By ordinance, the City of Cincinnati, Ohio (“City”) requires all tow trucks that tow vehicles from locations within City limits to other City locations, or to locations outside the City, to be licensed by the City. Cincinnati, Ohio, Mun.Code § 869-7 (1990). 1 The ordinance applies to all towing companies or operators based within the City limits or within a 25-mile radius of the City limits. Id. To obtain a license, proof of which is evidenced by an emblem known as a “T-sticker” placed on the windshield of each tow truck, id. §§ 869-17, -19, the towing operator must fill out an application form, id. §§ 869-9, -11; show proof of general liability insurance in the amount of at least $300,000, id. § 869-13(a), and of “garage keeper’s liability” insurance of at least $50,000, id. § 869 — 13(b); post a $5,000 bond, id. § 869-15; submit each wrecker for City inspection, id. § 869-9; and pay an $80 fee, id. The City assesses fines for performing towing services without the requisite license. Id. § 869-99. Towing services must be rendered in compliance with regulations set out by the City. Id. § 869-21.
Plaintiff-appellant Interstate Towing Association (“ITA”) represents the interests of towing concerns nationally, including concerns located in and around Cincinnati. In October 1990, plаintiffs 2 filed suit against the City, seeking a preliminary injunction against enforcement of this ordinance and challenging the validity of the ordinance, arguing that federal interstate trucking laws preempt the ordinance, that the ordinance impermissibly burdens interstate commerce, and that it fails muster under the United States Constitution. The district court consolidated the preliminary injunction motion and the underlying suit for bench trial.
The district court found in favor of the City, holding that the ordinance is not preempted by federal law, is not excessively burdensome on interstate commerce under the Commerce Clause, and is not violative of the Fourteenth Amendment, being reasonably related to legitimate municipal interests.
See Interstate Towing v. City of Cincinnati,
*1157
I.
A.
ITA contends that federal law impliedly preempts
3
the ordinance. The Constitution declares that “the Laws of the United States ... shall be the supreme Law of the Land.” U.S. Const. art. VI, cl. 2. Among other circumstances, federal law preempts state law “when there is an out right or actual conflict between federal and state law.”
Louisiana Public Serv. Comm’n v. FCC,
First, ITA notes that federal regulations require its trucks, like all interstate trucks over 10,000 lbs. gross weight, to undergo extensive mechanical inspections; the City, on the other hand, requires only a minimal inspection conducted by “untrained and unskilled police officers.” ITA presented evidence at trial that the City inspections were perfunctory at best, taking only a few minutes, and that certain of the required tests, for example, the brake safety regulation requiring inspectors to test whether the truck going 20 miles per hour can stop within 30 feet, were not actually done on a regular basis. ITA also presented testimony dеscribing the federal roadside inspection as thorough and lengthy compared to the City tow truck inspections. One of plaintiffs' witnesses said that he took a wrecker to be inspected by the City, it passed inspection, and then he took the same wrecker within a short tíme to the federal inspection station, where it was deemed “unroadworthy” due to numerous mechanical problems.
The district court found that while both the federal trucking regulations and the City ordinance require inspections, the inspections are “not identical.”
Interstate Towing,
Perhaps surprisingly, the two inspection schemes overlap'only slightly. Most importantly, while the federal regulations encom-piass all interstate trucks, and generally focus on tractor-trailer type vehicles, the City ordinance specifically addresses the safety requirements of tow trucks. As the City argued before the district court, its primary goal in' implementing the ordinance was to ensure safe, standardized, high-quality towing service; the regulations reflect that goal. Most of the City regulations, therefore, specify the minimum equipment required for each tow truck. Depending on the size and category of the truck, certain winch capacities are required. The regulations require each wrecker to carry accessories such as tow-bars, chains, a fire extinguisher, brooms, a shovel, “and other equipment necessary to render first class towing service.” Cincinna-. *1158 ti, Ohio, Wrecker and Towing Rules and Regulations (City Regulations) § C(a)-(e).
