I. INTRODUCTION
During the middle to late 1990s, the defendant, City of Federal Heights, Colorado, enacted a series of ordinances governing the licensing and operation of adult entertainment businesses. Plaintiffs are Essence, Inc., a corporation that operates a nude dancing establishment, and Devona Richelle Lopez and Lisa Easton, two women denied employment as dancers by Essence, Inc. because they were younger than twenty-one at the time they sought employment. Plaintiffs present First Amendment facial challenges to multiple provisions of the Federal Heights municipal code. The district court, with a few exceptions, rejected the challenges and granted Federal Heights’ summary judgment motion. This court has jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and affirms in part, reverses in part, and remands.
II. BACKGROUND
At least as early as 1994, Federal Heights sought to regulate the location and operation of “adult entertainment establishments.” 1 A series of ordinances *1277 followed throughout the 1990s. The result was a comprehensive licensing and regulatory scheme governing adult entertainment establishments codified in Federal Heights Municipal Code chapter XII, article XII. It requires those seeking to do business as adult entertainment establishments to apply for a license from the City of Federal Heights. See Federal Heights Mun.Code ch. XII, art. XII, §§ 12-12-4 to -6. The code was amended in 1997 to require employees and managers of adult entertainment establishments to obtain licenses before they would be allowed to work. See Federal Heights Ordinance 97-15, § 6, codified at Federal Heights Mun. Code ch. XII, art. XII, § 12-12-10. 2
Plaintiff Essence 3 applied for a business license in November 1996. It was informed by the Federal Heights City Administrator, Roger Tinklenberg, that it had met “all the preliminary requirements for issuance” of a license, but that a license would not issue until permits from the Building and Fire Departments were issued for remodeling of Bare Essence. It is not clear whether Federal Heights ever issued the license. Following the death of the registered agent of Essence, Federal Heights required Essence to reapply for a license. Essence applied for another business license on October 28, 1997. Plaintiffs claim that before Federal Heights would issue the license it required substantial remodeling to ensure that dancers would be kept a minimum distance away from patrons and that there was adequate lighting inside and outside the premises. In addition, Federal Heights required Essence to comply with section 12-12-11(B) of the municipal code, which prohibited individuals under twenty-one from entering nude dancing establishments. As a result, because they were younger than twenty-one, plaintiffs Lopez and Easton were refused employment. 4 Essence was issued a business license on November 4, 1997.
In the meantime, the Federal Heights City Council introduced Ordinance 97-15. The Ordinance amended portions of chapter XII, article XII of the municipal code. Among other provisions, it amended section 12-12-10 to require employees and managers to obtain licenses from the city before they would be allowed to work. Ordinance 97-15 was adopted on December 2, 1997, nearly a month after Federal Heights issued a business license to Es *1278 sence. That same day, the City Council passed Resolution 97-36, which set the application fees for an employee license.
On January 14, 1998, plaintiffs filed a lawsuit challenging the entirety of the Federal Heights adult entertainment regulatory scheme. The plaintiffs mounted a facial attack on numerous provisions of article XII, asking for declaratory and in-junctive relief. Essence also claimed that enforcement of the provisions prior to the issuance of its business license caused Essence economic damages. Plaintiffs Lopez and Easton claimed monetary damages stemming from their inability to work as nude dancers at the Bare Essence.
Federal Heights moved for summary judgment, and plaintiffs filed a cross-motion for partial summary judgment. The issues contested were a subset of the claims asserted by plaintiffs. The plaintiffs challenged: (1) the age restriction contained in section 12-12-11(B) 5 ; (2) the provision dealing with the denial of business licenses, section 12-12-6 6 ; (3) section 12-12-9, which contained the procedures for suspending or revoking a business license 7 ; (4) section 12-12-10, the employee licensing provision 8 ; (5) the fees im *1279 posed on employee license applicants by Resolution 97-S6; (6) requirements contained in section 12-12-4 that owners of an adult entertainment business disclose their ownership share in the business; and (7) sections 12-12-13, -14, and -15, which required certain stage configurations, lighting, and a minimum distance between dancers and patrons.
