ORDER
This matter is before the court on plaintiffs Kimberly Billups, Michael Warfield, and Michael Nolan’s (collectively, “plaintiffs”) motion for preliminary injunction, and defendant City of Charleston’s (the “City”) motion to dismiss. For the following reasons, the court denies plaintiffs’ motion for preliminary injunction and denies the City’s motion to dismiss.
I, BACKGROUND
This dispute arises out of a First Amendment challenge to the City’s regulation of tour guides. The city of Charleston, South Carolina draws millions of visitors every year and has developed a reputation for being one of the top tourist destinations in the world. Riley Aff. ¶ 3. Given the size and significance of the local tourism industry, the City has long regulated the industry in a number of ways. Id. ¶¶ 4-5. Pursuant to Charleston City Code § 29-58, the City prohibits any person from “act[ing] or offer[ing] to act as a -tour guide in the city for hire unless he or she has first passed a written examination and is licensed by the [City].” A “tour guide” is defined as a “person who acts or offers-to act as a guide for hire through any part of’ certain regulated areas of the city. Charleston City Code § 29-2. The City defines a “tour or touring” as “the conducting of or the participation in sightseeing ... for hire or in combination with a request for donations.” Id.
The City recently amended the prerequisites to obtaining a tour guide license. ECF No. 26, Def.’s Second Supp. 1. As the regulations currently stand, the City simply requires prospective tour guides to pass the aforementioned written examination and obtain a valid business license before qualifying for a tour gUide license. Id. The written examination is designed to “test the applicant’s knowledge of the city and its history,” Charleston City Code § 29-59(b), and consists of 200 questions drawn from information provided in the Charleston Tour Guide Training Manual (the “Manual”), a 490-page study guide sold by the City’s Tourism Management Office. Compl. ¶¶ 16, 20. The stated purpose of the Manual “is to provide a wealth of knowledge for prospective and current licensed tour guides” in an effort to further “the city’s goal to provide accurate, factual and updated information to its visitors and residents.” Id ¶ 21; ECF No. 5-3, Manual Excerpts. A prospective tour guide must correctly answer 70 percent of the exam questions to pass.
Prior to the recent amendments, the City also required prospective tour guides to pass an oral examination, wherein candidates would “act as a guide” before City officials and be evaluated on a “pass or fail basis.” Compl. ¶ 18; see also Ordinance § 3 (striking provisions requiring oral examination). Beyond “acting as a tour guide,” the pre-amendment Code recognized two additional roles an individual might occupy in a guided tour operation: a “temporary tour guide” and an “escort.” Compl. ¶¶ 27-30; see also Ordinance §§ 1, 2, 4, 5, 7-9 (striking provisions dealing with temporary tour guides and removing reference to tour “escorts”). Under certain conditions, individuals could obtain a one-time, temporary tour guide license that lasted for a maximum of six months. Compl. ¶ 27. To obtain such a license, applicants needed to pass a “temporary tour guide examination” and be “sponsored and employed by persons who operate a licensed tour company.” Id. ¶¶28, 29. The sponsoring employer was also required to file a script with the City which the City would “approve for accuracy.” Id. ¶ 30.
Tour “escorts” were persons employed to satisfy certain size restrictions on walking tour groups. The City requires group walking tours conducted in the public right of way for groups of over 20 persons to be divided into sub-groups of no more than 20 people. Ordinance § 9 (amending limits on size requirements of Charleston City Code § 29-261). The pre-amendment regulations required an “escort,” who did not need to be a licensed tour guide, to accompany any sub-groups that were not accompanied by a licensed tour guide. Id. Now, the City requires that each sub-group “be accompanied by a licensed tour guide.” Id.
