ORDER
By оrder issued September 30, 1999, the Court granted Motions to Dismiss filed by the Defendants, the Town of Gilbert, Arizona, and the Town’s Mayor, Cynthia Dun-ham, on the ground that the Plaintiffs, the Arizona Civil Liberties Union (AzCLU) and three individual residents of the Town of Gilbert, had not established standing to maintain the action.
See Arizona Civil Liberties Union v. Dunham, (“AzCLU”),
Legal Standard
The Court has discretion to reconsider its order granting final judgment.
Sheet Metal Workers’ Int’l Ass’n Local Union No. 359 v. Madison Indus., Inc., of Arizona,
Discussion
I. Is Reconsideration Warranted?
In the course of addressing Plaintiffs’ arguments, the Court again examined all of the pleadings having any bearing on Defendants’ motions to dismiss, as well as the Court’s prior order. In the prior order, the Court correctly determined that residency, though insufficient to confer standing alone, contributes to the existence of standing.
AzCLU,
“A district judge can vacate a judgment under Rule 60(b) ‘after mature judgment and re-reading the records’ and ‘on its own motion.’ ”
Kingvision Pay-Per-View Ltd. v. Lake Alice Bar,
Reconsideration is merited even though this Court engaged in a careful analysis of Plaintiffs’ standing in its prior order due to both the significance and the difficulty of the issue. In analyzing standing, the Court was mindful that standing and other Article III doctrines are a limitation on judicial power.
See Allen v. Wright,
The Supreme Court has acknowledged the difficulties inherent in the analysis of standing: “ ‘We need not mince words when we say that the concept of ‘Art. Ill standing’ has not been defined with complete consistency in all of the various cases decided by this Court which have discussed it.’ ”
Valley Forge,
II. Do Plaintiffs Have Standing?
In
Valley Forge,
the Supreme Court expressly articulated the importance of direct contact with challenged government conduct, for standing purposes, by distinguishing its prior decision,
School Dist. of Abington Township, Penn. v. Schempp,
In their Response to the Motion to Dismiss, Plaintiffs quote the Supreme Court’s explanation of the harm suffered by individuals when their government endorses a particular religion: “ ‘it sends a message to nonadherents that they are outsiders, not full members of the political community....’ ” (Pis.’ Resp. at 21 (quoting
County of Allegheny v. A.C.L.U.,
In one of the first, and most widely-cited, circuit court decisions addressing standing in the Establishment Clause context after
Valley Forge,
the Eleventh Circuit confirms the significance of direct contact with the challenged activity.
See ACLU v. Rabun County Chamber of Commerce, Inc., (“Rabun County
”),
[BJecause the cross is clearly visible from the porch of his summer cabin at the religious camp which he directs as well as from the roadway he must use to reach the camp, plaintiff Kaman has little choice but to continually view the cross and suffer from the spiritual harm *930 to which he testified.... [W]e are unable to find any qualitative differences between the injury suffered by the plaintiffs in this case and that which the Court found in [Schempp ].
Id.
Several years later, the Ninth Circuit cited
Rabun County
and adopted a second standard that the Eleventh Circuit articulated therein for assessing the existence of standing, drawn from
United States v. SCRAP,
In subsequent actions, the Ninth Circuit has continued to apply this standard without describing the specific conduct that satisfied it. See
Separation of Church and State Comm. v. City of Eugene,
Other circuits have addressed the issue, however. Four years after its decision in
Rabun County,
the Eleventh Circuit addressed the issue of standing in the Establishment Clause context again.
See Saladin v. City of Milledgeville,
In reaching its decision in
Saladin,
the Eleventh Circuit did not rely on the portion of
Rabun County,
“[T]he presence of the word on the seal offends the [plaintiffs] because the seal represents the City’s endorsement of Christianity and thus makes the appel- *931 lantsfeel like second class citizens.” Id. at 692-93 (emphasis added). The message communicated by the seal, appellants assert, is that ... Christianity is the “litmus test” of being a “true” citizen of Milledgeville. The plaintiffs here, unlike the plaintiffs in Valley Forge, clearly have more than an abstract interest in seeing that the City of Milledgeville observed the Constitution: they are part of the City and are directly affronted by the presence of the allegedly offensive word on the city seal.
