul of the First Amendment, the question becomes whether it was permissible for Congress to enact the type of viewpoint-based funding restriction found in Section 177.
The Supreme Court has held that “[t]he Government can, without violating the Constitution, selectively fund a program to encourage certain activities it believes to be in the public interest without at the same time funding an alternative program which seeks to deal with the problem in another way.”
Rust v. Sullivan,
The Supreme Court distinguishes between the government acting as speaker or using public funds to convey the government’s own message and the government simply funding private speech. In the first instance, viewpoint discrimination is constitutional; in the second, it is not.
See Rosenberger v. Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia,
This case is not about the government funding speech, private or otherwise. While the government was in some sense speaking through the providers in
Rust,
in no way is it speaking through WMATA. Nor is the government funding private speech as in
Velazquez.
In fact, the transit grants are not made for encouraging speech
at all.
There can be no legitimate argument that the government is “speaking” through its funding of capital improvements to mass transit facilities or that the grant of funds for mass transit is “designed” to facilitate private speech. The type of funding at issue here is more closely akin to that found in the
American Library Association
case where the federal government appropriated funds for public libraries to provide Internet access with certain strings attached. At issue in that case was the Children’s Internet Protec
There are two lines of reasoning in
American Library Association
that arguably could support the constitutionality of Section 177. First, the plurality opinion implies that the viewpoint-based restrictions struck down two years earlier in
Velazquez
were found improper because the program was “designed to facilitate private speech,” whereas the library Internet terminals in
American Library Association
were not designed to facilitate speech at all.
See United States v. American Library Ass’n, Inc.,
The two justices who concurred in
American Library Association,
Justice Kennedy and Justice Breyer, did not adopt the plurality opinion’s disavowal of the heightened scrutiny generally associated with the First Amendment. Justice Kennedy noted that librarians were able to unblock filtered material on request and therefore access was not burdened “in any significant degree.”
United States v. American Library Ass’n, Inc.,
Unlike the statute at issue in the
American Library Association
case, Section 177 is a restriction on the expression not just of content, but of a certain viewpoint. Section 177 does not express Congress’ desire to shield the nation’s youth from
all
conversation regarding controlled substances, but rather eliminates only dialogue regarding legislative reform of the narcotics laws, and the prohibition applies to minors and adults alike. Because of its lack of viewpoint neutrality, it cannot survive a heightened scrutiny analysis, which is still required after
American Library Association,
and neither
American Library Association
nor
Finley
is support for its constitutionality. The government has articulated no legitimate state interest in the suppression of this particular speech other than the fact that it disapproves of the message, an illegitimate and constitutionally impermissible reason. As the Court said in
Velazquez:
“When private speech is involved, even Congress’ antecedent funding decision cannot be aimed at the suppression of ideas thought inimical to the Government’s own interest.”
Legal Services Corp. v. Velazquez,
While Congress may be under no obligation to fund mass transit or other entities that rely also on advertising revenues for their survival, once it chooses to do so, it must act in a way that does not engage in viewpoint discrimination in violation of the First Amendment.
See Legal Services Corp. v. Velazquez,
E. Permanent Injtmction
In determining whether to enter a permanent injunction, the Court considers a modified iteration of the factors it utilizes in assessing preliminary injunctions: (1) success on the merits, (2) whether the plaintiffs will suffer irreparable injury absent an injunction, (3) whether, balancing the hardships, there is harm to defendants or other interested parties, and (4) whether the public interest favors granting the injunction.
See National Ass’n of Psychiatric Health Systems v. Shalala,
As discussed in the previous section, the Court concludes that plaintiffs are correct on the merits. As for irreparable injury, “loss of First Amendment freedoms, for even minimal periods of time, unquestionably constitutes irreparable injury.”
Branch v. FCC,
There is no significant harm that will occur if the injunction is granted and there is a clear public interest in preventing the chilling of speech on the basis of viewpoint. Because plaintiffs have prevailed on the merits, permanent injunctive relief is the appropriate remedy in this matter.