Plaintiffs are individuals who wish to work as tour guides in Charleston, but failed to meet the 80 percent threshold required to pass the written licensing exam when they each took it in 2015. Compl. ¶¶ 38, 52-55, 68. Notably, plaintiffs Kimberly Billups and Michael Warfield each scored over the current 70 percent threshold in November 2015 and August 2015, respectively. Id. ¶ 38, 53. Pursuant to the retroactive application of the new 70 percent threshold, Billups. and Warfield are now eligible to obtain tour guide licenses. See Ordinance § 10. Plaintiff Michael Nolan, however, remains ineligible for a tour guide license and must still pass the written examination. Compl. ¶ 68 (noting that plaintiff Nolan scored a 64 percent on his only attempt to pass the written exam). Billups and ’Warfield remain subject to the continuing education requirements and the prospect of future examination if they fail to meet those requirements. Charleston City Code § 29-63.
On January 28, 2016, plaintiffs filed a complaint alleging that the City’s tour guide license requirement violated the First Amendment of the United States Constitution, both facially and as applied to them. Compl. ¶¶ 103-06, On February 2, 2016, plaintiffs filed a motion for preliminary injunctive relief prohibiting the City and its agents from enforcing the tour guide licensing requirement and the related provisions of the Charleston City Code. On March 7, 2016, the City filed a response to plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction, as well as a motion to dismiss. On March 14, 2016, plaintiffs filed a reply in support of their motion for
II. STANDARD
A. Motion to Dismiss
Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), a party may move to dismiss for “failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.” When considering a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss, the court must accept the plaintiffs factual allegations as true and draw all reasonable inferences in the plaintiffs favor. See E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. v. Kolon Indus.,
B. Motion for Preliminary Injunction
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 65(a) grants discretion to the reviewing court in deciding whether to issue a preliminary injunction. It provides that a court “may issue” a preliminary injunction only upon notice to the adverse party. Fed. R. Civ. P. 65(a). A preliminary injunction is “an extraordinary remedy that may only be awarded upon a clear showing that the plaintiff is entitled to such relief.” Winter v. Natural Res. Def. Council Inc.,
Preliminary injunctions may be categorized as either prohibitory or mandatory. Pashby v. Delia,
III. DISCUSSION
Plaintiffs argue they are entitled to a preliminary injunction restraining the City from enforcing its tour guide licensing regulations because such regulations are clearly unconstitutional and are currently preventing plaintiffs’ from exercising their First Amendment rights. Plaintiffs are obviously asking for a mandatory preliminary injunction. The City argues that the plaintiffs’ claims should be dismissed because the challenged regulations do not regulate or impermissibly burden speech within the meaning of the First Amendment.
Though different standards apply to each motion, the first factor of the preliminary injunction inquiry under Winter presents the same basic question as the City’s motion to dismiss — whether the City’s licensing regime violates the First Amendment. Indeed, plaintiffs’ arguments as to the other Winter factors rely on the assumption that the licensing regime is unconstitutional. See PLs.’ Mot. 22-23 (arguing that plaintiffs’ showing of irreparable harm is “inseparably linked” to their showing of a violation of their First Amendment rights (citing Newsom ex rel. Newsom v. Albemarle Cty. Sch. Bd.,
“The First Amendment, applicable to the States through the Fourteenth Amendment, prohibits the enactment of laws ‘abridging the freedom of speech.’” Reed v. Town of Gilbert, Ariz., — U.S. -,
The City argues that the licensing regime only regulates the act of charging money for tour guide services, and that such action does not implicate the First Amendment. Def.’s Resp. 13-14; Def.’s Mot. 8-9. To support this proposition, the City relies on Detroit Automotive Purchasing Services, Inc, v. Lee, a 1978 decision from the District of Maryland in which the court found that a state law requiring a license to “make[ ] arrangements on behalf of clients to purchase particular vehicles” did not implicate the First Amendment.
