OPINION
May a city, consistent with the First and Fourteenth Amendments, prohibit individuals from placing leaflets on car windshields and other parts of a vehicle without the consent of the owner? Because the law represents a content-neutral restriction on the time, place and manner of speech, because the law narrowly regulates the problems at hand (littering, visual blight and unauthorized use of private property), because the law leaves open ample alternative avenues for distributing leaflets in an inexpensive manner (face-to-face on a public street and door-to-door in a neighborhood) and because the law has much in common with a ban on placing signs on utility poles,
see Members of City Council of Los Angeles v. Taxpayers for Vincent,
I.
The City of Catlettsburg lies in northeastern Kentucky at the confluence of the Ohio and Big Sandy rivers, where the borders of Kentucky, Ohio and West Virginia all converge.. The city has a population of about 1,900.
In 1952, the city council of Catlettsburg enacted the following ordinance:
*263 § 113.05 Placing Posters on Vehicles It shall be unlawful for any person to place or deposit or in any manner to affix or cause to be placed or deposited or affixed to any automobile or other vehicle or other automotive vehicle, any handbill, sign, poster, advertisement, or notice of any kind whatsoever, unless he be the owner thereof, or without first having secured in writing the consent of the owner thereof.
Penalty, see § 113.99
Catlettsburg, Ky., City Ordinances, § 113.05. The ordinance thus prohibits individuals from doing two different things— “plae[ing]” a handbill on a car (e.g., under the windshield wipers) or “affix[ing]” a poster or other advertisement to the car. Individuals who violate the section may be fined “not more than $500.” See § 113.99.
The ordinance does not stand alone in the city’s code. In a neighboring law, entitled “Scattering, Littering Prohibited,” the city forbids throwing, scattering, or distributing any poster or pamphlet upon any public place (including sidewalks and streets), upon “any private lot or steps,” or “into or upon ... any vehicle.” See § 113.03. At the same time, the city expressly permits the distribution of written materials to private residences if the literature “is handed in at the door, or placed on a porch, or securely fastened to prevent it from being blown or scattered about,” id., and the city does not prohibit individuals from handing out leaflets on streets, sidewalks or other public places.
The current mayor of Catlettsburg does not know why the city first promulgated the vehicle-handbill ordinance over a half-century ago. As for the present-day relevance of the ordinance, the mayor has explained that the municipality has a general littering problem that this ordinance (along with other ordinances) helps to address.
Leonard Jobe lives in Catlettsburg and is the head of the local American Legion post. In 2002, Jobe, with no apparent knowledge of the law, began distributing leaflets on behalf of the American Legion by placing them under the windshield wipers of cars parked on public property. In response, the city enforced the ordinance against him by fining Jobe $500. Jobe has paid the fine and does not challenge its imposition here. As far as the mayor can recall (based on his employment with the city since 1991), Jobe was the first person against whom the city has enforced the ordinance. To the mayor’s knowledge, no one had complained about leafletters violating the ordinance before Jobe’s violation and no one has complained about leaflet-ting of this sort since then.
Invoking his First (and Fourteenth) Amendment right to freedom of speech, Jobe filed a three-page declaratory-judgment action against the city, seeking a declaration that the ordinance was unconstitutional, an injunction against the ordinance as applied to future leafletting by him and an award of costs and attorney’s fees. On cross motions for summary judgment and after minimal discovery initiated by the parties, the district court upheld the ordinance as a valid content-neutral time, place and manner restriction that did not foreclose other means of effective communication. We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo.
CSX Transp., Inc. v. United Transp. Union,
II.
A.
In its traditional form, leafletting occurs when individuals offer handbills, pamphlets, tracts, advertisements, notices and other information to individuals on the street or sidewalk who remain free to ac
*264
cept or reject the document.
Taxpayers for Vincent,
In each of these settings, the Supreme Court has made it clear that leafletting and related activities represent a method of speech protected by the First and Fourteenth Amendments. The Court has invalidated bans on leafletting on public streets.
