Appellant Ian Grady challenges his conviction for violating an Athens-Clarke County (“County”) ordinance regulating the volume of noise from “mechanical sound-making devices.” He contends that the provision is facially invalid under the free speech clause of the Georgia Constitution. See Ga. Const, of 1983, Art. I, Sec. I, Par. V (“No law shall be passed to curtail or restrain the freedom of speech or of the press. Every person may speak, write, and publish sentiments on all subjects but shall be responsible for the abuse of that liberty.”). The trial court rejected his claim, and we affirm.
1. On Friday night, April 17, 2009, Grady hosted a party at his apartment in downtown Athens, apparently to celebrate his admission to law school. Grady’s residence is in a mixed-use zone that *727 includes a hotel and residential buildings alongside commercial ones. At 3:30 on Saturday morning, an Athens-Clarke County police officer cited Grady for violating local ordinance § 3-5-24. That law prohibits, among other things, noise from “mechanical sound-making devices” or from a “party” that is “plainly audible” 100 feet away from a person’s property limits between midnight and 7:00 a.m. on Saturday and Sunday. There were no noise complaints about the party, but the officer was patrolling the area and heard loud music from over 170 feet away. This was unusual, the officer later testified, because downtown Athens is typically a “ghost town” at 3:30 a.m.
The solicitor later amended Grady’s citation to specify violations of § 3-5-24 (c) (2) (a) (mechanical sound-making devices) and (c) (2) (d) (party noise). Grady proceeded to trial before the municipal court, arguing, among other things, that these provisions of the ordinance were facially invalid under the Georgia Constitution’s free speech clause. The municipal court acquitted Grady of violating subsection (c) (2) (d) but convicted him of violating subsection (c) (2) (a) and fined him $350. Grady filed a petition for writ of certiorari with the superior court. After a hearing, that court affirmed. Grady then filed an application for discretionary review, which we granted to consider the constitutionality of § 3-5-24 (c) (2) (a). 1
2. (a) As both parties correctly recognize, subsection (c) (2) (a) regulates constitutionally protected speech.
2
The mechanical devices
*728
it targets — such as televisions, stereos, radios, and musical instruments — produce not just random noise, but music and words that qualify for protection as speech. See
Ward v. Rock Against Racism,
Were this a First Amendment case, we would consider whether the County ordinance is “narrowly tailored” to serve a significant government interest and leaves open ample alternatives for communication. See, e.g.,
Ward,
(b) The rationale for our deviation from the governing First Amendment standard in this one area of free speech law is elusive. As far back as 1932, this Court looked to federal cases interpreting the First Amendment for guidance in applying Georgia’s free speech guarantee. See
Carr v. State,
In
State v. Miller,
In 1999, however, a majority of the Court relied on the
Miller
dictum to depart, apparently for the first and only time, from the Court’s traditional alignment with First Amendment doctrine.
Statesboro
involved a challenge to a city ordinance that prohibited the distribution of free printed material in yards, driveways, or porches — the sort of content-neutral time, place, and manner regulation of speech also at issue in this case. See
The majority went on, however, to address whether the ordinance also violated the Georgia Constitution. Citing
Miller’s
dictum that “[o]ur state constitution provides even broader protection of speech than the first amendment,” the majority announced that rather than applying the United States Supreme Court’s “narrow tailoring” test for content-neutral speech regulations, it would adopt the “least restrictive means” test advocated in a dissent by just two
*730
of that Court’s Justices.
Statesboro,
Two points about this division of Statesboro must be noted. First, the majority went well out of its way to reach the state constitutional issue and make new law on the scope of Georgia’s free speech guarantee. The Court had already found the ordinance unconstitutional under the United States Constitution, so finding it to be unconstitutional again under the Georgia Constitution was gratuitous. Indeed, Justice Hines did not join this division of the majority opinion, see id. at 96, and Justice Carley’s dissent noted that the trial court had addressed only the First Amendment challenge to the ordinance and had not cited the Georgia free speech clause or any case law applying it, which normally means that the Court would not address the state constitutional challenge on appeal. See id. (Carley, J., dissenting).
Second, other than citing the
Miller
dictum, which as discussed above was supported by no authority or reasoning, and the
Clark
dissent, which is not precedent even for the application of the First Amendment, the
Statesboro
majority cited no authority and offered no analysis of constitutional text, history, or precedent to support the proposition that the Georgia free speech guarantee is broader than its federal counterpart. Nor did the majority acknowledge or try to distinguish contrary Georgia precedent such as
Carr, Paramount Pictures,
and
Chamblee Visuals.