The City’s’focus on the “conduct” constituting the transaction' loses sight of the expressive material being distributed through that transaction. The content of the transaction is what distinguishes the City’s licensing regime from the licensing statute at issue in Detroit Automotive. In Detroit Automotive, the court viewed the license requirement as a prohibition on selling véhicles, Detroit Automotive,
Thus, the fact that the plaintiffs in Detroit Automotive did not need a license to inform customers about the price of automobiles is not analogous to the instant plaintiffs’ ability to engage in free tour guide services. Communicating the price of an automobile simply facilitates the sale of the automobile. The automobile remains the object of the sale. In this case, tom-guide services are not ancillary communications used to facilitate a transaction; they are — like the automobiles in Detroit Automotive — the objects of the transaction. Thus, the appropriate comparison is between tom guide services and automobiles, not communications about the price of automobiles.
2. Appropriate First Amendment Scrutiny
The question then arises: what form of First Amendment scrutiny is required? The answer turns on the manner in which the City’s licensing regime threatens the aims of the First Amendment.
The animating purpose behind the First Amendment “lies [in] the principle that each person should decide for himself or herself the ideas and beliefs deserving of expression, consideration, and adherence.” Turner Broad. Sys., Inc. v. F.C.C.,
A law may be content-based in two ways: it may be content-based “on its face,” or it may rely on a content-based “purpose and justification.” Reed,
The Supreme Court has explained that while “[s]ome facial distinctions based on a message are obvious, ... others are more subtle, [such as] defining regulated speech by its function or purpose.” Reed,
In this case, however, this argument is unpersuasive. The City defines a “tour or touring” as the “conducting of or the participation in sightseeing.” Charleston City Code § 29-2. This broad definition does not explicitly mention speech at all, and the court is unable to discern what form or function of speech would be necessarily required to perform such activities. Whereas the “marketing speech” can be defined as speech “used to influence sales or the market share of a [product],” see Sorrell,
For instance, one might imagine a tour that simply takes visitors along a scenic route, without discussing particular points of interest — perhaps a silent tour for the particularly contemplative, or a running tour for exercise enthusiasts.
The most that can be said is that acting as a tour guide requires one to speak with the function or purpose of acting as a tour guide. Whatever the Court intended when it held that a law may be content-based if it facially distinguishes between categories of speech defined by their “function or purpose,” Reed,
Even if a regulation is not content-based on its face, it may nevertheless be content-based if it was imposed with a content-based purpose or justification. Sor-rell,
Plaintiffs argue that the City’s license requirement is motivated by an intent to influence the content of the tour guides’
The City offers a different justification for the licensing requirement, arguing that its purpose is to “protect the City’s tourism economy and its residents and visitors from false or misleading offers of service for compensation.” Def.’s Resp. 21; Def.’s Mot. 13. This assertion finds support in the language of Charleston City Code § 29-1, which states that the purpose of the Code sections regulating tourism is “to maintain, protect and promote the tourism industry and economy of the city .... ” The City contends that the licensing requirement accomplishes this goal by ensuring that all persons holding themselves out as tour guides have a “base level of competency to provide the touring services they are charging for.” Def.’s Resp. 7.
a. Motion to Dismiss
It is clear that, for motion to dismiss purposes, plaintiffs have sufficiently stated a claim that the tour guide licensing regime relies on a content-based justification, and therefore, must be evaluated under strict scrutiny. Though the City has offered its own competing justifications, it has not demonstrated that plaintiffs’ allegations are insufficient to. support their claim, especially when such allegations are construed in plaintiffs’ favor. Moreover, the City’s justifications are not necessarily inconsistent with plaintiffs’ argument. Even if one accepts that the City intends to ensure that all tour guides possess a “base level of competency,” that intent is entirely consistent with a desire to influence the content of their speech — especially if one assumes that the City regards a “competent” tour guide to be one who provides visitors with certain types of information. Given the written examination’s focus on certain topics, it is fair to say that the examination provides some indication that the City holds particular views about what information a “competent” tour guide would convey and that the licensing regime is an attempt to restrict speech that does not Convey such information. On this view, the licensing regime is clearly content-based and therefore subject to strict scrutiny.