See, e.g., United States v. Grace,
At the same time that the Court has invalidated bans on leafletting and unyielding licensing requirements for leafletting, it has indicated that the reserved police powers of the States (and cities) permit them to impose reasonable time, place and manner restrictions on leafletting.
See Frisby v. Schultz,
The Court also has addressed similar free-speech issues in the context of government regulations of signs. In
Metromedia, Inc. v. City of San Diego,
Through it all, however, the Court has not considered the validity of a regulation restricting individuals from placing leaflets on car windshields or otherwise affixing notices on cars. That is surprising given the many cities that have similar ordi-' nances. As readers outside of Catletts-burg may wish to know, one State (New York) and numerous American cities have adopted equivalent ordinances, including many large cities (Atlanta, Philadelphia), several mid-sized cities (Charlotte, Portland (Oregon), San Antonio) and some small cities (Albany (Georgia), Mundelein (Illinois), Mishawaka (Indiana)).
See
Appendix (listing similar ordinances from one State, from one territory and from 38 cities located in 19 other States). One of the four statutes at issue in
Schneider
(the Los Angeles statute), it is true, forbade “attaching] any hand-bill in, to or upon any automobile or other vehicle.”
B.
In the face of these precedents and this history, both parties agree that the First Amendment generally protects leafletting in its various forms and manifestations. And they agree that the Catlettsburg ordinance is a content- and viewpoint-neutral regulation of leafletting, and thus does not warrant exacting scrutiny on that basis alone. But they part company over whether Jobe’s leafletting occurred in a public forum — with Jobe emphasizing that his leafletting occurred on cars parked on public streets and the city emphasizing that his leafletting occurred on privately owned cars.
The public-forum doctrine recognizes “three types of fora: the traditional public forum, the public forum created by government designation, and the nonpublic forum.”
Cornelius v. NAACP Legal Defense & Educ. Fund, Inc.,
Not every regulation that affects public property, however, implicates the public-forum doctrine. In
Taxpayers for Vincent,
supporters of a political candidate challenged a Los Angeles ordinance that prohibited them from placing cardboard signs on utility poles and crosswires supporting utility poles.
Similar reasoning defeats Jobe’s argument. If the public-forum doctrine does not apply to
public
items (e.g., utility poles)
permanently
located on public streets and sidewalks, it assuredly does not apply to
private
cars
temporarily
parked on public streets. And if
Taxpayers for Vincent
was wary about permitting citizens to co-opt utility poles to serve as bulletin boards and signposts, one would expect the Court to be equally wary, if not more wary, of permitting citizens to co-opt privately owned cars to serve as receptacles for the distribution or display of literature and other information.
See id.
at 815 n. 31,
C.
Once
Taxpayers for Vincent
had concluded that the ordinance at issue did not regulate a public forum, it proceeded to apply the traditional time-place-and-manner test to the regulation.
To qualify as a reasonable time-place-and-manner regulation of speech, the law must (1) be content-neutral, (2) serve a significant government interest, (3) be narrowly tailored to serve that government interest and (4) leave open ample alternative channels of communication.
Id.
at 808, 815,
Catlettsburg’s ordinance survives this test.
First,
the parties correctly agree that the ordinance is content-neutral and viewpoint-neutral as well. The law does not draw distinctions based on the topic of speech at issue or the point of view of the speaker. And the explanations for passing the law have nothing to do with the content of the literature being distributed by the speaker.
See R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul,
Second,
the ordinance advances two significant government interests: (1) It furthers the government’s interest in prohibiting litter and visual blight; and (2) it furthers individuals’ interests in having their private property left alone by those who do not have permission to use it. Curbing littering and the visual blight that comes with it advances the city’s “weighty, essentially esthetic interest in proscribing intrusive and unpleasant formats for expression.”