The district court granted defendant’s motion in part and plaintiffs’ motion in part. On the issue of the age restriction, the court held section 12-12-11(B) invalid as it applied to dancers, but valid as it applied to anyone else. The court recognized that the age restriction was a content neutral regulation and could thus be upheld if it was narrowly tailored to further a substantial governmental interest. It ruled, however, that Federal Heights had “made no showing that restricting the employment of performers to those over 21 has any relationship to the community’s interest in avoidance or mitigation of the secondary effects from the operation of adult entertainment establishments.” Dist. Ct. Op. at 6-7. As to patrons under the age of twenty-one, the court ruled that their First Amendment rights were “qualitative[ly] different]” from the rights of the performers, that dancers’ rights to express themselves through nude dancing “did not include a right to perform for a particular audience,” and that the age restriction was “only an incidental burden on [Essence’s] freedom.” Id. at 7.
The district court ruled that sections 12-12-6, 12-12-9, and 12-12-10, the provisions dealing with the denial, suspension, and revocation of business and employee licenses, contained all the requisite procedural safeguards. The court ruled that the fourteen day limit on the decision whether to grant an employee license under section 12-12-10 was not so long as to run afoul of the procedural safeguards of
Freedman v. Maryland,
The district court also ruled that sections 12-12-6 and 12-12-9, for the most part, did not grant to the officials of Federal Heights impermissible discretion in deciding whether to grant, suspend, or revoke business licenses. The court accepted the city’s narrowing construction of several phrases in the ordinance that otherwise seemed to give the City Administrator and City Council wide discretion to deny, suspend, or revoke a business license. See id. at 11. The district court, however, declared invalid the portion of section 12-12-6 allowing the City Council to deny an application for a business license if issuance of the license would result in “serious criminal conduct.” See id. at 12.
*1280 ■ The district court upheld portions of sections 12-12-6 and 12-12-10, which allowed denial of applications for business and employee licenses if a principal (in the case of a business license) or employee has been convicted of certain crimes specified in section 12-12-4(F). The court analyzed the disqualification provisions as content neutral restrictions on speech and concluded that they furthered the substantial governmental interest in mitigating the secondary effects of adult businesses. Id. at 13-15.
The district court upheld the licensing fees imposed on applicants for employee licenses, observing that the fees were correlated to the costs of administering the licensing scheme. Id. at 16-17. Since plaintiffs did not prove the fees were excessive, the court declared them valid. Id. at 17.
The district court also ruled on other provisions of the Municipal Code, including the requirements that principals of businesses seeking business licenses disclose their share of the business, that dancers maintain a certain distance from the stage, and that adequate lighting be installed both inside and outside the premises. The court declared invalid the portion of the Code requiring principals to disclose their exact share of an applicant for a business license, but upheld the premises configuration requirements. These rulings were not appealed.
III. STANDING
Before reaching the merits of the appeal, this court must satisfy itself that the parties have standing to invoke the power of the federal courts.
Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Env’t,
We conclude that plaintiffs do not have Article III standing to challenge the portion of section 12-12-6 allowing the City of Federal Heights to deny a business license based on the previous criminal convictions of a principal or the portion of section 12-12-10 allowing the city to deny an employee license based on a previous criminal conviction of the applicant. Plaintiffs have neither demonstrated that no
*1281
genuine issue of fact exists as to injury in fact, nor alleged facts necessary to show injury-in-fact.
See FW/PBS, Inc. v. City of Dallas,
Injury-in-fact must be concrete and imminent. Hypothetical or conjectural harm is not sufficient. When a law does not apply to a party, that party has suffered no invasion of a legally protected interest and may not question the law’s constitutionality.
See Warth v. Seldin,
Similarly, 12-12-6 and 12-12-10’s disability provisions do not apply to Essence or the individual plaintiffs. There is no allegation that Essence is owned or controlled by any individuals subject to the disability provision or that Essence has ever been owned by such individuals. Additionally, plaintiffs have not alleged that Essence employs such individuals or has had to deny employment to those convicted of crimes, nor is there an allegation that the individual plaintiffs have been convicted of crimes. Merely because Essence is prospectively inhibited from such ownership and employment arrangements is, in this case, a hypothetical injury and not a concrete injury. As a consequence, the plaintiffs do not have standing, and the district court should have dismissed their challenge to the disability portions of section 12-12-6 and 12-12-10.