b. Motion for Preliminary Injunction
Turing to plaintiffs’ motion for preliminary injunction, the question is much closer. Under the preliminary injunction standard, it is not enough for plaintiffs to simply point to the existence of allegations or evidence supporting their motion; the court must weigh such considerations against the opposing arguments and evidence to determine whether plaintiffs have made a “clear showing” that they are likely to prevail on the merits of their claim. Importantly, the court must apply an even more exacting “clear showing” standard in this case, because plaintiffs seek to alter the regulatory scheme currently in place, thereby' disturbing the “status quo.” See Pashby,
While the City’s proffered justification for its licensing requirement may be consistent with an underlying content-based purpose, it does not necessarily establish
As previously mentioned, the language of Charleston City Code § 29-1 supports this understanding of the City’s motivations. Charleston City Code § 29-1 (“It is the purpose of such regulation to maintain, protect and promote the tourism industry and economy of the city .... ”). The fact that the licensing regime permits tour guides to speak on whatever topics they wish provides further support for this view. See Kagan,
3. Intermediate Scrutiny
Now, the court is faced with a fork in the road
For a law to meet the requirements of intermediate scrutiny, it “must be ‘narrowly tailored' to serve a significant governmental interest.’’” McCullen v. Coakley, — U.S. -,
The Fourth Circuit recently examined how a court must apply the intermediate scrutiny analysis in Reynolds v. Middleton,
a. Existence of Substantial Interest
Plaintiffs first argue that the government does not have a substantial interest in enforcing the licensing requirement because its stated interest is invalid. Pis.’ Mot. 19. Plaintiffs contend that the City’s interest in ensuring that tour guides are properly qualified is necessarily connected to an interest in managing the content of their speech, and thus, this interest cannot justify the City’s regulation.
Here, the City’s stated interest does not simply involve the bare exercise of free speech. The City’s interest in speech is derivative of its primary interest in preventing “false or misleading offers of service for compensation.” Def.’s Resp. 23. The problem is not simply that unqualified guides may provide visitors with false information, it is that they may do so under the guise of providing “accurate” information, and that such behavior may harm visitors, residents, and the industry overall. The difference between what is promised and what is delivered is the core of the City’s interest, not the content of the information itself. Moreover, the Watchtower Bible Court did not even rely on plaintiffs’ rationale in reaching its holding. In Watchtower Bible, the Court struck down the permit requirement because it applied to more far more speech than necessary to further the government’s stated goals and was therefore not narrowly tailored. Id. at 168-69,
Courts have recognized that governments have a legitimate and substantial interest in preventing fraudulent or misleading commercial operations and protecting their industries. Riley,
b. Advancement of Substantial Interest
The question of whether the licensing regime actually advances that interest is effectively uncontested. The City argues that its licensing requirement ensures that tour guides offering their services in Charleston are qualified because people unwilling to learn about the City’s history are unlikely to pass the written examination. Def.’s Resp. 24. Plaintiffs do argue that because tours do not always focus on the city’s history, there is no nexus between the information required to pass the test and the knowledge required to be a tour guide. Pis.’ Mot. 19-20. However, this argument really goes to the degree to which the regime advances the City’s interests. Few would doubt that the regime advances the City’s interests with respect to all tour guides who discuss the topics covered by the written exam. Whether that benefit is sufficient to justify the regulation is another question. Therefore, the court finds that plaintiffs’ “nexus” argument is better addressed under the final prong of the intermediate scrutiny analysis — whether the licensing requirement burdens “substantially more speech than is necessary to further the government’s legitimate interests.” McCullen,
Even if one rejects the premise that the licensing requirements are related to the qualifications necessary to act as a tour guides, there are still reasons to think that such requirements prevent unqualified individuals from misleading potential cus
c. Excessive Burden on Speech
Thus, the court comes to the crucial question of whether the City’s licensing requirement places an excessive burden on speech in relation to the interests it promotes. The Supreme Court has explained that a regulation is excessively burdensome when it “burden[s] substantially more speech than is necessary to further the government’s legitimate interests.” Turner Broad. Sys.,
As discussed above, plaintiffs argue that there is no “nexus” between the licensing requirement and much of the speech made in the course of providing “tour guide services.” Pis.’ Mot. 19-20. While the written examination requires prospective guides to learn about the city’s history, licensed tour guides may provide tours dealing with ghosts, pubs, or any number of other topics. Id. Because these tours do not require any particular competency or qualification, plaintiffs argue, the licensing regime burdens this speech unnecessarily.