Taxpayers for Vincent,
*269
Nor does Catlettsburg stand alone in seeking to advance these government interests. That -at least one State (New York) and at least 38 other cities — from Philadelphia and Atlanta to San Antonio and Portland (Oregon) to Mishawaka (Indiana) and Albany (Georgia) — have passed similar laws suggests that the policy behind them is premised on legitimate rather than contrived police-power concerns.
See
Appendix. In view of the common-sense explanations for these types of laws, they do not invariably require proof that the problem has occurred in the past (a daunting task in view of the 1952 vintage of this law and the understandable absence of information about why the law was passed) or an elaborate study of their present-day necessity (an equally daunting task in view of the difficulty of showing the empirical necessity for a law that has been in place for more than 50 years). While governments normally should be expected to weigh the costs and benefits of regulating methods of speech as well as the alternative to regulating speech at all before enacting such laws,
Prime Media,
Nor, at any rate, has Jobe presented “any reason to question the city’s theory” that a ban on placing advertisements and posters on cars will further the city’s interest in preventing littering on private property and in preventing the use of private property for purposes neither intended nor welcomed by the owner.
City of Los Angeles v. Alameda Books, Inc.,
Third,
the ordinance advances these interests in a narrow and constitutionally permissible way. As in
Taxpayers for Vincent,
where Los Angeles banned “the posting of signs on public property,”
is not merely a possible by-product of the activity, but is created by the medium of expression itself. In contrast to Schneider, therefore, the application of the ordinance in this case responds precisely to the substantive problem which legitimately concerns the City. The ordinance curtails no more speech than is necessary to accomplish its purpose.
Id.
at 810,
So it is true-here. Catlettsburg targeted the precise problems — littering on private automobiles and unauthorized use of private property — that it wished to correct. If a city may ban signs from utility *270 poles due to the visual blight caused by them, it follows that a city may ban the placement of leaflets and signs on privately owned ears. For the Catlettsburg law not only corrects the visual blight stemming from all manner of unrequested advertisements being placed on cars, it also prevents littering on private property (e.g., on the privately owned cars), prevents littering on public property (when wind, rain or the inadequacy of a windshield wiper as a receptacle for information causes the leaflets to fall to the ground) and prevents private property from being co-opted for uses that the owner neither intended nor welcomed.
Fourth,
the ordinance leaves open ample alternative channels of communication. Placed in the context of other municipal laws enacted by the city, the ordinance permits a wide range of leafletting activities. Catlettsburg does not prohibit leaf-letting in its most traditional sense — offering handbills to pedestrians and giving them the choice to take the handbill or leave it.
See Taxpayers for Vincent,
III.
Jobe attempts to counter these conclusions with a series of additional arguments that we have not yet fully accounted for or otherwise addressed in our affirmative presentation. He initially protests that Catlettsburg should control littering by punishing “those who actually throw papers on the streets” rather than those who distribute the leaflets.
Schneider,
Neither is it clear that Jobe’s conduct may fairly be described as leafletting, as opposed to littering, at least so far as the Supreme Court has described leafletting. “The right recognized in
Schneider,”
the Court has explained, “is
to tender
the written material to the passerby
who may reject it or accept it.” Taxpayers for Vincent,
Jobe next argues that the ordinance is not narrowly tailored because (1) it fails to account for drivers who want to receive leaflets and (2) it permits drivers to give only written consent, as opposed to oral consent, to receive leaflets. Yet the ordinance does account for willing car owners: It permits leafletting on the cars of those who give the leafletter permission. § 113.05 (permitting anyone to place leaflets on a vehicle after “having secured in writing the consent of the owner”). Nothing in the ordinance prohibits willing recipients from indicating in writing to Jobe or other passersby that they invite leaflets to be placed under the windshield wipers of their cars. The ordinance simply accounts for what has long been a central feature of traditional leafletting' — the opportunity of the recipient to either accept or reject the offered literature — an opportunity denied to car owners who have not invited the leaflets.