Essence has not alleged facts demonstrating injury-in-fact to support its challenge to the other portions of section 12-12-6. Section 12-12-6 allows the denial of an application for a business license on one of several grounds. Once an application is denied, the applicant may appeal the decision to the Colorado state courts pursuant to Colorado Rule of Civil Procedure 106(a)(4). Plaintiffs contend that the grounds for denial vest too much discretion in the licensing authority and that the judicial review procedure is inadequate. Essence, of course, has already been granted a license, and the allegedly over-broad discretion and lack of judicial review attendant to the application process do not apply to Essence.
See Clark v. City of Lakewood,
Essence has also failed to allege facts demonstrating that it has standing to
*1282
challenge section 12-12-9. It asserts that section 12-12-9 gives too much discretion to the city to revoke or suspend a business license. Essence also asserts section 12-12-9 fails to provide a stay of a suspension or revocation pending judicial review and fails to guarantee timely judicial review of the city’s suspension and revocation decisions. Essence currently holds a business license. Thus, there is the
possibility
that the city will suspend or revoke the license through exercise of its allegedly overbroad discretion, unchecked by adequate procedural safeguards. An Article III injury, however, must be more than a possibility.
See Whitmore v. Arkansas,
*1283 On remand, the district court should vacate the portion of its opinion and order upholding the disqualification provisions of sections 12-12-6 and 12-12-10, the portion of its opinion and order relating to plaintiffs’ other challenges to section 12-12-6, and the portion of its opinion and order relating to plaintiffs’ challenges to section 12-12-9. The district court should then dismiss the portions of plaintiffs’ complaint challenging those provisions.
IV. STANDARD OF REVIEW
This court reviews a summary judgement
de novo
and applies the same legal standard used by the district court under Rule 56.
Sigmon v. Community-Care HMO, Inc.,
V. AGE RESTRICTION
Both parties contest the district court’s handling of plaintiffs’ challenge to section 12-12-11(B), the section prohibiting anyone under the age of twenty-one from being on the premises of a business offering live nude dancing. The district court ruled that section 12-12-11(B) was valid as applied to patrons of nude dancing establishments, but invalid as applied to dancers.
Nude dancing is expressive conduct protected by the First Amendment.
Schad v. Borough of Mount Ephraim,
The
O’Brien
test has four factors. First, this court must assess whether Federal Heights possesses the constitutional power to enact the ordinance. Second, the regulation must further an important or substantial government interest. Third, the government interest must be unrelated to the suppression of free expression. Fourth, the restriction must be no greater than is essential to the furtherance of the government interest.
See O’Brien,
A. The City’s Interest in Limiting the Harmful Secondary Effects Associated with Nude Dancing.
The city asserts it has an interest in combating the harmful secondary effects flowing from nude dancing, including a decrease in property values, an increase in crime, and sexually transmitted diseases.
10
The city’s interest is undeniably important.
Pap’s A.M.,
A municipality only has a substantial or important governmental interest in combating the harmful secondary effects of nude dancing if those secondary effects are real.
Phillips v. Borough of Keyport,
Other courts have required a substantial evidentiary showing of secondary effects before a city’s interest in combating them will be deemed substantial or important. The Fifth Circuit requires a showing based on “testimony of individuals, local studies, or the experiences of other cities.”
SDJ, Inc. v. City of Houston,
This circuit has declared that a city’s stated purpose to limit the impact of secondary effects must be credited and “accorded high respect.”
Z.J. Gifts,
Federal Heights’ evidentiary showing is substantial. The preamble to Ordinance 94-16, which enacted the predecessor of section 12-12-11(B), recited several harmful secondary effects that the city found were caused by “adult entertainment establishments.” There is no preamble to Ordinance 95-11, which enacted section 12-12-11(B), but section 12 of the ordinance provided that the ordinance “is deemed necessary for the protection of the health, welfare, and safety of the community.” Ordinance 96-15 amended the zoning laws of Federal Heights to prohibit adult entertainment establishments from locating within 500 feet of a church, school, other adult entertainment establishment, or a residential zone. The preamble recites that the city consulted land use studies from other cities demonstrating adverse secondary impacts from adult businesses, but the cities, the authors, and details of the studies are not included.
