Lead Opinion
Our first decision in this appeal concluded that Springfield’s anti-panhandling ordinance does not draw lines based on the content of anyone’s speech. Because the litigants agreed that the ordinance’s validity depends on this issue, we affirmed the district court’s decision.
As our first opinión explained, •§ 131.06 of Springfield’s Municipal Code
prohibits panhandling in its “downtown historic district” — less than 2% of the City’s area but containing its principal shopping, entertainment, and governmental areas, including the Statehouse and many state-government buildings. The ordinance defines panhandling as an oral request for an immediate donation of money. Signs requesting money are allowed; so are oral pleas to send money later. Springfield evidently views signs and requests for deferred donations as less impositional than oral requests for money immediately, which some persons (especially at night or when no one else is nearby) may find threatening.
The panel disagreed with that submission for several reasons. We observed that the ordinance does not interfere with the marketplace for ideas, that it does not practice viewpoint discrimination, and that the distinctions that plaintiffs call content discrimination appear to be efforts to make the ordinance less restrictive, which should be a mark in its favor. We summed up: “The Court has classified two kinds of
Reed understands content discrimination differently. It wrote that “regulation of speech is content based if a law applies to particular speech because of the topic discussed or the idea or message expressed.”
Three Justices concurred only in the judgment in Reed.
Our observation,
The judgment of the district court is reversed, and the case is remanded for the entry of an injunction consistent with Reed and this opinion.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I join the opinion of the court in full, but write separately to underscore the significance of the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Reed v. Town of Gilbert, which held that a speech regulation targeted at specific subject matter is content-based even if it does not discriminate among viewpoints within that subject matter. — U.S.-,
Ward stated that “[t]he principal inquiry in determining content neutrality ... is
Reed saw what Ward missed — that topical censorship is still censorship. Rejecting the idea that the government may remove controversial speech from the marketplace of ideas by drafting a regulation to eliminate the topic, Reed now requires any regulation of speech implicating religion or abortion to be evaluated as content-based and subject to strict scrutiny, just like the aforementioned viewpoint-based restrictions covering more narrow contours of speech. 135 S.Gt. at 2228, 2230. New regulations will survive this rigorous standard.
Because the court has faithfully applied Reed to the City’s ordinance, I concur.