The only areas where the City Regulations arguably overlap with federal regulations is in the City’s requiring wreckers to be equipped with “Class A” -turn signals, City Regulations § C(d), and with sufficient brakes to meet standards set out under the Ohio Code and another City ordinance. The inspection,' however, requires only that the truck be able to stop from 20 miles per hour within 30 feet, for trucks over 10,000 pounds gross vehicle weight (GVW) such as the plaintiffs’, actually a more stringent requirement than that promulgated under federal regulations. See 49 C.F.R. § 393.52(d), Table B (requiring vehicles over 10,000 lbs. GVW to be able to stop from 20 m.p.h. within 35 feet). Since the City ordinance requires additional equipment specific to tow trucks not required under federal regulations, and since the City imposes at least the same if not more stringent requirements than do the federal regulations in the areas of overlap (brakes and turn signals), the City ordinance is not preempted by the Motor Carrier Safety Regulations, 49 C.F.R. §§ 350-399. While ITA has presented evidence that the City may be less than diligent in its enforcement of its own regulations, that evidence has ultimately no relevance to the question of specific preemption, which requires us to look only at the potentially conflicting laws and regulations as promulgated. 4
B.
Next, ITA asserts the doctrine of “field preemption,” arguing that in the area of interstate trucking, “Congress has legislated comprehensively, thus occupying an entire ■field of regulation and leaving no room for the States to supplement federal law.”
Louisiana Public Serv. Comm’n,
ITA would have us apply the recent case of
Gade v. National Solid Wastes Management Ass’n,
— U.S. ——,
We think that the MCSA bears at most a cosmetic resemblance to the OSH Act. Because the substantive factors militating in favor of preemption in the OSH, Act largely are absent from the MCSA, we distinguish
National Solid Wastes
from the ease at bar. As the
National Solid Wastes
Court recognized, “the question whether a certain state action is pre-empted by federal law- is one of congressional intent. The purpose of Congress is the ultimate touchstone.”
National Solid Wastes,
— U.S. at ----,
The OSH Act requires the Secretary of Labor “to set mandatory occupational safety and health standards applicable to businesses affecting interstate commerce.” 29 U.S.C. § 651(b)(3). States are “еncourag[ed] to assume ... responsibility for the administration and enforcement of their occupational safety and health laws”; the states are to receive grants to help them “develop plans in accordance with the provisions of this chapter.” Id. § 651(b)(11). The MCSA’s statement of purpose, on the other hand, does not speak in terms of imposing “mandatory” federal standards; the Act’s purposes are
to promote the safe operation of commercial motor vehicles, to minimize dangers to the health of operators of commercial motor vehicles and other employees[, and] ... to assure increased compliance with traffic laws and with the commercial motor vehicle safety and health rules, regulations, standards, and orders issued pursuant to this Act.
49 U.S.C. app. § 2501. Further, in enacting the MCSA, Congress found that “interested State governments can provide valuable assistance to the Federal Government in assuring that commercial motor vehicle operations are conducted safely and healthfully.”’ Id. § 2502(4). This suggests that Congress intended not to supplant state laws regulating motor carriers, but to supplement them; state laws would only be preempted where they stood in the way of achieving Congress’s goal of “improved, more uniform commercial motor vehicle safety measures and strengthened enforcement.” Id. § 2502(2).,
Comparing the two statutes’ provisions specifically addressing preemption of state laws bears out this initially apparent distinction in intent. The “structure and purpose” of the OSH Act “as a whole” gives states two choices. A state may elect to do nothing and submit, to the comprehensive federal statutory and regulatory worker health and safety scheme set out by the OSH Act, in which case the OSH Act permits no state occupational health and safety laws to remain in force, or the state may choose to submit to the Secretary of Labor a comprehensive state statutory and regulatory worker health and safety plan that satisfies the'minimum substantive and procedural requirements set out by Congress.
See
29 U.S.C. § 667. If the Secretary approves the state plan, then all worker health and safety matters remain
*1160
exclusively within that state’s purview; the OSH Act ceases to have effect except insofar as the Secretary retains oversight responsibility with regard to the administration of state plans.