See Taxpayers for Vincent,
*272
Far from improperly interfering with private property, Jobe next argues that his method of distributing American Legion literature and advertisements parallels other age-old methods of distributing information through the private property of others — using a door slot or a door knob to deliver a leaflet to a homeowner, using an answering machine to deliver a voice message, using a private mailbox to deliver a stamped advertisement or using a computer to deliver an electronic message. In attempting to analogize his actions to these methods of communication, however, he neglects a salient distinction: A windshield wiper is not a communications device and has never taken on the trappings of one. While Mary Anderson may be given credit for inventing the windshield wiper, she has never been given credit for devising a means of communication. And when Robert Kearns sought to improve the device (by inventing the intermittent windshield wiper),
see Kearns v. Wood Motors, Inc.,
Even so, Jobe counters, the ordinance does not leave open ample alternative channels because “the unique efficiency of leafletting cars downtown cannot be replicated [ ] by driving door to door throughout a rural county, by hand-delivering to people as they walk by, or by leafleting drivers.” Jobe Br. at 6. “To the contrary,” he continues, “the only efficient and effective way to leaflet those who come to town (residents and visitors) is to leaflet cars that congregate in a finite area.”
Id.
Jobe has a fair point here because the Supreme Court in fact has been quite sensitive to the need to permit inexpensive methods of spreading ideas and information.
See Gilleo,
But “[although the Court has shown special solicitude for forms of expression that are much less expensive than feasible alternatives and hence may be important to a large segment of the citizenry, this solicitude has practical boundaries.”
Taxpayers for Vincent,
Jobe, finally, argues that we should follow the Eighth Circuit’s lead in
Krantz v. City of Fort Smith,
At the end of the day, we disagree with three facets of the
Krantz
analysis. One, even though the
Krantz
district court stated that “these ordinances regulate the conduct of littering — the physical act of throwing down or depositing a piece of paper on public or private property,”
Krantz,
Two, so far as the opinion shows,
Krantz
did not address
Taxpayers for Vincent,
much less distinguish the decision. That perhaps explains the Eighth Circuit’s conclusions (1) that the public-forum doctrine governed the case and (2) that the ordinance was not narrowly tailored.
Krantz,
Three, Krantz in our view fails to account for the fundamental difference between traditional leafletting and the activities of Jobe and Krantz. Neither by tradition nor by design does the car windshield occupy a place in the long-accepted traditions of leafletting — whether hand-to-hand on public sidewalks or door-to-door in the neighborhood — or otherwise amount to a long-accepted communicative tool that governments may regulate only with the utmost care. And unlike traditional leafletting, Jobe’s and Krantz’s activities do not readily allow the recipient to opt out of receiving the flier and to opt out of the responsibility for disposing of it. While Krantz perhaps makes the best case for invalidating an ordinance like this one, it is not an analysis that we can accept.
IV.
For these reasons, we affirm.
Appendix
State law:
New York New York, N.Y. Veh. & Traf. Law § 375(b) (2005)
(b) Every such motor vehicle shall be equipped with suitable wipers or other device which shall clear a sufficient area of the windshields to provide reasonable driving vision.
(i) The use or placing of posters or stickers on windshields or rear windows of motor vehicles other than those authorized by the commissioner, is hereby prohibited. In a city of one million or more, there shall be a rebuttable presumption that the person whose name, telephone number, or other identifying information appears on any handbill or other form of advertisement attached to a windshield or windshield wipers of a motor vehicle shall be in violation of the provisions of this subdivision relating to the prohibition against attaching to windshields and windshield wipers, handbills and other forms of advertisements.
(in) ... The attaching to windshields and windshield wipers of handbills and other forms of advertisements, is hereby prohibited.
Territory law:
Virgin Islands 19 V.I.Code Ann. § 1563(10) (2004)
*275 No person shall—
(10) place or deposit any commercial or non-commercial handbill upon any vehicle not his own or in his possession.
City ordinances:
Albany Albany, Ga., Code of Ordinances, § 3.22 (2004)
It shall be unlawful for any person to throw or deposit any handbill in or upon any vehicle without the owner’s consent.