Id. at 692-93 (footnote omitted; emphasis added). The feeling of being a “second class citizen,” subordinate to others in the local community, was the injury suffered by area residents who found the seal offensive.
The other circuits that have addressed the issue uniformly agree with the Eleventh Circuit that claimants are injured, for standing purposes, if they are еither offended by viewing, or forced to avoid-, a religious display in the area where they live or work. Like the Eleventh Circuit, the Fourth and Seventh Circuits expressly rely on the distinction drawn by the Supreme Court between the plaintiffs in
Valley Forge
and those in
Schempp. See Suhre v. Haywood County,
[L]ike Schempp before it, Valley Forge recognized that direct contact with an unwelcome religious exercise or display works a personal injury distinct from and in addition to each citizen’s general grievance against unconstitutional government conduct.... The Supreme Court identified the proximity of the plaintiffs to the conduct they challenged as a critical factual distinction between [the plaintiffs in those two cases].
Suhre,
The Fourth and the Seventh Circuits also have drawn helpful distinctions between the plaintiffs who possessed standing, and individuals, actual or hypothetical, who did not. In the Seventh Circuit decision, Montgomery County residents had standing to challenge a large sign over the main entrance to the county courthouse, stating: “THE WORLD NEEDS GOD.”
See County of Montgomery,
The Fifth and Tenth Circuits likewise have concluded that standing can be based on a local resident’s direct contact with a display he or she finds offensive.
See Murray v. City of Austin, Texas,
947 F.2d
*932
147, 151 (5th Cir.1991),
cert. denied,
As explained above, the harm resulting from a religious display can occur through either direct contact or avoidance. However, several of the circuit courts have explained that a change in behavior, such as altering a travel route to avoid a religious display, is a sufficient, but not a necessary, injury for purposes of standing.
See, e.g., Foremaster,
Rules of standing that require plaintiffs to avoid public places would make religious minorities into outcasts. Forcing an Establishment Clause plaintiff to avoid the display of which he complains in order to gain standing to challenge it only imposes an extra penalty on individuals already alleged to be suffering a violation of their constitutional rights. We do not think Article III rеquires as much.
Suhre,
Like the injuries sufficient to establish standing in many of the decisions discussed above, the injuries suffered by the Plaintiffs at bar are directly impacted by Plaintiffs’ residency in Gilbert, the town engaged in the challenged conduct. In its prior order, the Court stated:
Ellen and Ellis Sklar, two of the named Plaintiffs, are residents of Gilbert who are Jewish. The Sklars aver that the Bible Week Proclamation offended them and made them feel excluded by the Town in which they reside and by its Mayor “because [they are] not part of the Town’s Christian majority”. (Ellen Sklar Aff. at ¶ 6, Exh. D to Pis.’ Response; Ellis Sklar Aff. at ¶ 4, Exh. E. to Pis.’ Response).
AzCLU,
Like the plaintiffs in
Saladin,
the Sklars’ residency in Gilbert placed them
*933
into unwelcome direct contact with the Bible Week Proclamation. Ellis Sklar avers that he learned of the Proclamation from the media in 1997, and both of the Sklars aver that they learned of the proposed 1998 Proclamation, the one enjoined by this Court, from the media in 1998. The Court discerns no basis for distinguishing between unwelcome direct contact with the Proclamation through the media and unwelcome direct contact with a city seal printed on stationery and city vehicles.