Moreover, less than two months after
Statesboro,
the Court unanimously held yet again that “Georgia’s constitutional free speech provision does not confer any greater free speech right than that protected by the First Amendment.”
Cahill v. Cobb Place Assocs.,
The anomaly in our jurisprudence created by Statesboro has led a federal court trying to apply Georgia law to express puzzlement:
The Georgia Supreme Court has indicated that the Georgia Constitution, “provides even broader protection of speech than the first amendment.” Statesboro.... This Court is not sure why this would be so as the language of the Georgia constitutional provision — no law shall be passed to curtail or restrain the freedom of speech — does not appear substantively different or more onerous than the language of the First Amendment, which prohibits laws that abridge freedom of speech.... Nevertheless, the Georgia Supreme Court’s general characterization of its jurisprudence notwithstanding, when analyzing sign ordinances, “Georgia courts have consistently applied United States Supreme *731 Court precedent, drawing no analytical distinction between the state and federal constitutions.”
Kennedy v. Avondale Estates, Ga., 414 FSupp.2d 1184, 1216 (N.D. Ga. 2005) (citation omitted).
Thus, our cases saying that Georgia’s constitutional protection of free speech is broader than that provided by the First Amendment offer none of the legal reasoning one would normally expect for such an important constitutional point. We do not foreclose the possibility that solid reasons supporting that conclusion may exist, although Grady has not offered any.
3
In any event, Statesboro’s ruling that the Georgia Constitution requires a content-neutral time, place, or manner restriction to be the “least restrictive means” of serving the government’s asserted interest was a holding by this Court; that holding was followed in
Coffey I,
(c) There is no dispute that subsection (c) (2) (a) satisfies two of
*732
Statesboro’s
three requirements. Like other noise control laws, it serves the significant government interest in protecting both the community in general and individual citizens “from noises which may affect their comfort, repose, health, or safety.”
Thelen v. State,
(d) Contrary to Grady’s claim, subsection (c) (2) (a) is also the least restrictive means of promoting Athens-Clarke County’s significant interest in protecting the comfort and repose of citizens in downtown Athens.
First,
as the trial court correctly found based on the record, the government drafted what is now subsection (c) (2) (a) deliberately, not arbitrarily, through a long process of gradual refinement that drew on community input and past experience to address specific noise concerns. Compare
Coffey v. Fayette County,
But then the City began to refine its approach. In 1980, the City amended its code to prohibit operating radios, musical instruments, and other sound-producing machines more loudly than “is necessary for convenient hearing of the persons who are in the room, vehicle or other chamber.” Operating those devices “in such a manner as to be plainly audible at a distance of [50] feet from the building” was prima facie evidence of a violation. A year later, the City amended its code to limit the 50-foot provision to the time between midnight and *733 7:00 a.m. on Friday and Saturday nights and 11:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m. the rest of the week. Then, in 1984, the City expanded the 50-foot prima facie rule to 300 feet.
This deliberate refining process continued when the consolidated Athens-Clarke County government adopted the City’s ordinance in 1991. The County noted that “the existing City of Athens noise ordinance was created via a very lengthy process of open forum sub-committee meetings with all viewpoints being represented, particularly our students.” In contrast, the County’s prior ordinance was “ineffective” until 11:00 p.m. because those cited could appear in court to justify noises before that time. In 2001, the County concluded that the existing 300-foot standard had proven too broad, observing that most noise complaints come from densely populated residential areas where people live fewer than 300 feet apart. The County also noted a “marked increase” in concern by neighborhood associations and individual residents on “quality of life issues.” Looking to the State’s vehicle-noise statute, OCGA § 40-6-14 (a), for guidance, the County reduced the 300-foot rule to 100 feet — still twice as permissive to noise-makers as the 50-foot rule in effect from 1980 to 1984 (and far more permissive than the 25-foot rule struck down in
Deegan v. City of Ithaca,
Finally, the County amended the provision to its current form in 2003 in response to this Court’s holding that an ordinance proscribing “any loud, unnecessary or unusual sound or noise which. . . annoys . . . others” was too subjective to provide constitutionally adequate notice of its prohibitions. See
Thelen,
Despite this history of careful refinement and the County’s reliance on community input and specific factual determinations to support its decision to adopt the current ordinance, Grady argues that the County must supply more evidence to prove that the noise prohibited would be harmful at the distances selected. This argument suggests that a government cannot adopt a noise law without evidence from scientific experts, and we know of no such requirement. See
Grayned v. City of Rockford,
Second,
subsection (c) (2) (a) is tailored to account for changing circumstances at different times and places across Athens-Clarke
*734
County. See
Grayned,
Finally, the County has advanced convincing reasons, supported by the record, for rejecting Grady’s proposed means of narrowing the ordinance. Grady contends that subsection (c) (2) (a) should adopt different volume limitations for different zones in Athens-Clarke County, arguing that a bustling area like downtown Athens cannot be subject to the same rules as a neighborhood of single-family homes. But as just discussed, the ordinance does not apply the same volume limitation everywhere, because the “plainly audible” requirement measures the permitted volume according to the ambient noise in each location. Likely for this reason, downtown Athens routinely generates the fewest noise complaints and incidents of any of the County’s zones.