Atlanta Atlanta, Ga., Code of Ordinances, § 6-2 (2005)
Sec. 6-2. Placing advertising matter in or upon motor vehicles.
It shall be unlawful for any person, without the consent of the owner or person in charge of a motor vehicle which is parked on a public street, to place on or inside that parked motor vehicle any placard, handbill, card or advertising matter.
Beach Park Beach Park, Ill., Municipal Code, § 9.20.110 (2003)
9.20.110. Distribution of handbills on streets or vehicles.
No person shall distribute, cast, throw or place in or upon or along any of the streets, alleys or private places, whether upon any public place or upon any private property in the village, any handbills, pamphlets, circulars, books or advertising for the purposes or with the intent of advertising or making known any business, occupation, profession, medical treatment, medicine or any thing whatsoever.
Bullhead City Bullhead City, Ariz., Municipal Code, § 9.12.070(A) (2005)
9.12.070. Handbills.
A. It is unlawful for any person to deposit, place or throw any handbill in or upon any city street or park, or upon an automobile or other vehicle located within the city, or to deposit, place or throw any handbill in or upon any other public place, except for handbills handed directly to a person who consents to receiving such handbill.
Calexico Calexico, Cal., Municipal Code, § 5.56.120 (2004)
Sec. 5.56.120. Distribution in or upon vehicles prohibited — Exception.
It is unlawful for any person to distribute, deposit, place, throw, scatter or cast any commercial handbill in or upon any automobile or other vehicle. The provisions of this section shall not be deemed to prohibit the handing, transmitting or distributing of any noncommercial handbill to the owner or other occupant of any automobile or other vehicle who is willing to accept the same.
Carlsbad Carlsbad, Cal., Municipal Code, § 8.28.055(a) (2005)
See. 8.28.055. Depositing handbills on vehicles in parking lots prohibited.
(a) It is unlawful for any person to place, throw or deposit any handbill in or upon any vehicle in a public parking lot or to place, throw or deposit any handbill in or upon any vehicle in a private parking lot without the written permission of the owner, or the person entitled to immediate possession, or the authorized agent of either. Said written permission shall be presented to a peace officer upon request.
Carpintería Carpintería, Cal., Municipal Code, § 9.20.030 (2005)
9.20.030. Placing in or on vehicles prohibited when.
No person shall throw, distribute, or place in or on any automobile or other vehicle in the city, any handbills, dodgers, circulars, newspapers, papers, booklets, posters, or any other printed matter or advertising literature without first having obtained the permission of the owner or person in possession thereof.
Cathedral City Cathedral City, Cal., Municipal Code, § 5.20.050 (2004)
5.20.050 Placing commercial handbills in or on vehicles prohibited.
No person shall distribute, deposit, place, throw, scatter or cast any commercial handbill in or upon any automobile or other vehicle.
Charlotte, N.C., Charter and Code of Ordinances, § 15-l(b) (2004) Charlotte
*276 Sec. 15-1. Distribution of handbills, advertisements, letters, pamphlets or other materials.
Go) It shall be unlawful for any person to deposit in, paste on, or attach to any motor vehicle any handbills, advertisements, cards, circulars, leaflets, folders, banners, letters or pamphlets or to cause such materials to be deposited in, pasted on or attached to any motor vehicle, without the consent of the owner. Nothing contained in this subsection shall prohibit the attachment to a motor vehicle of a citation or public safety information issued or published by or on behalf of the city.
Cheyenne Cheyenne, Wy., City Code, § 8.52.070 (2005)
Section 8.52.070. Unlawful, depositing on uninhabited or vacant premises — Placing on vehicles.
Throwing or depositing of handbills upon uninhabited or vacant private premises is not allowed, nor shall any person throw or deposit any handbill in or upon any motor vehicle.
Chino Chino, Cal., Municipal Code, § 9.64.030(A) (2005)
9.64.030. Distribution of handbills and/or samples on motor vehicles strictly prohibited.
A. Any person who places, or allows, directs or causes another to place, handbills in or about any motor vehicle shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.