See
29 U.S.C. § 667(f);
see also National Solid Wastes,
— U.S. at - -,
This “all or nothing” approach contrasts vividly with the “structure and purpose” of the MCSA; with regard to existing state law, the MCSA’s attitude might best be characterized as “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.” The MCSA does not purport to set up a comprehensive regulatory scheme, but to “establish minimum Federal safety standards for commercial motor vehicles.” 49 U.S.C. app. § 2505(a). In promulgating regulations, the Secretary must “consider ... State laws and regulations pertaining to commercial motor vehicle safety in order to minimize unnecessary preemption under this Act.” 49 U.S.C. app. § 2505(c)(2)(B). Like the OSH Act, the MCSA requires the Secretary (of Transportation) to review state laws and regulations to ensure they comport with these minimum standards and do not impose excessive burdens on interstate commerce. 49 U.S.C. app. § 2506.
But the process as well as the substance of this review differs drastically from that prescribed by the OSH Act, and does not evidence or even suggest an intent to preempt state and local laws that the Secretary does not review or otherwise act upon. The statute requires “[a]ny State which enacts, adopts, issues, or has in effect any law or regulation pertaining to commercial motor vehicle safety and is interested in having in effect and enforcing such law or regulation after the last day of the 60-month period beginning on October 30, 1984” to submit a copy of such law or regulation to the Secretary for review. 49 U.S.C. app. § 2506(a). 6 However, if a state or locality does not submit its laws for review as “required,” the only consequence is that “the Safety Panel [a review board authorized by the statute to review state and local laws on the Secretary’s behalf] shall analyze the laws and regulations of such State and determine which of such State’s laws and regulations pertain to commercial motor vehicle safety.” Id. § 2506(e). It may seem odd that a state’s obstinance or neglect in submitting its laws for review should automatically shift to the Secretary and the Panel the responsibility of ferreting-out potentially incompatible laws, but so says the statute. More importantly to the lawsuit at bar, this arrаngement certainly does not support ITA’s argument that the review provisions act to preempt state and local law even in the absence of affirmative steps by the Secretary.
The MCSA does not itself establish, or direct the Secretary to establish, a complete and comprehensive scheme regulating commercial transportation. Thus, while the OSH Act makes states choose between submitting to the federal plan and submitting their own comprehensive state regulatory schemes for approval by the Secretary, as discussed, the • MCSA’s review provisions necessarily anticipate that the states and the federal government will share responsibility for motor carrier regulation. No doubt for this underlying reason, the MCSA does not state, nor does its language suggest, that a state regulation must pass the Secretary’s review as a prerequisite to its remaining in force after the effective date of the MCSA. Again, as we have just observed, the statute allоws to remain in force individual state regulations which have not been affirmatively found, by the Secretary or by the Panel, to conflict with federal regulations. The section of the MCSA dealing specifically with “Review and preemption of State regulations,” § 2507, provides:
*1161 After the last day of the 60 month period beginning on October 30, 1984, no State may have in effect or enforce with respect to commercial motor vehicles any State law or regulation pertaining to commercial motor vehicle safety which the. Secretary finds under this section may not be in effect and enforced.
49 U.S.C. app. § 2507(a) (emphasis added). Particularly when viewed in light of Congress’s ability to preempt state law wholesale, as it did in the context of the OSH Act as already discussed, this provision plainly indicates that if the Secretary takes no action to review a particular state or local law, or makes no preemption finding with regard to such law, it is not preempted.
Thе substance of the MCSA’s review procedure bolsters this conclusion. In reviewing these individual state motor vehicle safety laws, the Secretary or the Safety Panel “shall determine if such law or regulation (i) has the same effect as; (ii) is less stringent than; or (iii) is additional to or more stringent than; the regulation issued by the Secretary.” 49 U.S.C. app. § 2507(b)(2)(A). Those state regulations found to be “less stringent” than their .federal counterparts are preempted. Id. § 2507(c)(3). State laws that the Secretary finds to “ha[ve] the same effect as a regulation issued by the Secretary ... may be in effect and enforced_” Id. § 2507(c)(2). Those state laws the Secretary finds to be “additional to or more stringent than” federal law may also be enforced, excepting only where the Secretary finds, in addition, that “(A) there is no safety benefit associated with such State law or regulation; (B) such State law or regulation is incompatible with the regulation issued by the Secretary ...; or (C) enforcement of such State law or regulation would be an undue burden on interstate commerce.” Id. § 2507(c)(4).