Ordinance 97-15 amended other provisions of the adult business regulations and created, among other things, an employee licensing scheme. The preamble to 97-15 cites Renton for the proposition that it may rely on the experience of other cities with harmful secondary effects from adult businesses and need not “await the impact of such effects.” The preamble also states that the City Council and administrators have reviewed many land use studies concerning secondary effects. The location and dates of fourteen studies are listed, but no details are given. From these studies, the City Council concluded that secondary effects result from adult busi *1286 nesses. These effects include increased rates of certain crimes, the spread of sexually transmitted diseases, and harmful effects on surrounding residences and businesses including decreased property values and parking and traffic problems.
The affidavit of Sharon Richardson, Mayor Pro Tern of Federal Heights, states that “residents shared concerns with me about the nature of the effects of Adult Entertainment Establishments on the community.” Section 12-12-11(b) was supported by “studies and information received subsequent to the 1995 ordinance.” The City Council’s deliberations on Zoning Ordinance 96-15, she testifies, took into account “secondary impact studies both locally and nationally.” Crime statistics relating to adult businesses were presented to the Council, as was an informal survey of other Colorado communities regarding their experiences with the secondary effects of adult businesses. Ms. Richardson also testified that Federal Heights had a topless dancer club from 1975 to 1979 and that there were “numerous problems ... including one murder on the premises.”
In this case, Federal Heights has offered undisputed evidence that secondary effects have resulted and will result from nude dancing clubs and other forms of adult entertainment. As noted above, there are numerous statements in the preambles of various Federal Heights ordinances that the presence of adult entertainment establishments would result in harmful secondary effects. These preambles are not “mere incantations” of secondary effects.
See J & B Entm’t,
When there is evidence of secondary effects in the form of supported preamble statements, studies and court decisions relied upon by the governing body, and localized experience with crime or other secondary effects associated with nude dancing, the city is entitled to summary judgment on the existence of a substantial governmental interest unless the challenger presents conflicting evidence giving rise to an issue of fact.
See Jones v. Denver Post Corp.,
B. Requirement that the Age Restriction Furthers the City’s Interest.
The O’Brien test is not satisfied, however, merely by the existence of a substantial governmental interest in regulating secondary effects. The city must also prove that its chosen weapon against these secondary effects will further its mission. The city has chosen to combat the general secondary effects associated with nude dancing not by banning nude dancing outright, but by banning those under twenty-one from nude dancing establishments. The district court ruled that Federal Heights failed to present evidence that its age restriction on dancers would further its interest in combating secondary effects. Dist. Ct. Op. at 6-7. It therefore denied Federal Heights motion for summary judgment in part and granted plaintiffs’ in part. 13
A ban on nude dancing would necessarily further the city’s interest in minimizing secondary effects.
Pap’s A.M.,
The city attempted to demonstrate that the age restriction furthers its interest in combating secondary effects by offering the affidavit of Mayor Pro Tem Richardson and the affidavit of Jennifer Weaver, a former dancer at Bare Essence. The city did not offer the Weaver affidavit until the day of oral argument on the cross-motions for summary judgment, almost six months after it filed its summary judgment motion. Weaver was a dancer at the Bare Essence and testified to observing numerous illegal activities and conduct at the club violating the Federal Heights ordinance. Specifically, Weaver testified to seeing dancers under the age of twenty-one drinking alcohol, being told in an employee meeting that it was acceptable for dancers to drink alcohol, and observing customers bring alcohol into the club for employees. Weaver’s affidavit tends to prove that underage drinking occurs at nude dancing establishments and that the age restriction would be effective in reducing the crime of underage drinking.
The district court denied Federal Heights’ motion to supplement its reply brief with the affidavit. Our review of that decision, like review of other evidentiary rulings, is for abuse of discretion.
See Sports Racing Servs., Inc. v. Sports Car Club of Am., Inc.,
A district court may, in its discretion, consider an untimely affidavit for “cause shown” if the failure to timely file the affidavit “was the result of excusable neglect.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 6(b)(2).
14
Federal Heights contends that the district court abused its discretion by concluding there was no evidence that the age restriction would further the city’s interest in preventing secondary effects “and yet the Court did not consider or allow the presentation of evidence which directly addressed the adverse secondary effects.” The city’s position is essentially that an abuse of discretion arises whenever a district court refuses to consider evidence necessary to one party’s case. This court, however, will not overturn the district court’s evidentia-ry decision unless we are firmly convinced that it made a clear error of judgment.