Cleveland Cleveland, Oh., Charter & Codified Ordinances, § 613.12 (2004)
Section 613.12. Placing Commercial and Noncommercial Handbills on Vehicles No person shall throw or deposit any commercial or noncommercial handbill in or upon any vehicle. However, it shall not be unlawful in any public place unless specifically prohibited by the controlling governmental agency for a person to hand out or distribute without charge to the receiver thereof, a noncommercial handbill to any occupant of a vehicle who is willing to accept it.
Coachella Coachella, Cal., Municipal Code, § 5.32.110 (2003)
5.32.110. Placing handbills in and on vehicles.
It is unlawful for any person to distribute, deposit, place, throw, scatter or cast any handbill in or upon any automobile or other vehicle.
Commerce City Commerce City, Colo., Code of Ordinances, § 13 — 12(b) (2005)
Sec. 13-12. Placement of advertisements and other printed materials. (b) Any handbill, poster, placard or printed material placed under windshield wipers or affixed to a vehicle without the permission of the owner, agent or occupant of the vehicle shall be deemed a nuisance.
Cotati Cotati, Cal., Municipal Code, § 9.48.020 (2004)
9.48.020. Vehicles.
No person shall throw or deposit any commercial or noncommercial handbill in or upon any vehicle. Provided, however, that it is not unlawful in any public place for a person to hand out or distribute without charge to the receiver thereof a noncommercial handbill to any occupant of a vehicle who is willing to accept it.
Duarte Duarte, Cal., Municipal Code, § 5.32.130 (2005)
5.32.130. Distribution on motor vehicles.
No person shall distribute, or cause to be distributed, any advertising matter by placing the same in or upon any motor vehicle, as that phrase is defined in the Vehicle Code of the state, which is parked upon any public street, alley or public parking area, or upon any such vehicle parked upon any private property.
El Monte El Monte, Cal., Municipal Code, § 9.04.060 (2004)
Sec. 9.04.060. Handbills.
No person shall place or affix any commercial advertising handbill, leaflet, dodger or other printed commercial advertisement of any kind on any vehicle parked in any public place or parked on any privately owned parking lot open to the public without the express written consent of the owner or person in lawful possession of the vehicle or property.
Escondido Escondido, Cal., Municipal Code, § 16-96 (2005)
*277 Sec. 16-96. Manner of distributing handbills.
No handbill or advertising shall be thrown, placed or distributed upon any yards, sidewalks, automobiles, streets, parking lots or elsewhere so as to litter or make untidy any such place.
Fillmore Fillmore, Cal., Municipal Code, § 16.20.030 (2004)
16.20.030. Placing in vehicles.
It is unlawful for any person, either directly or indirectly, to distribute, deposit, place, throw, scatter or cast, any handbill in or upon any automobile or other vehicle; the provisions of this section shall not be deemed to prohibit the handing, transmitting or distributing of any handbill to the owner or other occupant of any automobile or other vehicle.
Flagstaff Flagstaff, Ariz., City Code, § 6-06-001-0008(0) (2002)
Section 6-06-001-0008. Posting of Handbills on Public and Private Property C. Vehicles: No Person shall deposit any Handbill upon any vehicle on a Public Place without the express consent of the owner or person in control of such vehicle.
Gardena Gardena, Cal., Municipal Code, § 12.08.020 (2004)
Sec. 12.08.020. Distribution of advertising.
It is unlawful for any person to east, scatter and strew, i.e. litter, in the city to or among any other persons in, along, or upon any public street, highway, alley, park, depot or any other public place or into or upon any automobile or other vehicle or conveyance of another person or into or upon any mailbox, porch, yard or any portion of any premises within the city any handbill, poster, dodger, pamphlet or paper containing printed or typewritten matter or advertising or other notice or advertisement.