See Saladin,
The Sklars were directly and personally affected by the Bible Week Proclamation. Thus, their injury is unlike the injury suffered by the Plaintiffs in
Valley Forge,
i.e., “ ‘the abstract injury in nonobservance of the Constitution asserted by ... citizens.’ ”
The distinction between the particularized injury asserted by the Sklars and the abstract injury insufficient for standing is further confirmed by the Supreme Court’s decision in
Allen,
Unlike the Plaintiffs in the actions discussed above, the Sklars also provide independent evidence verifying their feelings of being shunned. This evidence consists of uncontroverted -harassing and defamatory mail and phone calls the Sklars received after Ellen Sklar expressed opposition to the proposed 1998 Bible Week Proclamation. (Ellen Sklar Aff. at ¶ 7; Ellis Sklar Aff. at ¶ 5;
see also
Ellen Sklar Dep. at 32; Ellis Sklar Dep. at 96). As explained in the Court’s prior order: “Ellis Sklar testified in his deposition that one caller stated, “You Goddamn Jews, we’ve had nothing but trouble with you since the beginning of time. You should have all been burned in Hell.’ ”
AzCLU,
The Sklars are not the only Plaintiffs directly affected by the Bible Week Proclamation. William Gregory, a Gilbert resident who is Christian, averred that the Bible Week Proclamation “deeply offends” him because “[he] believe[s] that it cheapens holy scriptures” by affording them significance on a par with that of other Proclamation subjects such as “Bowling Week” and “National Pet Week.” (Gregory Aff. at ¶ 7, Exh. G to Pis.’ Response). He also finds the Proclamation demeaning because it suggests that “[his] religion and the Bible ... need governmental support.”
(Id.
at ¶ 5). Eileen Levine, another Christian resident of Gilbert who learned of the Bible Week Proclamation through the media, finds the Proclamation demeaning for the same reason.
4
(Levine Aff. at ¶ 7). Levine is an AzCLU member,
(see
Levine Aff. at ¶ 2), whose affidavit is offered to establish the AzCLU’s standing as an organization litigating on behalf of its members.
See Associated General Contractors of Am. v. Metropolitan Water Dist. of S. Cal.,
Gregory’s and Levine’s feelings of offense at the Town of Gilbert’s and the Mayor’s perceived insult to their religious beliefs, like the offense experienced by the individuals in the cases discussed above, are enhanced due to their residency in Gilbert. They are “part of the City and are directly affronted [by the Proclamation].”
Saladin,
Recognizing that the injuries of the Sklars, Gregory, and Levine are sufficient for standing purposes does not provide other potential plaintiffs “a special license to roam the country in search of governmental wrongdoing and to reveal their discoveries in federal court,” the concern ex
*935
pressed by the Supreme Court in
Valley Forge,
As the Court’s prior order explained, Plaintiffs also must satisfy “the traceability and redressability requirements for standing, i.e., the requirements ‘that the injury fairly can be traced to the challenged action and is likely to be redressed by a favorable decision.’ ”
AzCLU,
Plaintiffs request that the court reconsider another matter. As noted above, this Court’s prior order concluded, correctly, that the harassing mail and phone calls the Plaintiffs received as a result of their opрosition to Bible Week constituted an injury.
See AzCLU,
Plaintiffs argue that the harassing mail referenced in the report establishes standing. As a general rule, the Court does not consider evidence on a motion for reconsideration if the evidence could have been provided before the decision was rendered initially.
See Multnomah County,
The harassing mail referenced in the Police Department Report does not help establish standing because Plaintiffs have not shown that the harassing mail resulted from the issuance of the 1997 Bible Week Proclamation, the only Proclamation that remains at issue. It is likely that the harassing mail was sent as a result of Ellen Sklar’s opposition to the proposed 1998 Proclamаtion, expressed at a Town Council meeting earlier in November. 5 Plaintiffs also reference a letter to the editor published in the Gilbert Tribune on November 12, 1998 as another example of harassing mail that occurred before the litigation ensued. Even if a published letter to a newspaper editor, rather than a letter directly to the Plaintiffs, could establish injury for standing purposes, an issue the Court does not decide, Plaintiffs have *936 not established that the letter resulted from the issuance of the 1997 Bible Week Proclamation. Again, this letter appears to be a result of Sklar’s opposition to the proposed 1998 Proclamation.