United States v. Magleby,
The only other materials offered by Federal Heights was Mayor Pro Tern Richardson’s affidavit. Richardson testified that the City Council determined that “the minimum age requirement of Code § 12-12-11 would assist Federal Heights in reducing the negative effects of sexually oriented businesses.” Richardson also testified that the City Council determined again in 1995 that the age restriction on nude dancing would reduce secondary effects. She further testified that the Council’s determination is “supported by the studies and information received” after passage of the restriction. The studies referenced by the affidavit are not in the record.
Federal Heights bears the burden at trial of proving that the age restriction furthers its interest in preventing the secondary effects of nude dancing even though nude dancing may still occur. To successfully resist plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment, Federal Heights, as the non-movant who bears the burden of proof at trial, may not rest on its pleadings but must come forth with specific facts showing there is a genuine issue for trial. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(e);
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
VI. LICENSING PROVISIONS
In addition to restricting the age of those on the premises, Federal Heights’ sexually-oriented business ordinances establish a licensing scheme for such businesses and their employees. In particular, section 12-12-10 requires all employees and managers of adult entertainment establishments to apply for an “employee’s license.”
16
The Supreme Court has allowed licensing of adult enter
*1290
tainment establishments so long as two classic evils of prior restraints are not present.
FW/PBS,
In the adult business licensing context, at least two procedural safeguards are essential: (1) the licensor must make the decision whether to issue the license within a specified and reasonable time period, (2) there must be opportunity for prompt judicial review of the denial of a license.
See FW/PBS,
Section 12-12-10 provides that an employee license shall issue unless the City Administrator finds one of several grounds of denial. See supra note 8. Unlike sections 12-12-6 and 12-12-9, the sections dealing with denial, suspension, and revocation of business licenses, section 12-12-10 lacks any mechanism for review of the City Administrator’s decision. There is no provision for a public hearing before the City Council following a license denial. Compare Federal Heights Mun.Code ch. XII, art. XII, §§ 12-12-6, -9. 19 In addition, *1291 there is no authorization to appeal the City Administrator’s decision to a Colorado court. Section 12-12-10 thus fails to provide any opportunity for judicial review and is facially invalid. 20
VII. SEVERABILITY
Sections 12-12-10 and 12-12-11(B) are facially unconstitutional. Under Colorado law, a section of a legislative enactment is severable if the remaining portion is autonomous and the legislature’s will in passing the entire statute is not thwarted by excision.
See City of Lakewood v. Colfax Unlimited Ass’n, Inc.,
Sections 12-12-10 and 12-12-11(B) were made part of the municipal code by Ordinances 97-15 and 95-11 respectively. Both ordinances contain a severability clause. 21 Striking sections 12-12-10 and 12-12-11(B) does not render Ordinances 97-15 and 95-11 incoherent since each code amendment made by the ordinances is autonomous. Nor will striking either section render contradictory or incoherent any other provision of the municipal code. We therefore conclude that only section 6 of Ordinance 97-15, the provision enacting the present form of section 12-12-10, and that portion of section 5 of Ordinance 95-11 enacting the present form of section 12-12-11(B) should be stricken.
VIII. CONCLUSION
We affirm the district court’s exclusion of the Weaver affidavit. We affirm in part and reverse in part the district court’s decision with regard to the age restriction. Section 12-12-11(B) is stricken in its entirety. The district court’s decision on the constitutionality of section 12-12-10 is reversed. The section is stricken in its entirety. The portions of the district court’s opinion and order dealing with the plaintiffs’ challenge to the disability provisions of sections 12-12-10 and 12-12-6, plaintiffs’ other challenges to section 12-12-6, and plaintiffs’ challenges to section 12-12-9 should be vacated on remand. The district court should then dismiss the portion of plaintiffs’ complaint relating to the disability provisions and sections 12-12-6 and 12-12-9.
Notes
. As used throughout this opinion, the phrase "adult entertainment establishment" shall *1277 have the meaning given it by Federal Heights Ordinance 96-12, sec. 1(A) (June 17, 1996), codified at Federal Heights Mun.Code ch. XII, art. XII, § 12-12-2(A): “An adult arcade, adult bookstore, adult video store, adult cabaret, adult motel, adult motion picture theater, adult theater, sexual encounter establishment, all as defined herein, or other similar businesses....” Relevant to this case is the definition of "adult cabaret”: "A nightclub, bar, restaurant or similar business which regularly features ... Persons who appear in a state of nudity....” Federal Heights Mun.Code ch. XII, art. XII, § 12-12-2(A)(3).