The City argues that its regulations do not restrict more speech than necessary because they only regulate the sale of tour guide services, allowing plaintiffs to give tours and speak freely on any subject so long as they do not charge for such ser
However, the One World court did not find that this fact alone showed that the regulation at issue was narrowly tailored. The court also observed that “[t]he ordinance targets precisely the activity [] causing the problems the city legitimately seeks to ameliorate, and it doesn’t sweep in expressive activity that doesn’t contribute to those problems.” One World,
As "for the City’s reliance on- Kagan, plaintiffs.argue that the Kagan court failed to conduct the type -of inquiry -required under McCuIlen and Reynolds. Pis.’ Mot. 21-22.. As discussed above, the Fourth Circuit recently interpreted the Supreme Court’s decision in McCuIlen to hold that “the government [must] present actual evidence supporting its assertion that a speech restriction does not burden substantially more speech than necessary; argument unsupported by the evidence will not suffice to carry the government’s burden.” Reynolds,
First, the court notes that the parties appear to exaggerate the difference in the analysis applied by the district court in Kagan and the D.C. Circuit in Edwards.
Nevertheless, the court does find that the D.C. Circuit’s opinion in Edwards provides a somewhat better illustration of the analysis required under the Fourth Circuit’s opinion in Reynolds. The Edwards court looked beyond the simple fact that alternative avenues of communication were available and evaluated the extent to which the government’s regulation restricted speech in furtherance of its interests. By looking for evidence that the regulated conduct actually threatened the government’s interests, and assessing the viability of alternative means of advancing such interests, the Edwards court was able to determine whether the regulation at issue was properly calibrated to its justifying purpose. This element of calibration goes to the very heart of the constitutional requirement that the regulation “not ‘burden substantially more speech than is necessary to further the government’s legitimate interests.’” McCullen,
In contrast, under the City’s proposed analysis, the court might simply assume that because' the licensing regime left open certain channels of communication, the channels that it foreclosed were narrowly tailored to protect the City’s interests. While alternative channels of communication may provide indirect evidence of narrow tailoring, such evidence is not conclusive. Their availability says nothing about the burdened speech or its relationship to the government’s interest. Moreover, if all the government needed to show was the bare existence Of alternative channels of communication, it is not clear what role Reynolds’s evidentiary requirement would play, since this showing could most often be made by looking at the text of the regulation itself.
Therefore,, the court finds that the City must provide some evidence that: (i) unqualified tour guides posed a threat to its interests in protecting its tourism industry from fraud and deceit; and (ii) it did not forego readily available, less intrusive means . of protecting those interests. McCullen,
At the same time, the court does not believe this evidentiary showing is as demanding as the Edwards opinion might suggest. While the Edwards court cited the fact that “the record contains no evidence ill-informed guides are indeed a problem for the District’s tourism industry,” Edwards,
The court also rejects any suggestion that the government must prove that it attempted to implement, or even considered, every possible less restrictive alternative a plaintiff or court might imagine. Bruni,
Importantly, the less restrictive alternative inquiry presupposes that the proposed alternatives “would be at
The McCullen decision is instructive on this issue. In McCullen, the' Supreme Court recognized, and ultimately rejected, the government’s argument that the available alternatives would fail to achieve the government’s interests. McCullen,
i. Motion to Dismiss
Applying these evidentiary requirements to the City’s motion to dismiss, it is clear that plaintiffs have stated a plausible claim for relief. The complaint sufficiently alleges that the City has no evidence that unlicensed tour guides have ever presented problems in Charleston, or any other city. Compl. ¶84 (“[T]he City has no evidence of any harm that has ever befallen the public due to a city’s failure to require tour guides to pass an examination before they may work as guides.”); Compl. ¶ 93 (“[T]he City has no evidence of harms that would arise if the requirement to pass a written exam were removed.”). Taking these allegations to be true, plaintiffs can plausibly argue that the licensing regime is unduly burdensome because the interests it protects are simply not at risk.
