Dеfendant-Appellant Islamorada, Village of Islands (“Islamorada”) appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida granting injunctive and monetary relief in favor оf Plaintiffs-Appellees Island Silver & Spice, Inc., Glenn S. Saiger, and Virginia Saiger (collectively “Island Silver”) and invalidating an Islamorada zoning ordinance’s “formula retail” restrictions as violations of the Dormant Commerce Clause. We affirm the judgment of the district court.
BACKGROUND
In January 2002, Islamorada enacted Ordinance 02-02, which prohibited “formula restaurant[s]” and restricted “formula retail” establishments to limited streеt level frontage and total square footage. (See Ordinance 02-02 §§ 6.4.3^4(a-b), available at R.E. Tab 2 at 22 (“Ordinance 02-02” or “the ordinance”).) The ordinance defines formula retail as:
[a] type of retail sales activity of retail sales еstablishment ... that is required by contractual or other arrangement to maintain any of the following: standardized array of services or merchandise, trademark, logo, service mark, symbol, decor, аrchitecture, layout, uniform, or similar standardized feature.
(Id. at § 6.4.1(e).)
Island Silver owns and operates an independent retail store in Islamorada.
See Island Silver & Spice, Inc. v. Islamorada,
On February 28, 2007, the district court granted injunctive and monetary relief in favor of Island Silver and invalidated the ordinance’s formula retail provisions. Id. at 1294. The district court found that the provisions violated the Dormant Commerce Clause because they had a discriminatory impact on interstate commerce unsupported by a legitimate state purpose and the putative local benefits were outweighed by the burden imposed on interstate commerce. Id. at 1292-93. Islamo-rada appeals. 1
JURISDICTION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
We have jurisdiction over the appeals of final judgments of the district court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We review the district court’s factual findings for clear error and its legal conclusions
de novo. Ruiz v. Tenorio,
DISCUSSION
The Dormant Commerce Clause prohibits “regulatory measures designed to benefit in-state economic interests by burdening out-of-state competitors.”
New Energy Co. of Ind. v. Limbach,
The district court correctly determined that the formula retail provision does not facially discriminate against interstate commerce.
See Island Silver,
Under the elevated scrutiny test, a regulation must be supported by “a legitimate local purpose that cannot be adequately served by reasоnable nondiscriminatory alternatives.”
3
Bainbridge,
The ordinance’s stated local purposes include the preservation of “unique and natural” “small town” community characteristics, encouragement of “small scale uses, water-оriented uses, [and] a nationally significant natural environment,” and avoidance of increased “traffic congestion ... [and] litter, garbage and rubbish offsite.” (Ordinance 02-02 at Preamble.) The parties stipulated, however, that “Islamorada has a number of [preexisting] ‘formula retail’ businesses,” (Evi-dentiary Stipulation, at 6 n.3), Islamorada “has no Historic District, and there are no historic buildings in the vicinity of [Island Silver’s] proрerty,”
(id.
at 6-7), and “[t]he Ordinance is not necessary for preservation of the historic characteristics of any buildings in the Village,”
(id.
at 7). In addition, because the ordinance “does not address small formulа retail stores, which are permitted under the ordinance, but would presumably affect the Village’s small town character as well,” or large non-chain businesses, the district court found that “[r]estricting formulа retail stores, while allowing other large [and] non-unique structures, does not preserve a small town character.”
Island Silver,
With respect to the stated purpose of encouraging small-scale and natural uses, the parties also stipulated that Islamora-da’s existing “zoning allows the use of the property as a retail pharmacy ... and other retail uses,” (Evidentiary Stipulation, at 1), and that Island Silver operated as “a street, level business comprising over twelve thousand square feet of floor area,”
(id.
at 2), which “greatly exceeds the [ordinance’s] dimensional limitations” for formula retail businesses,
(id.
at 3). The district court correctly found that Islamo-rada “[did] not explain why the ordinance singles out retail stores and restaurants
*848
with standardized features,”
Island Silver,
Similarly, the stated purposes of reduсing traffic and garbage are undermined by the parties’ stipulations that Islamorada has existing “land development regulations, other than the Ordinance, that govern and control traffic generatiоn of retail uses,” and “that limit the dimensions, location, and use of buildings and signs.” (Ev-identiary Stipulation, at 7.) The district court therefore properly concluded that Islamorada failed to provide a legitimate local purpose to justify the ordinance’s discriminatory effects, and that even if such purpose had been shown, “the ordinance does not serve this interest.”
Island Silver,
Islamorada’s failure to indiсate a legitimate local purpose to justify the ordinance’s discriminatory effects is sufficient to support the district court’s determination that the formula retail provision is invalid under the Dormаnt Commerce Clause. See id. (“Because the ordinance clearly fails the first two prongs of the [elevated scrutiny] test, the Court does not need to reach the merits of the third prong of the test. Whether [Islamorada] can show that no adequate, non-discriminatory methods were available is therefore immaterial.”). It should be noted, however, that Islamorada does not assert that the statеd purposes of the ordinance cannot be furthered by reasonable nondiscriminatory alternatives, such as Islamorada’s existing land development regulations. (See, e.g., Evidentiary Stipulation, at 7.) Even undеr the balancing approach advocated by Islamorada, the stipulated facts indicate that the formula retail provision’s disproportionate burden on interstate commerсe, such as the effective exclusion of interstate formula retailers, clearly outweighs any legitimate local benefits.
Accordingly, the district court did not err in concluding that the ordinance’s fоrmula retail provision violated the Dormant Commerce Clause.
CONCLUSION
We therefore AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. This appeal was consolidated for oral argument with Cachia v. Islamorada, No. 06-16606, which is disposed of in a separate opinion, filed concurrently with this opinion.
. The district court applied both the elevated scrutiny and balancing tests, finding that ''[the] ordinance fails both tests: it is discriminatory in impact ... without an adequate legislative purpose, and the burden it imposes is clearly excessive in relation tо its putative local benefits.”
Island Silver,
. Regulations that facially discriminate or have a discriminatory effect on interstate commerce rarely pass the elevated scrutiny test.
See Brown-Forman,