.In this opinion, licenses issued under section 12-12-6 to businesses will be called "business licenses.” Licenses issued under section 12-12-10 to employees or managers will be called "employee licenses.”
. Essence, Inc. was called Sanclub Corporation throughout the proceedings before the district court. Some time prior to this appeal its name changed. At all times it did business in Federal Heights as "The Bare Essence.” This opinion will refer to the plaintiff corporation as "Essence” and its establishment as "Bare Essence.”
. Lopez and Easton have since turned twenty-one, and their claims for injunctive relief are moot. Lopez and Easton, however, also present damage claims which are dependent on their constitutional challenge to the Federal Heights ordinances. They thus retain a concrete interest in the outcome of this matter, rendering their challenge viable and not moot.
See Univ. of Tex. v. Camenisch,
. "[I]t shall be unlawful for any person under twenty-one (21) years of age to be upon the premises of any adult entertainment establishment which offers live nude dancing.” Federal Heights Mun.Code ch. XII, art. XII, § 12-12-11(B).
. Section 12-12-3 makes it unlawful for a business to engage in business as an adult entertainment establishment without a license. Section 12-12-4 requires applicants for an adult entertainment license to file an application with the City Clerk; the section also specifies what information must be included in the application.
Section 12-12-6 sets out the procedure once the application is submitted. After the City Clerk receives the application, the Police Department, the Building Inspector, and the Fire Chief investigate the applicant and its premises "for compliance with the applicable provisions of the municipal code.” Those agencies turn the result of their investigations over to the City Administrator. Within 30 days of the Clerk's receipt of the application, the City Administrator must decide to grant a license or, if there is probable cause to believe that there are grounds for denial, notify the applicant and refer the application to the City Council. A hearing before the Council will be held within 20 days of the notice to the applicant. Review of the Council’s decision may be pursued according to Colorado law.
Section 12-12-6 also specifies grounds under which the City Council may deny an application. Among these grounds are a failure by the applicant to provide information reasonably necessary for the issuance of a license, the premise's noncompliance with applicable provisions of the municipal code, or when an applicant, partner, officer, director, or stockholder of more than 10% of the outstanding shares of the applicant business was either convicted of a crime listed in section 12 — 12—4(F)(1) or had an adult entertainment license denied, suspended, revoked, or non-renewed and as a consequence the issuance of a Federal Heights license would result in "serious criminal conduct.”
. Section 12-12-9 provides the grounds for suspension and revocation of an adult entertainment business license. Under section 12-12-9(A), the City Council shall suspend a license, and may revoke it, if the licensee or its employees have violated any provision of article XII or have knowingly permitted an “unlawful act” upon the licensed premises. Section 12-12-9(B) provides that a license shall be revoked if the license has been suspended within a year, and the licensee or an employee knowingly allowed possession or sale of drugs, prostitution, the licensee operated the business while the license was suspended, or the licensee or employee allowed a sexual act on the premises. Section 12-12-9(E) requires that the City Council hold a public hearing on suspension or revocation within 20 days of notice to the licensee. The decision shall issue within 10 days of the hearing, and the decision may be appealed according to Colorado law.
. Section 12-12-10 (as amended by Ordinance 97-15) requires all managers and employees of a licensed establishment to apply for an employee license. All applications will be investigated by the Police Department; the investigations shall be completed within four *1279 teen days. After the investigation, the license shall issue unless the City Administrator finds grounds for denial of the license. There is no specific time limit on the City Administrator’s decision. The grounds for denial include making false or misleading statements on the application, failing to provide the information required in section 12-12-10, failing to pay an annual license fee, being convicted of one of the criminal offenses listed in section 12-12-4(F)(1), or having an employee license revoked by Federal Heights or other governmental entity within the five years preceding the date of application.
. There are cases that hold a possibility of license suspension or revocation confers standing. In
Deja Vu of Nashville, Inc.
v.
Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County,
the Sixth Circuit held that the possibility that a licensor will suspend or revoke a license without adequate procedural safeguards constitutes a threat to the license-holders’ First Amendment interests and is itself a legally cognizable injury.