Glendora Glendora, Cal., Municipal Code, § 5.16.040 (2004)
5.16.040. Putting handbills in vehicles.
It is unlawful for any person to distribute, deposit, place, throw, scatter or cast any commercial or noncommercial handbill in or upon any automobile or other vehicle.
Huntington Park Huntington Park, Cal., Municipal Code, § 6-1.03 (2003) Sec. 5-1.03. Putting handbills in or on vehicles.
(a) No person, either directly or indirectly, shall distribute, deposit, place, throw, scatter or cast any handbill in or upon any automobile or other vehicle.
Jersey City Jersey City, N.J., Municipal Code, § 81-10 (2005)
§ 81-10. Placing handbills in or upon vehicles prohibited.
It shall be unlawful for any person to distribute, deposit, place, throw, scatter or east any handbill in or upon any automobile or other vehicle. The provisions of this section shall not be deemed to prohibit the handing, transmitting or distributing of any handbill to the owner or other occupant of any automobile or other vehicle who is willing to accept the same.
La Habra La Habra, Cal., Municipal Code, § 5.12.040 (2005)
5.12.040. Placing in or upon vehicles.
It is unlawful for any person to distribute, deposit, place, throw, scatter or cast any commercial or noncommercial handbill in or upon any automobile or other vehicle.
La Mesa La Mesa, Cal., Municipal Code, § 10.12.030 (2005)
10.12.030. Automobiles.
No person shall throw, distribute, or place in or on any automobile or other vehicle in the City any handbill, dodger, circular, newspaper, paper, booklet, poster, or any other printed matter, advertising literature or product without first having obtained the permission of the owner or person in possession thereof.
La Plata La Plata, Md., Municipal Code, § 132-10 (2005)
Section 132-10. Distribution of handbills.
B. Placing commercial and noncommercial handbills on vehicles. No person shall throw or deposit any commercial or noncommercial handbill in or upon any vehicle; provided, however, that it shall not be unlawful in any public place for a person to hand out or distribute without charge to the receiver thereof a noncommercial handbill to any occupant of a vehicle who is willing to accept it.
*278 Las Vegas Las Vegas, Nev., Municipal Code, § 6.42.145 (2005)
6.42.145. Distribution on or in motor vehicles.
(A) No person shall deposit, fasten, throw, scatter, cast or place any commercial or noncommercial handbill:
(1) In or upon any vehicle that is parked on any public street or on any property that is owned by the City; or
(2) In or upon any vehicle parked in or upon any private property that provides multiple spaces for parking vehicles. Such property shall, without limitation, include such locations as parking garages, shopping centers, shopping malls, outdoor theaters, drive-in restaurants, gasoline service stations, apartment and housing developments and complexes, casino and other types of parking lots and any other place where provision is made for vehicles to stop or park in designated areas for any purpose.
(B) The provisions of Paragraphs (1) and (2) of Subsection (A) of this Section shall not be deemed to prohibit in any public or private place the distribution of any commercial or noncommercial handbill by hand delivery to the owner or other occupant of any vehicle who is willing to accept the handbill without payment therefor.
Madison Madison, Wis., Code of Ordinances, § 23.04 (2004)
23.04. Distribution of Commercial and Advertising Matter Prohibited.
(2) It shall be unlawful for any person, firm, or corporation, except the owner, to place or cause to be placed in or upon any automobile standing on the streets, alleys, or public places in the City of Madison for advertising purposes any commercial, dodger, card, pamphlet, sticker, tag, or paper of any kind.
Menlo Park Menlo Park, Cal., Municipal Code, § 8.36.010 (2005)
8.36.010. Distributing on streets and automobiles.
Except as provided hereafter, no person shall, upon any public street, parking plaza, sidewalk or park, deposit or place on vehicles any handbill or any other type of printed or written advertisement. This section shall not prohibit the distribution of written or printed matter devoted to the expression of views, opinions, beliefs or contentions relating to religious or political subjects, or to public or civic affairs, or which treats of any social or economic order, or which is aimed at the redress of any grievance, or which otherwise is not distributed for the purpose of soliciting business or trade.
