ASSOCIATION OF COMMUNITY ORGANIZATIONS FOR REFORM NOW a/k/a
ACORN, and David Clohessy, Appellants,
v.
ST. LOUIS COUNTY; Gilbert H. Kleinknecht, Superintendent of
Police, St. Louis County; and Lester A. Liebmann,
Director of Department of Revenue, St.
Louis County, Appellees.
No. 89-3011.
United States Court of Appeals,
Eighth Circuit.
Submitted Nov. 14, 1990.
Decided April 8, 1991.
John D. Lynn, St. Louis, Mo., for appellants.
Michael E. Shuman of Clayton, Mo., for appellees.
Before JOHN R. GIBSON, Circuit Judge, HENLEY, Senior Circuit Judge, and CONMY,* District Judge.
JOHN R. GIBSON, Circuit Judge.
This case presents a first amendment challenge to a traffic code provision prohibiting solicitation in the roadways of St. Louis County, brought by ACORN, a non-profit advocacy organization, and one of its members, against St. Louis County, Missouri, its Superintendent of Police and its Director of Revenue. After a bench trial, the district court1 held that the challenged regulation is a permissible time, place and manner restriction serving the government's interest in safety and traffic efficiency and entered judgment for St. Louis County. Association of Community Organization for Reform Now v. St. Louis County,
I.
ACORN has in the past raised money in St. Louis County by soliciting donations from drivers at busy intersections in an operation it calls a "toll road". ACORN's practice is to post solicitors at intersections with traffic lights. They wait on medians or on the sidewalk or road shoulder until the light turns red. Then they walk into the street and approach the stopped vehicles carrying cans for collecting money and "tags," which are little slips of paper with information about ACORN. They start with the first car at the light, then work their way down the row, briefly telling each driver about one of ACORN's goals, asking him for a contribution and giving him a tag. Solicitors may be in each of several lanes of traffic at an intersection, including lanes that are not adjacent to a median or curb. Sometimes, ACORN stations someone at the intersection to shout at the solicitors when the light for the cross street turns yellow, and sometimes the solicitors depend on familiarity with the length of the red light or cues from sounds and driver behavior. In any case, ACORN's ideal is that the solicitors leave the roadway when the light for the cross street turns yellow. ACORN had for a number of years obtained permits from St. Louis County for its solicitation activities.
St. Louis County Traffic Code Sec. 1209.090, enacted on November 22, 1985, provides:
Pedestrians Soliciting Rides or Business--1. No person shall stand in a roadway for the purpose of soliciting a ride, employment, charitable contribution or business from the occupant of any vehicle.
The County thereafter advised ACORN that it will enforce section 1209.090 against ACORN solicitors who go out into the roadway to solicit contributions from drivers, and stopped issuing permits to ACORN. There was testimony at the trial that the County's purposes in enacting section 1209.090 were to promote pedestrian and motorist safety; and that the County's interest in traffic efficiency was also threatened by the "toll roads."
The evidence at trial consisted primarily of testimony about the dangers of in-the-roadway solicitation generally, in-the-roadway solicitation as practiced by ACORN, and ideal in-the-roadway solicitation. St. Louis County's experts all agreed that in-the-roadway solicitation generally is dangerous. ACORN's own expert testified that toll roads are dangerous unless regulated by an extensive set of rules. St. Louis County even produced testimony by a volunteer for another organization who had been hit by a car and seriously injured while collecting charitable contributions in the roadway. St. Louis County also introduced a videotape of an actual ACORN "toll road," in which according to ACORN's own expert, "ACORN people were violating practically every tenet that I have shown here in terms of safety," and delaying traffic after the light changed sixteen percent of the time. The district court found that "[w]ithout doubt, the tape demonstrates that there is a significant safety concern linked with solicitation. It showed solicitors darting in between and around the cars, front and back, and from lane to lane. Occasionally, some of the individuals even remained in the street soliciting after the light had turned green." At 751.
The only area of possible conflict in the testimony was whether in-the-roadway solicitation could ever be done safely and without impairing traffic efficiency. St. Louis County's experts testified that they knew of no technique that would make on-the-roadway solicitation safe. However, ACORN introduced the testimony of Mr. Paul Box, a traffic engineering consultant, who said that by the use of his eight point plan,2 in-the-roadway solicitation could be done at "very little" risk to pedestrians, and with "no significant adverse affect [sic] on the flow of traffic."
St. Louis County's expert Robert Reeder specifically addressed the Box plan and stated that it would improve the safety of the solicitation, but that on-the-roadway solicitation would still not be a safe practice. St. Louis County's Traffic Planning Supervisor, Joseph Passanise, also stated that in-the-roadway solicitation subject to the eight restrictions still would not be safe.
The parties stipulated that section 1209.090 does not forbid solicitors from soliciting drivers as long as they stand off the roadway--on the curb, median or shoulder of the road. Therefore, there is no ban on soliciting drivers--only on standing in the roadway to do it.
II.