ii. Motion for Preliminary Injunction
Assessing this issue under the preliminary injunction standard is, unsurprisingly, more difficult. The City characterizes plaintiffs’ focus on the evidentiary requirements set forth in Reynolds as an “attempt[] to flip the preliminary injunc-tive standard on its head,” because the clear showing burden lies with the plaintiffs, as the moving party. Def.’s Supp. Resp. 6. While it is true that plaintiffs bear the ultimate burden of making, a clear showing that they are likely to prevail on the merits, Fourth Circuit precedent requires the court to evaluate the merits on the basis of the current record. See Newsom ex rel. Newsom v, Albemarle Cty. Sch. Bd.,
Still, on the record before it, the court does not find that plaintiffs are likely to prevail at trial, especially under the heightened standard applicable here. The court first observes that the licensing regime burdens a rather small range of speech — namely, speech given in connection with hired tour guide services. Charleston City Code § 29-58. This is not a case like McCullen or Reynolds, where speakers were absolutely prohibited from engaging in certain forms of speech in certain locations, McCullen,
The court also notes that there is very little evidence in the record that the licensing regime imposes any significant burdens on speech that “do[] not serve to advance its goals.” McCullen,
Thus, at this stage of the litigation, the record suggests that the City’s licensing regime imposes only a minor burden on speech. This fact must be considered in determining whether the City has ‘burdened] substantially more speech than is necessary to further the government’s legitimate interests.’” McCullen,
Keeping this principle in mind, the court turns to the City’s evidence of narrow tailoring. As noted above, the City has not shown that unscrupulous tour guides have ever caused any harm to the tourism industry in Charleston. However, the City has presented evidence that it is a highly regarded tourist destination, Riley Aff. ¶ 3, and that “fake tour guides” target such destinations. Def.’s Supp. Resp. 7 n.27’ (recommending a Google search for “fake tour guides”). While this' evidence is certainly not conclusive, the court finds that it at least indicates that Charleston possesses the somewhat unique attributes that may attract unscrupulous tour guide activity, and thus, the City has some non-speculative reasons for believing its interests are at risk. Moreover, the City apparently shares these concerns with four other American cities. Pis.’ Mot. 4. While plaintiffs make much of the fact that this evidence must be weighed against “the scores of other U.S. cities that have determined licensing tour guides is not necessary,” Pis.’ Mot. 20 (quoting Edwards,
Plaintiffs also complain that the City has failed to present evidence that it considered less-restrictive alternatives. Pis.’ Mot. 20-21; Pis.’ Reply 8. The court agrees that the City has failed to present any evidence that it took specific efforts to examine any such alternatives. However, the court remains unconvinced that the plaintiffs’ proposed measures would adequately protect the City’s interests. Because the City has presented some evidence that unscrupulous, unqualified tour guides pose a threat to consumers, the court finds there is also reason to believe that plaintiffs’ proposed reliance on “market forces” is insufficient. The very fact that the problem exists suggests that it has escaped the grasp of the invisible hand. Plaintiffs also suggest the City adopt a voluntary licensing program, but note only two other cities where such programs exist, and in both instances, the programs are run by private organizations. Pis.’ Mot. 4. To the extent plaintiffs suggest the City rely on a private organization to establish a voluntary certification program, the court considers such a suggestion indistinguishable from reliance on “market forces.” To the extent plaintiffs suggest that the City establish its own voluntary certification program, the record contains no indication that any other jurisdictions have adopted this approach, much less jurisdictions with similar tourism markets. As set forth above, the court does not believe that the City was required to identify and examine every possible method of addressing its concerns before implementing the licensing regime. Ward,