Unlike the OSH Act scheme, this arrangement does not preclude the coexistence of federal and state regulation of interstate motor carriers; indeed, it does not even preclude the coexistence of identical federal and state measures, but provides means by which the promulgation of federal regulations under the MCSA does not automatically preempt existing state regulation. In the absence of these review provisions, preemption would occur wherever the substance of the federal and state provisions were the same. “[W]hen Congress has ‘unmistakably ... ordained’ that its enactments alone are to regulate a part of commerce, state laws regulating that, part of commerce must fall.”
Jones v. Rath Packing Co.,
Regulations, too, promulgated under the MCSA reflect an understanding on the part of the Secretary that Congress did not intend for the MCSA to supplant state motor vehicle laws:
Except as otherwise specifically indicated, subchapter B of-this chapter is not intended to preclude States or divisions thereof from establishing or enforcing State or local laws relating to safety, the compliance with which would not prevent full compliance with these regulations by the person subject thereto.
49 C.F.R. § 390.9. Again, the MCSA specifically requires that the Secretary take into account the existence of state mоtor vehicle safety laws in promulgating regulations so as to “minimize unnecessary preemption.” 49 U.S.C. app. § 2505(c)(2)(B). These legislative edicts are wholly inconsistent with a congressional intent to eclipse the states’ role in ensuring safe commercial trucking.
Starting with the traditional presumption, then, that “Congress did not intend to displace state law,”
Maryland v. Louisiana,
II.
Next, ITA contends that the City ordinance cannot pass muster under the Commerce Clause, U.S. Const, art. I, § 8, cl. 3, because of its “discriminatory purpose” and its “unreasonable burden on interstate commerce.” The ordinance “facially” discriminates against tow trucks based in Indiana and Kentucky within the 25-mile radius of coverage because “those towing companies bear an unequal burden of the fees paid,” ITA argues, citing
American Trucking Ass’ns, Inc. v. Scheiner,
We first reject ITA’s assertion that the ordinance on its face discriminates against out-of-state towing companies. The ordinance draws no distinction between Ohio and foreign firms and does not specify different application or reach based on state residency or the crossing of Ohio borders. A state or local law that does not on its face “affirmatively discriminate” against interstate transactions does not automatically trigger heightened judicial scrutiny.
Maine v. Taylor,
We do not think that
Scheiner
bolsters ITA’s Commerce Clause argument. In that case, Pennsylvania had assessed a use tax in the form of fixed annual fees on trucks using interstate highways in that Commonwealth. The stated purpose of the fees was for road improvement and repair. The Supreme Court concluded that this use tax favored Pennsylvania carriers because trucks registered in states other than Pennsylvania bore a greater financial burden in terms of “cost per mile” than did trucks registered in Pennsylvania, which were effectively exempt,
Scheiner is clearly distinguishable from the case at bar. The City’s $80 fee cannot properly be characterized as a user fee, as was the tax in Scheiner. Rather, the City’s fee is assessed to help defray the costs of inspecting towing vehicles to ensure that all trucks providing towing services within City limits, Ohio-based and out-of-state-trucks *1163 alike, meet certain standards of safety and are equipped sufficiently to provide “first-class” service. The fee is not charged for the privilege of using the City’s streets, nor are City- or Ohio-based tow trucks exempt from the fee.
Perhaps more importantly, the City’s ordinance does not impose different burdens based only, or even incidentally, on state citizenship or origin. The state boundaries are entirely irrelevant to this fee. ITA asserts that the “per-milе” cost of the fee is higher for towing companies based in Kentucky and Indiana than for those based in Ohio, but there is no defensible basis for this assertion. While the burden of the fee is indeed less, as a percentage of revenue, for those firms that do more business in Cincinnati, this has nothing to do with the towing company’s home state. And the fact that some of the firms on which the fee may fall more heavily, due to infrequent trips to the City, are based across state borders does not render the fee impermissible.
The City deems safety, minimum levels of service, and consumer protection necessary for the provision of towing services within its borders. Such concerns have consistently been regarded as legitimate, innately local in nature, and presumptively valid, even where regulations enacted to address those concerns have an impact on interstate commerce.