See
The analogy between an applicant and a licenseholder is not persuasive. The applicant has standing to bring a facial challenge to a licensing scheme vesting unbridled discretion in the licensor because of the likelihood of self-censorship: the applicant may be cowed into censoring its speech for fear of alienating the licensor and receiving an unfavorable decision on its application.
City of Lakewood v. Plain Dealer Publ’g Co.,
. Federal Heights seems to argue in portions of its brief that it passed the age restriction because it determined that individuals aged eighteen to twenty are at a greater risk than the general population from the secondary effects of nude dancing establishments. Federal Heights has not, however, demonstrated that its interest in protecting those younger than twenty-one is substantial. Federal Heights must demonstrate that the harms it seeks to redress actually exist.
See Turner Broad. Sys., Inc. v. FCC,
. There is some support for the position that since the Supreme Court has repeatedly accepted evidentiary showings that secondary effects do in fact result from the presence of adult entertainment establishments, a city may presume their reality.
See City of Erie v. Pap’s A.M.,
. Numerous courts have concluded that Justice Souter's opinion should be read as the holding of the
Barnes
court.
See Tunick v. Safir,
. The district court upheld the age restriction as it applied to patrons, because it believed there is a "qualitative difference” between the rights of dancers and observers. We do not decide whether those who receive protected expression have a lesser right than those who send such expression. We note that observers or recipients of expression do have some First Amendment rights.
See U.S. West, Inc. v. FCC,
Moreover, Essence may assert those rights. Although federal courts generally have prevented parties from asserting the rights of others, the traditional rule prohibiting the assertion of the rights of others is prudential rather than jurisdictional in the Article III sense.
See United Food & Commercial Workers Union v. Brown Group,
[w]hen ... enforcement of a restriction against the litigant prevents a third party from entering into a «relationship with the litigant (typically a contractual relationship), to which relationship the third party has legal entitlement (typically a constitutional entitlement), third-party standing has been held to exist.
United States Dept. of Labor v. Triplett,
Because patrons of nude dancing establishments do have some First Amendment interest in observing nude dancing, and because Essence may assert that interest, the district court erred in bifurcating its analysis. Instead, it should have evaluated the age restriction as a whole under O’Brien.
. Rule 6(d) requires that affidavits supporting a motion be served with the motion. Fed. R.Civ.P. 6(d). Rule 6(b)(2) allows a district court, in its discretion, to admit an untimely filing upon motion if the failure to timely act was the result of excusable neglect. Fed. R.Civ.P. 6(b)(2). Rule 6(b) applies to motions for summary judgment.
See id.
(excluding various motions from Rule 6(b)’s time extension procedures but not listing summary judgment motions);
Buchanan v. Sherrill,
. Accordingly, Federal Heights' summary judgment motion should have been denied as to the age restriction. Because the Richardson affidavit does not create a genuine issue of fact, it is not evidence upon which a reasonable jury could return a verdict for Federal Heights.
See Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
. It appears from the record that neither the plaintiff dancers nor any of Essence’s employ
*1290
ees applied for or were denied an employee license. Nevertheless, plaintiffs have standing to bring a facial challenge to section 12-12-10. "Applying for and being denied a license ... is not a condition precedent to bringing a facial challenge to an unconstitutional law.”
Ass’n of Cmty. Orgs. for Reform Now v. Municipality of Golden,
.It is unclear whether a third procedural safeguard, requiring that the censor bear the burden of going to court to justify a license denial, must also be present in adult business licensing schemes. The Supreme Court split sharply over the issue in
FW/PBS. See
. Plaintiffs also contend, in a single sentence, that section 12-12-10 vests the City Council with overbroad discretion. "Such perfunctory complaints fail to frame and develop an issue sufficient to invoke appellate review.”
Murrell v. Shalala,
. These provisions are summarized in footnotes 6 and 7.
. Plaintiffs also contend that the fees charged for issuance of an employee license constitute an unconstitutional tax on free expression. Because we conclude that the employee licensing requirement is invalid on its face, we need not decide the issue.
. Section 8 of Ordinance 95-11 and section 10 of Ordinance 97-15 both read:
If any article, section, paragraph, sentence, clause or phrase of this ordinance is held to be unconstitutional or invalid for any reason, such decision shall not affect the validity or constitutionality of the remaining portions of this ordinance. The city council hereby declares that it would have passed this ordinance and each part or parts hereof irrespective of the fact that any one part or parts be declared unconstitutional or invalid.