Mishawaka Mishawaka, Ind., Code, § 110.05 (2005)
§ 110.05. Placing Posters on Vehicles.
It shall be unlawful for any person to place or deposit or in any manner to affix or cause to be placed or deposited or affixed to any automobile or other vehicle or other automotive vehicle, any handbill, sign, poster, advertisement, or notice of any kind whatsoever not provided by law, unless he be the owner thereof, or without first having secured in writing the consent of the owner thereof.
Mundelein Mundelein, Ill., Municipal Code, § 9.56.060 (2005)
9.56.060. Handbill distribution.
(b) Placing on Vehicles. No person shall place or deposit any commercial or noncommercial handbill in or upon any vehicle while such vehicle is parking or standing on any street or other public place within the village. It is not unlawful in any public place within the village for a person to hand out or distribute without charge to the receiver thereof, a noncommercial handbill to any occupant of a vehicle who is willing to accept it.
Nashville Nashville & Davidson County, Tenn., Charter and Related Private Laws and Code of Laws of the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County, Tennessee, § 10.24.040 (2005)
10.24.040. Handbills — Distribution on vehicles.
No person shall throw or deposit any commercial or noncommercial handbill in or upon any vehicle. Provided, however, that it is not unlawful in any public place for a person to hand out or distribute to the receiver thereof, a commercial or noncommercial handbill to any occupant of a vehicle who is willing to accept it.
Quincy Quincy, Mass., Municipal Code, § 9.12.020 (2003)
*279 Section 9.12.020. Advertisements — Distribution.
No person shall distribute or circulate, or cause to be distributed or circulated, any handbills, cards, posters or flyers in or upon any public street, way or place of the city by placing the same in or upon any automobile or other vehicle standing in any such street, way or place, except upon permission duly granted in writing by the chief of police. A copy of such handbill, card, poster or flyer so proposed to be distributed or circulated shall accompany the application for such permit, and no such permit shall be construed to allow the throwing or scattering of such handbills, cards, posters or flyers in or upon the streets named in the permit.
Petersburg Petersburg, Alaska, Municipal Code, § 9.12.150 (2005)
9.12.150. Handbills — Placing on vehicles prohibited.
No person shall throw or deposit any commercial or noncommercial handbill in or upon any vehicle; provided, however, that it is not unlawful in any public place for a person to hand out or distribute without charge to the receiver thereof, a noncommercial or commercial handbill to any occupant of a vehicle who is willing to accept it.
Philadelphia Philadelphia, Penn., Code of Ordinances § 10-711 (2005)
§ 10-711. Placing Commercial and Non-Commercial Handbills on Vehicles.
(1) No person shall place or deposit any commercial or non-commercial handbill in or upon any vehicle; provided, that it shall not be unlawful for any person to distribute, without charge, a non-commercial handbill to any occupant of a vehicle who is willing to accept it.
Portland Portland, Or., City Code § 16.70.510 (2005)
A. It is unlawful for any person to ride or trespass upon or within any motor vehicle without the consent of the owner or operator thereof.
B. It is unlawful for any person to post, stick, or place upon or within any motor vehicle any card, notice, handbill, leaflet, pamphlet, survey, or similar matter without the consent of the owner or operator.
C. The provisions of this Section do not apply to any card, notice, handbill, leaflet, pamphlet, survey, or similar matter placed upon or within such motor vehicle by authority of law, by an authorized officer of the City, County, or State or by a designee of the City Traffic Engineer.
San Antonio San Antonio, Tex., Charter and Code of Ordinances, § 21-5 (2004)
See. 21-5. Throwing handbills in parked vehicles.
It shall be unlawful for any person to throw, place or deposit, or cause to be thrown, placed or deposited, any circular, dodger, handbill or other advertising or printed matter of any character whatsoever, in or on any vehicle parked or standing upon or along any street or other public place within the city, without the express consent and permission of the owner or person in charge of the vehicle.