The right to solicit contributions to a charitable or political cause is protected by the first amendment. Schaumburg v. Citizens for Better Environment,
The only issue that remained for consideration by the district court, and that this court must address, is whether the restriction is narrowly tailored to serve a significant governmental interest. This test governs the intrusiveness of governmental regulation in two ways. First, it governs the extent to which the regulation can have the incidental effect of burdening behavior that does not threaten the governmental interest in question.
A regulation must not "burden substantially more speech than is necessary to further the government's legitimate interests." Ward v. Rock Against Racism,
Second, the "narrowly tailored" requirement governs the degree of intrusion the government can impose on behavior that does threaten its interests to some degree. To justify any intrusion at all there must be a threshold showing that the factual situation demonstrates a real need for the government to act to protect its interest. In United States v. Grace,
In Clark, the National Park Service had adopted a ban on sleeping in Lafayette Park and the Mall in Washington, D.C., in order to conserve those parks.
The Supreme Court recently summarized both aspects of the "narrowly tailored" requirement in Ward. "[A] regulation of the time, place or manner of protected speech ... need not be the least-restrictive or least-intrusive means of [serving the government's legitimate content-neutral interests]. Rather, the requirement of narrow tailoring is satisfied 'so long as the ... regulation promotes a substantial government interest that would be achieved less effectively absent the regulation.' "
In applying the "narrowly tailored" requirement to the facts of this case, we must conduct an independent review of the "constitutional facts" at issue. See Bose Corp. v. Consumers Union, Inc.,
ACORN first argues that its toll roads are not dangerous and that the scope of the regulation is therefore too broad. It argues that it has not had an accident occur during the conduct of a toll road in the five and one-half years experience of one of its witnesses. ACORN argues that its solicitors are specially trained for safety and the regulation is therefore an unnecessary burden on its first amendment rights. ACORN characterizes the evidence of the solicitor from another charity who was hit by a car as the "isolated exception that proves the general rule of safety."
The fact that there was no evidence of ACORN's solicitors being hurt is of no probative value. The government need not wait for accidents to justify safety regulations. United States Labor Party v. Oremus,
Nor is it sufficient for ACORN to show that its particular practices are safe if the practice of in-the-roadway solicitation generally is dangerous. It is the regulation's relationship "to the overall problem the government seeks to correct," not its necessity in ACORN's particular case, that determines its validity. See Ward,
Furthermore, the evidence clearly showed that the ACORN solicitors' behavior did fall within the scope of the problems the government was trying to address. The videotape showed ACORN solicitors walking across lanes of traffic while cars were moving, detaining cars after the light turned green, and crossing between the front of one car and the rear of another. The solicitors regularly returned to the median only after the light turned green. ACORN's own expert testified that the tape showed ACORN's solicitors "violating practically every [safety] tenet" he had espoused. The district court found that the tape showed a "significant safety concern linked" with ACORN's practices, slip op. at 6, and that finding is supported abundantly by the record. There is no merit to ACORN's argument that the regulation is unwarranted in ACORN's case.
ACORN next argues that the regulation is unduly intrusive, because St. Louis County could accomplish the same goals less intrusively by adopting the Box eight-point plan.3 St. Louis County easily passed the threshold test of proving that it acted in response to a real, not speculative, danger. After satisfying this threshold requirement, the county is not required to show that the regulation adopted was the least restrictive alternative. After Ward, the inquiry is whether St. Louis County "could reasonably have determined that its interests overall would be served less effectively without [section 1209.090] than with it." Ward,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
The Honorable Patrick A. Conmy, Chief United States District Judge for the District of North Dakota, sitting by designation
The Honorable Stephen N. Limbaugh, United States District Judge for the Eastern and Western Districts of Missouri
The eight point plan would:
Require solicitors to be 18 or older
Require solicitors to wear high-visibility clothing, for example, orange vests
Limit the number of solicitors per approach to the intersection to two or three individuals
Require solicitors to leave the roadway and return to their stations in a neutral area (sidewalk or median) when the traffic signal changes to yellow for the cross traffic
Restrict solicitation to the occupants of those vehicles detained by a red traffic light in (a) the left lane of one-way streets where there is no curbed parking and (b) the lane adjacent to a median in two-way streets if the median is at least six feet wide
Forbid solicitors from ever crossing in front of or in back of such vehicles. In other words, restrict solicitation to only one lane of traffic adjacent to the sidewalk or median and allow solicitors to approach only the driver's side of vehicles
Require soliciting organizations to post a supervisor with a whistle at each intersection to monitor the traffic light and to ensure compliance with these safety rules
Restrict solicitation to daylight hours
As we read ACORN's argument, this is not simply another argument that the regulation applies to conduct that is not dangerous. Rather, ACORN argues that the County could make solicitation safe by regulating it as Mr. Box proposes and prosecuting solicitors who violated such a regulation
Moreover, the record was at best contradictory as to whether even the Box eight-point plan would render in-the-roadway solicitation safe. The County's experts said it would not. See supra at 594. We note that two other circuit courts have upheld district court findings that in-the-roadway solicitation cannot be made safe. International Soc'y for Krishna Consciousness, Inc.,