Moreover, as the County’s Planning Director testified, there is a good reason to impose somewhat similar volume restrictions on both downtown Athens and purely residential neighborhoods — downtown Athens is a mixed-use zone with both residences and hotels next to commercial buildings, and the County is trying to encourage further mixed-use development there. Indeed, Grady was not playing his music too loudly in a bar or other commercial establishment, but rather in his apartment, alongside other residences.
Grady also contends that the ordinance should require a citizen to complain to the police before a citation is issued. He relies on
McKenzie v. State,
Moreover, lewd phone calls are far less intrusive than the noise subject to subsection (c) (2) (a). Listeners can simply hang up on unwanted phone calls; they cannot so easily stop loud music emanating from someone else’s residence, building, or vehicle. See
Kovacs,
Grady’s proposed citizen-complaint requirement would also have two undesirable consequences. First, it would impose an unusual burden on private citizens, who would be forced to take action, sometimes in the middle of the night, and to lodge an official complaint about a neighbor to law enforcement — and then wait for law enforcement to respond to the complaint before getting any relief. Nor does Grady explain how a citizen-complaint process would work for noise coming from vehicles or passersby carrying sound-making devices, who may be long gone by the time the police could respond. In addition, Grady does not explain why police officers who hear excessive noise — like the officer in this case — could not qualify as citizen complainants.
Second, and even more troubling, Grady’s proposed alternative would regulate speech, in part, according to whether individual listeners liked it or instead decided to complain. See
Thelen,
In sum, Athens-Clarke County drew the challenged provision of its ordinance deliberately and in response to specific concerns, and the County has offered good reasons for rejecting Grady’s proposed *736 alternatives; the provision advances a substantial government interest in the least restrictive way. Furthermore, the provision is content neutral and leaves open ample alternatives for communication. Section 3-5-24 (c) (2) (a) is thus a reasonable, content-neutral time, place, and manner speech regulation, and Grady’s facial challenge to it is without merit.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
This Court previously considered a case brought by several college students seeking a declaration that the
entire
Athens-Clarke County noise ordinance was unconstitutional. See
Manlove v. Unified Govt. of Athens-Clarke County,
Subsection (c) (2) (a) provides as follows:
Mechanical sound-making devices. It is unlawful for any person or persons to play, use, operate, or permit to be played, used, or operated any radio receiving device, television, stereo, musical instrument, phonograph sound amplifier or other machines or devices for the producing, reproducing or amplifying of sound and/or noise at such a volume and in such a manner so as to create, or cause to he created, any noises or sounds which are plainly audible at a distance of 100 feet or more from the building, structure, or motor vehicle or in the case of real property, beyond the property limits, in which it is located, whichever is farthest, between the hours of 11:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m. Sunday through Thursday and between the hours of 12:00 midnight and 7:00 a.m. on Saturday and Sunday.
Several of the state high courts that have similarly held that their state constitutions provide greater protection for speech have supported that conclusion with detailed analysis of their specific constitutional language, history, and precedent and comparison to that of the First Amendment, although the validity of that analysis has sometimes been the subject of vigorous dispute. See, e.g.,
Davenport v. Garcia,
It is possible that Article I, Section 8 [of the Texas Constitution] may be more protective of speech in some instances than the First Amendment, but if it is, it must be because of the text, history, and purpose of the provision, not just simply because. Starting from the premise that the state constitutional provision must be more protective than its federal counterpart illegitimizes any effort to determine state constitutional standards. To define the protections of Article I, Section 8 simply as one notch above First Amendment protections is to deny state constitutional guarantees any principled moorings whatever. We reject this approach.
Operation Rescue-Natl. v. Planned Parenthood of Houston & Se. Tex., Inc.,
Dicta in a number of other cases cite
Miller
or
Statesboro
in saying that we have decided that Georgia’s free speech protection is broader than the First Amendment’s. See, e.g.,
Democratic Party of Ga., Inc. v. Perdue,