In sum, the court is asked to enjoin the enforcement of a licensing scheme that does not impose an especially sizable burden oh speech, where there is at least some evidence that the substantial interests that scheme is designed to protect are at risk. While the record does not show that the City gave any consideration to the less-restrictive alternatives proposed by plaintiffs, questions remain as to whether such proposals would protect the City’s interests as well as the licensing requirement. Even if these alternatives were effective, the fact that the licensing scheme imposes only a modest burden on speech makes it highly unlikely that the alterna-fives would burden “substantially less speech.” McCullen,
B. Irreparable Harm
“[I]n the context of an alleged violation of First Amendment rights, a plaintiffs claimed irreparable harm is ‘inseparably linked’ to the likelihood of success on the merits of plaintiffs First Amendment claim.” WV Ass’n of Club Owners & Fraternal Servs., Inc. v. Musgrave,
The same dynamic determines whether the balance of the equities favors a grant of preliminary injunctive relief and whether such relief is in the public interest. As to the balance of the equities, the City would clearly suffer harm if it was prevented from enforcing the license requirement and protecting Charleston’s tourism industry. .Similarly, the public has an interest in preventing unscrupulous tour guides from misleading tourists.
Certainly, a government suffers no harm from the “issuance of a preliminary injunction which prevents it from enforcing a regulation^] which ... is likely to be found unconstitutional,” Newsom,
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons the court DENIES the City’s motion to dismiss and DENIES plaintiffs’ motion for preliminary injunction.
AND IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Prior to the recent amendments, prospective tour guides were required to correctly answer 80 percent of the exam questions to pass. Compl. ¶ 17. The recent amendments make the reduced 70 percent threshold retroactive to April 26, 2015, ECF No. 26-1, Ordinance § 10.
. , After maintaining a.valid license for a period of 25 years, a tour guide obtains the status of "tour guide emeritus” and is relieved of any continuing education or testing requirements. Charleston City Code § 29-63.
. Charleston City Code § 29 — 59(f), which reduced the passing threshold to 70 percent, was made retroactive to April 26, 2015, as described above.
. The City effectively concedes that tour guide services implicate speech through its-repeated emphasis of the fact that unlicensed individuals are free to engage in the sorts of acts that constitute "tour guide services” as long as they do not charge a fee. Def.’s Resp. 14. Def.'s Mot. 3.
. At this point in the analysis, the court simply addresses the City’s contention that no First Amendment scrutiny is required at all. This leaves to the side the secondary question of whether tour guide services constitute a content-specific form of speech. Because the court finds that tour guide services do constitute, or at least implicate, “speech” within the meaning of the First Amendment, it will be necessary to take up this secondary question to determine what sort of First Amendment scrutiny must be applied.
. Whether or not plaintiffs are free to communicate the price of tour guide services is not the issue in this case.
. Even the Fifth Circuit in Kagan v. City of New Orleans, which found that a similar tour guide licensing regime in New Orleans was constitutional, applied some First Amendment scrutiny.
. Plaintiffs' initial motion for preliminary injunction and response to the City's motion to dismiss pointed to the role of a tour "escort” under the City’s pre-amendment regulations to illustration this distinction. Pis.’ Mot. 11; Pis.’ Resp. 6-7. Plaintiffs argued that an unlicensed tour escort was permitted to engage in all of the same conduct as a licensed tour guide, except that the escort could not talk about points of interest. Pis.' Mot. 11; Pis.’ Resp. 6-7. Since the City has recently removed the role of a four "escort” from the regulations, plaintiffs now transfer this argument to a hypothetical bus driver of a vehicle based tour. Pis.’ Supp. Resp. 5-6.