In their Motion for Reconsideration, Plaintiffs also ask the Court to correct what they describe as “factual errors.” Plaintiffs state that, to the extent the Court suggested that the Town incurred attorneys’ fees and expenses for stationery and postage only after the litigation ensued, the suggestion is incorrect. The Court did not make that finding — it merely stated: “It is not clear whether the Town incurred this expense [of attorneys’ fees], or the expense of stationery and stamps for correspondence, before or only after the instant litigation ensued.”
AzCLU,
Plaintiffs also point to the contents of the letter, in which Mayor Dunham states that the Town’s counsel had advised her that the Bible Week Proсlamation did not appear to violate the Establishment Clause. (Dunham Dep., Exh. A to Pis.’ Mot. for Reconsideration; Letter from Dunham, Dec. 1997). The Court referred to this letter in the prior order, but not for this point. The Court’s decision provided Plaintiffs the first notice that the period of time in which the correspondence costs and attorneys’ fees were incurred might be material to the issue of standing. Therefore, the Court will amend its prior decision to reflect Dunham’s statement that the Town’s counsel was consulted in 1997.
Because Plaintiffs have established standing, the order granting Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss will be vacаted. The current order renders moot Plaintiffs’ arguments about the appropriate award of costs. A decision addressing the argument in the Motions to Dismiss, that Plaintiffs failed to state a claim, will issue separately.
Accordingly,
IT IS ORDERED granting Plaintiffs’ Motion for Reconsideration. (Dkt.# 118).
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED vacating the Order of September 30, 1999 granting the Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss in part. The Motions to Dismiss are denied with respect to the issue of standing. The issue of whether the Complaint states a claim will be addressed in a separate order. The following portions of the analysis contained in the Order are vacated:
1. On page 1075, in the paragraph beginning: “It is undisputed that the mental anguish and profound offense that the named Plaintiffs experienced [... ] is genuine[,]” delete the last two sentences of the paragraph, beginning with “Nonetheless,” and their accompanying citations.
2. On page 1082, in the paragraph beginning: “In addition to the expense for certificates, stamps, and stationery [...], the Town expended $1,989 in attorneys fees for legal research and advice [... ]”, delete the remainder of the paragraph, beginning with “It is not clear.”
The remainder of the analysis is not vacated.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED renewing the Town of Gilbert’s Motion to Strike the Affidavit of Eileen Levine, and denying the Motion. (Dkt.# 96).
Notes
. The word "Christianity” was nоt legible on the printed and embossed copies of the seal, but the Eleventh Circuit considered the illegibility immaterial because the particular appellants knew that the illegible mark was the word "Christianity” regardless of whether they could read it. Id. at 691-92.
. This conclusion increases the persuasive value of the Sevenths Circuit's discussion in an earlier decision, in which it opined that individuals may be more likely to be "intensely distressed” by an unconstitutional display in the area where they reside.
See ACLU v. City of St. Charles,
. See Meghan Tomasik, Note, Nothing to Stand On: Reading the Standing Doctrine to Include Religious Proclamations Through Arizona Civil Liberties Union v. Dunham, 32 Ariz. St. L.J. 345 (2000) (student commentаtor on contact via the media as sufficient direct contact).
. In the prior order, the Court denied as moot the Defendant Town of Gilbert's Motion to Strike Levine’s affidavit. However, the Court's reconsideration of the standing issue requires that the Motion to Strike be addressed. The Town merely argues that the affidavit should be stricken because it does not establish injury. This argument pertains to the weight of the affidavit, not to its admissibility. Therefore, the Motion to Strike will be denied.
. The constitutionality of the proposed 1998 Proclamation was rendered moot by the Court's issuance of a TRO prohibiting issuance of the Proclamation.