See Pike v. Bruce Church, Inc.,
[w]here the statute regulates even-handedly to effectuate a legitimate local public interest, and its effects on interstate commerce are only incidental, it will be upheld unless the burden imposed on such commerce is clearly excessive in relation to the putative local benefits. If a legitimate local purpose is found, then the question becomes one of degree. And the extent of the burden that will be tolerated will of course depend on the nature of the local interest involved, and on whether it could be promoted as well with a lesser impact on interstate activities.
Id. (citation omitted). Here, despite ITA’s protestations to the contrary, Cincinnati’s ordinance does “regulate[ ] even-handedly,” applying equally to all towing firms seeking to tow cars from the streets of the City. We have pointed out that the metropolis’s serendipitous location in an area where three states converge does not mean the City cannot regulate local activities which, as a result of this location, entail movement across .state lines; at best, such movement affects interstate commerce only incidentally. See id. And we have concluded that the City’s interest in regulating tow trucks is legitimate. Thus, the only question left is whether the burdens the City has placed on interstate commerce exceed the City’s benefits.
As practiced by those firms based within the radius defined by the ordinance, even those across state borders from Cincinnati, the towing of vehicles, regulated by the ordinance, is primarily a local service. Certainly, a tow truck based in Kentucky (or for that matter in Ohio) may haul a vehicle across a state border in the process of performing a tow. Particularly in a sprawling municipality such as “Greater Cincinnati,” spreading as it does over state borders, even a trip to the grocery store may involve interstate travel, but this fact is incidental to the local nature of the activities in question here, and this accident of geography does not magically transform a lоcal service into “interstate commerce” properly regulated only by the federal government. The services Al’s Towing Service renders in Cincinnati, perhaps changing a tire, perhaps moving a wreck, and the like, may involve Al’s trucks’ crossing *1164 state borders, but such services nonetheless raise the City’s legitimate safety, consumer protection, and traffic-related concerns, and may be regulated without doing harm of constitutional proportions to interstate commerce. . The line of cases leading up to Scheiner, and those cases which have held certain fees, licenses, and other local regulations impermissibly to burden interstate commerce have all dealt with trades that consist solely or essentially of interstate carriage. In such cases, the Court has read between the statutory lines to see whether a state or municipality actually has a defensible interest in regulating this commerce, or whether it is, in a sense, extorting money in еxchange for permitting interstate commerce within its jurisdiction. 9
The City towing ordinance protects inargu-ably important municipal interests. ITA’s contention that no out-of-state tow truck summoned to the City by a motorist or auto club has ever caused safety problems or given rise to consumer complaints does nothing to diminish the City’s interest in making sure no such problems arise, and the regulations and required inspection seem properly directed toward that goal. 10 More importantly, since the mandates of the City ordinance promote the public safety and consumer confidence in the regulated services, we must assume that the ordinance also benefits the towing companies themselves. The Supreme Court has
sustained nondiscriminatory, properly apportioned state corporate taxes upon foreign corporations doing an exclusively interstate business when the tax is related to, a corporation’s local activities and thе State has provided benefits and protections for those activities for which it is justified in asking a fair and reasonable return.... “[T]he validity of the tax rests upon whether the State is exacting a constitutionally fair demand for that aspect of interstate commerce to which it bears a special relation.... In other words, the question is whether the State has exerted its power in proper proportion to appellant’s activities within the' State and to appellant’s consequent enjoyment of the opportunities and protections which the State has afforded.”
Colonial Pipeline Co. v. Traigle,
ITA asks us to envision a world where every' municipality, from major cities on down to the smallest hamlet, imposed identical towing ordinances. In that event, they argue, interstate commerce would surely be unduly burdened; “most towing firms would likely be unduly restricted to operating in but a few local jurisdictions.” They assert that if such a result could occur, the ordinance in question surely must be invalid. In support of this argument, they invoke the so-called “internal consistency” requirement, applied in
Scheiner,
which invalidates state taxation schemes that, “if applied [identically] by every jurisdiction,” would impermissi-bly burden free trade.
Scheiner,
Envisioning such a world is not difficult, since municipal regulation of the business of towing is not unusual. See supra note 8. In any case, even if all the municipalities in the Greater Cincinnati area enacted identical statutes, we do not think the effect would be “to threaten the free movement of commerce by placing a financial barrier”. around each jurisdiction equivalent to the one Pennsylvania erected, and the Court invalidated, in
Scheiner. See
III.