. At least, this was the definition of marketing at issue when the question was addressed by the Supreme Court in Sorrell.
. Even if one regards these hypotheticals as somewhat implausible, they nevertheless fall within the definition of a "tour” set forth in Charleston City Code § 29-2, as both could be said to involve "the conducting of or the participation in sightseeing.”
. Indeed, this hypothetical is not far from the tours plaintiff Kimberly Billups actually plans to offer. Compl. ¶ 34.
.Notably, the district court in Edwards v, District of Columbia,
. Whether the City's attempt to tailor its examination to the relevant topics was successful may be analyzed under the intermediate scrutiny standard, but the point remains: a poorly designed examination does not preclude the possibility of a content-neutral purpose,
. The court does not mean to suggest that the City may support its regulations with post hoc justifications in response to litigation. Greater Baltimore Ctr. for Pregnancy Concerns, Inc. v. Mayor & City Council of Balti
. As the late great philosopher Yogi Berra once said, "if you come to a fork in the road — take it.”
. The City does argue, in a footnote, that "if the court determines that the ordinance is content based ... the ordinance regulates no more than commercial speech.” Def.’s Resp. 27 n.129, However, as the City recognizes, commercial speech is "defined as that which 'does no more than propose a commercial transaction.' ” Moore-King v. Cty. of Chesterfield, Va.,
. This argument attempts to stop the intermediate scrutiny analysis before it even begins and bears a strong resemblance to plaintiffs’ prior argument that the licensing regime must be analyzed under strict scrutiny because it lacked a content-neutral justification. Though the court has some doubt as to whether this argument is truly appropriate under the intermediate scrutiny framework, it ultimately finds the argument unpersuasive and therefore declines to consider whether or not it is duplicative.
. The court has some doubts as to whether ghost and pub tours are truly unrelated to the city's history. Nevertheless, the court accepts the premise that one could provide a tour that has nothing to do with the information tested by the City’s written exam, even if plaintiffs have failed to offer an example of such a tour.
. Plaintiffs actually direct their criticism at the Fifth Circuit's opinion affirming the district court, which was indeed quite concise. However, as noted above, the City cites to the Eastern District of Louisiana's opinion on this
. Even the Edwards court's discussion of free market solutions was at least tethered to the fact that many other cities did not find it necessary to impose the licensing regime at issue in that case and here. Edwards v. D.C.,
. The court notes that both Kagan and Edwards, the two cases most factually similar to this one, as well as McCullen and Reynolds, the two most authoritative cases in articulating the appropriate evidentiary standard, were all decided on summary judgment records — or in the case of McCullen, after a bench trial.
. The record does not even indicate that any of the plaintiffs plan to provide tours that have no "nexus” with the City's written examination. Kimberly Billups and Michael Nolan, by their own admission, plan to give tours dealing primarily with the city and its history. Compl. ¶¶ 33, 63. While Michael Warfield plans to give "ghost” and "pub” tours, and alleges that the written examination does not contain any questions on such topics, these allegations fail to disclose the actual content of Warfield’s tours. Id. ¶¶ 48, 56. The fact that the written examination did not specifically ask about ghosts or pubs does not mean that stories about ghosts or pubs do not draw upon the information contained in the written examination. Thus, plaintiffs have failed to clearly show that the licensing regime fails to advance the City’s interests, even when applied to them.
. The court notes that the City should also provide more information on the laws in these other jurisdictions if it wishes to rely on such evidence at summary judgment. Edwards,
. The same reasoning applies to plaintiffs’ suggestion that the City hire its own tour •guides or provide government-sponsored education, Pis.' Mot, 20, as there is no indication ■ that these approaches have ever been enacted elsewhere.
. As the record develops, it may become clear that these alternatives demand the City’s consideration,