An Order and Judgment consistent with this Opinion shall issue this same day.
SO ORDERED.
ORDER AND JUDGMENT OF INJUNCTIVE RELIEF
Upon consideration of plaintiffs’ and defendants’ cross-motions for summary judgment, and of the declarations, exhibits and legal memoranda filed in support thereof and in opposition thereto, and of the arguments of counsel, and of the entire record in this action, and for the reasons stated in the separate Opinion issued this same day, it is hereby
ORDERED that plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction [3] is DENIED as moot; it is
FURTHER ORDERED that plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment and permanent injunction [9] is GRANTED and de
FURTHER ORDERED that defendant Norman Mineta, in his official capacity as Secretary of Transportation, and defendant United States, and their respective officers, employees, representatives, and agents are enjoined from enforcing Section 177 of Division F of the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2004, Pub.L. No. 108-199,118 Stat. 3; and it is
FURTHER ORDERED that this Order and Judgment shall constitute a FINAL JUDGMENT in this case. This is a final appealable order. See Rule 4(a), Fed. R.App. P.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. In a footnote in their reply brief, plaintiffs belatedly argue that the government's suggestion that the federal transit grantees can constitutionally comply with Section 177 by refusing, from this point forward, to carry
any
political advertising, raises questions regarding whether the statute is in pursuit of the general welfare and whether it is sufficiently unambiguous to allow the grantees knowingly to choose a course of action, " 'cognizant of the consequences of their participation.’ ” See PI. Rep. at 4 n. 2 (quoting
South Dakota v. Dole,
. WMATA filed a notice of a related case, Barbour v. WMATA, No. 03-7044 (argued Feb. 10, 2004) currently pending before the court of appeals. WMATA noted that the third restriction under Dole was addressed by the parties’ appellate briefs and at oral argument in that case. The Memorandum Opinion issued by Chief Judge Hogan, however, makes no mention of that issue, and no decision has yet been issued by the court of appeals. This Court therefore can take no guidance from Barbour.
. Although one could distinguish bus shelters from subway stations and say that the bus shelters are public forums because they are simply structures standing on city sidewalks, the essential character making subway stations and airports nonpublic forums-that they are simply terminals for entering and exiting a mass transit system to which people go not for leisure or entertainment but for transportation-is present equally in the case of the bus shelters.
. Plaintiffs’ reliance on cases striking down other mass transit authorities' viewpoint-based advertising policies is inapposite. Certainly, many courts have held, as already noted, that once the state opens up mass transit as a public forum, it cannot discriminate on the basis of viewpoint.
See Christ's Bride Ministries, Inc. v. Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority,
. The Court declines to consider, in the context of this facial challenge, what new advertising policy would both meet the requirements of Section 177 while also satisfying the level of scrutiny inherent in content-based restrictions in a designated public forum.
. The Court in
Velazquez
characterized
Rust
as one of those cases in which the government "used private speakers to transmit information pertaining to its own program."
Legal Services Corp. v. Velazquez,
. In
Rust,
the majority noted that the Court's earlier "unconstitutional conditions” cases involved "situations in which the Government has placed a condition on the
recipient
of the subsidy rather than on a particular program or service, thus effectively prohibiting the recipient from engaging in the protected conduct outside the scope of the federally funded program,” a situation very much like the one presented here.
Rust v. Sullivan,
. Velazquez is important not just because of its reasoning and holding, but because the two decisive Justices in American Library Association — concurring Justices Kennedy and Breyer — were in the majority in Velazquez, a 5-4 decision in which Justice Kennedy wrote the opinion for the Court. Reading these two decisions in harmony leads to the result here.
. The Court acknowledges that certain of plaintiffs advertisements previously displayed by WMATA were significantly more controversial than the advertisement contained in Exhibit B of the plaintiffs’ motion and that the subject matter may have been quite objectionable to parents and other daily commuters. The distasteful nature of certain advertisements chosen by plaintiffs does not, however, make them unprotected speech.
See United States v. Playboy Entertainment Group, Inc.,