Citing the Due Process 14 and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment, ITA challenges the ordinance, as applied to Al’s and to similarly situated towing companies, as being discriminatory, lacking a rational basis, and not furthering a legitimate municipal purpose. Al’s Towing is based acrоss the Kentucky staté line from the City and within the 25-mile radius of the ordinance’s coverage. ITA says that Al’s, and operators like it, perform Only “consensual” tows within City limits. A “consensual” tow, they contend, happens where a vehicle owner contacts the wrecking company of his choice, and asks for a tow to a specific location. ITA argues that in this type of tow, the consumer is fully informed as to the price, the service to be rendered, and the identity of the provider ahead of time. In contrast, the archetypical “non-consensual” tow occurs where the owner parks his car illegally and returns to find it gone. In that case, ITA contends, the owner has no control over who tows the car, the type of service rendered, the destination of the towed vehicle, and the price to be paid. ITA argues that the ordinance only rationally applies to the non-consensual tow situation.
Carving out “consensual” towing from “non-consensual” towing seеms to us to be making a distinction without a difference, and certainly not a distinction of constitutional dimension. ITA’s argument that the City has no legitimate interest in regulating consensual tows is at heart a contention that the ordinance is impermissibly overbroad. For example, they contend that the City need not regulate the price of consensual tows since the motorist who phones a particular towing company presumably has shopped around to find the best deal, whereas wreckers who tow away illegally parked cars, without owner consent, have the motorists at their mercy and may charge extortionate rates for the return of the vehicles. Evidence that an ordinance, in seeking to achieve its ends, imposes “unnecessary” burdens on those who are not causing the problem to be remedied does not help to prove the provision incompatible with equal protection.
See, e.g., New York City Transit Auth. v. Beazer,
ITA also revives its argument that the federal government already regulates tow trucks such as those operated by Al’s and subjects these trucks to stringent highway inspections; ITA contends that the City therefore has no legitimate interest in imposing regulations. It points out the near absence of consumer complaints or safety violations attributable to cross-border “consensual” towing operators. ITA also contends that the ordinance’s 25-mile radius of coverage is an irrational and arbitrary provision.
These arguments suggest that Cincinnati must defend the rationality of its ordinance by proving thе existence of an ongoing problem which each facet of the regulations seeks to address. However, the City need not show that its ordinance provides the best means for achieving its stated ends, only that these means are rational in view of its goals.
See Williamson v. Lee Optical of Oklahoma, Inc.,
[T]he law need not be in every respect logically consistent with its aims to be constitutional. It is enough that there is *1167 an evil at hand for correction, and that it might be thought that the particular measure was a rational way to correct it.
Id.
at 487-88,
Recently, an argument very similar to that put forth by ITA here was rejected by a federal district court in New York. In
New Jersey Limousine Assoc. v. Lusk,
No. 98 Civ. 2092,
If New York City can make this explicit distinction in the application of its ordinances governing limousines without offending the Equal Protection Clause, then a fortiori the Cincinnati ordinance, which does not reach tow trucks “dropping off’ vehicles in the City, and which at best is alleged to discriminate only implicitly against “consensual” towing companies, must stand. ITA argues that the City’s evidence submitted to show that regulation of towing was needed, for example, evidence that some tow operators would take legally parked cars “hostage” by towing them a few blocks away to another parking lot and then demanding money to reveal to the owner where the car was, does not apply to operators who only come into the City when summoned by a motorist. However, most of the safety regulations, the inspection, the insurance requirements, and so on ostensibly increase the quality and decrease the safety and fraud risks with regard to all towing services, regardless of how obtained or provided. We do not find Cincinnati’s means of ensuring “first class” towing service irrational, and therefore we uphold the ordinance as valid under the Equal Protection Clause.
IV.
For the reasons explained, the judgment of the district court in favor of the City of Cincinnati is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. This section of the ordinance reads:
No wrecker or towing operator shall engage in the business of offering towing services by use of a wrecker or similаr vehicle by removing parked or disabled motor vehicles from any street, or property, whether public or private, located in the city of Cincinnati, unless a license is obtained from the city treasurer for each place of business operated by the wrecker or towing operator. This includes those operators both within and without the corporate limits of the city of Cincinnati.
No licensee shall operate a wrecker or automobile used for towing purposes to remove parked or disabled motor vehicles from any street, or property, whether public or private, located in the city of Cincinnati and towing them over the streets of Cincinnati, unless a license sticker is obtained from the city treasurer for such wrecker or automobile.
The requirements of this section shall not apply (1) to wrecker or towing operator(s) whose placc(s) of business is (are) located more than 25 miles from the city limits of the city оf Cincinnati and who are subject to and have complied with the safety regulations of the U.S. Department of Transportation (49 CFR Parts 390-399); or (2) to any wrecker or operator who uses his wrecker exclusively for towing, winching, or moving his own property.
Cincinnati, Ohio, Mun.Code § 869-7 (1990).
. Several parties not before us on appeal were plaintiffs in the district court action: Towing and Recovery Association of Kentucky, Tri-State Towing Association, and Al's Towing.
. While ITA first claims that federal law "expressly" preempts the Cincinnati towing ordinance, their argument that “[t]he clear language of the federal statute evidences an intent on the part of Congress to preempt local [laws],” ITA’s Brief at 14, máy properly be understood as one for "implied" preemption. Express preemption occurs only where the federal statute itself explicitly states that certain state and local laws shall be preempted.
See Shaw v. Delta Air Lines, Inc.,
. ITA also argues that the ordinance is specifically preempted by the Interstate Commerce Act, 49 U.S.C. §§ 10521-30. In fact, the ICA specifically exempts from Interstate Commerce Commission jurisdiction
(1) transportation provided entirely in a municipality, in contiguous municipalities, or in a zone that is adjacent to, and commercially part of, the municipality or municipalities, [and]
(3) the emergency towing of an accidentally wrecked or disabled motor vehicle.
49 U.S.C. § 10526(b). ITA claims that exemption (3) illustrates the distinction they draw between "consensual” and "non-consensual” tows, see part III of this opinion; but on their faces, these subsections of the statute indicate Congress's intent not to preempt local towing services. This is enough to reject this aspect of ITA's argument.
. The saving clause provides:
Nothing- in this chapter shall prevent any State agency or court from asserting jurisdiction under State law over any occupational safety or health issue with respect tо which no standard is in effect under section 655 of this title.
29 U.S.C. § 667(a).
. For the purposes of the MCSA's review provisions, "state” includes "a political subdivision of a State.” 49 U.S.C. app. § 2503(10).
. We find support for our conclusions in the Fourth Circuit case of
Specialized Carriers & Rigging Ass'n v. Virginia,
. Cоurts have consistently upheld municipal ordinances regulating towing services, finding such services to be essentially local and within the purview of the police powers.
See, e.g., People v. Merksamer,
.
See, e.g., Bourjois, Inc. v. Chapman,
. At trial, plaintiffs elicited testimonial evidence that the City inspections were somewhat lax and that certified mechanics or inspectors were not employed. While non-compliance with established enforcement measures does suggest ulteri- or motives for a regulatory scheme, particularly where part of the inspection involves collection of the fee, the evidence does not indicate that this ordinance is simply a ruse. Imperfect enforcement does not render,an underlying statute unconstitutional.
See Hameetman v. City of Chicago,
. Writing for this court, Judge Nelson has aptly described this test as being "reminiscent of Kant’s categorical imperative."
Brown-Forman Co. v. Tenn. Alcoholic Beverage Comm'n,
. As we have explained, the City does not impose its regulations on all tow trucks within a 25-mile radius of City limits; it imposеs its regulations on tow trucks based within that radius that'perform towing services within City limits.
. We also note that the "internal consistency” argument has yet to be employed to invalidate state legislation outside the specific context of taxation; we therefore would hesitate to extend the Court's "Kantian” doctrine to encompass other types of regulation of interstate commercial activities.
See Scheiner,
. The entirety of ITA’s due process contention is that towing companies based up to 25 miles outside City limits may not have "actual or constructive knowledge" of the ordinance. This ar- ■ gument lacks merit.
. ITA cannot seriously contend that towing operators providing "consensual” tows constitute a "protected class,” comparable to a racial minority and entitled to heightened judicial protection.
