This аppeal — in which we have the benefit of exemplary briefing by the parties and the various amici — requires us to reconcile a triad of state interests (protecting public health, maintaining public safety, and preserving access to medical facilities) with the First Amendment interests of those who challenge restrictions on how they may debate issues of public concern. We act in the context of a Massachusetts statute, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 266, § 120E1/ (the Act), which creates a floating six-foot buffer zone around pedestrians and motor vehicles as they approach reproductive health care facilities (RHCFs). We view
*39
that statute through the prism of
Hill v. Colorado,
The district court found meaningful distinctions between the Act and the Colorado statute at issue in
Hill,
determined that these distinctions undermined the constitutionality of the Act, and preliminarily enjoined the Act’s enforcement.
See McGuire v. Reilly,
I. BACKGROUND
In order to frame the issues on appeal, we think it is useful to trace the developments leading to the Act’s passage, survey its text, and place it in the context suggested by the Hill Court’s decision. With that foundation in place, we then recount the proceedings below.
A. The Act’s History.
By the late 1990s, Massachusetts had experienced repeated incidents of violence and aggressive behavior outside RHCFs. Concerned legislators responded to these disturbances by introducing Senate Bill No. 148, see S.B. 148, 181st Gen. Ct., Reg. Sess. (Mass. Jan. 6, 1999), reprinted in Appendix B hereto. The bill purposed to create a fixed twenty-five foot buffer zone from RHCFs’ entrances, exits, and driveways, and with limited exceptions, to prohibit all persons from entering, or remaining within, that buffer zone regardless of the person’s intent or the willingness оf others to listen. The state senate held a hearing in April of 1999. The received testimony chronicled the harassment and intimidation that typically occurred outside RHCFs. In addition, numerous witnesses addressed the emotional and physical vulnerability of women seeking to avail themselves of abortion services, and gave accounts of the deleterious effects of overly aggressive demonstrations on patients and providers alike. Based in part on this testimony, the senate concluded that existing laws did not adequately protect public safety in areas surrounding RHCFs. To remedy this situation, the senate favored the creation of fixed buffer zones. The sponsors of the bill left no doubt that they intended the proposed law to “increase public safety in and around [RHCFs]” while “maintaining] the flow of traffic and preventing] congestion” there. S.B. 148, supra, § 1. In the bargain, the sponsors expected the law to provide “reasonable time, place and manner restrictions to reconcile and protect both the First Amendment rights • оf persons to express then-views near reproductive health care facilities and the rights of persons seeking access to those facilities to be free from hindrance, harassment, intimidation and harm.” It thereby would “create an environment in and around reproductive health care facilities which is conducive towards the provision of safe and effective medical services ... to its patients.” Id.
Skeptics worried that the proposed law might offend the Constitution. To stave off these gloom-and-doom predictions, the senate, on November 3, 1999, asked the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court (SJC) for an advisory opinion on the bill’s constitutionality. On January 24, 2000, the SJC concluded that the Constitution presented no obstacle to enactment.
Opinion of the Justices to the Senate,
After receiving this favorable review, the senate engrossed Senate Bill No. 148 on February 29, 2000. That version of the law never came to a vote in the house of representatives, mainly because the United States Supreme Court decided
Hill
on June 28, 2000. In that opinion, the Court upheld, as a content-neutral time, place, and manner restriction, a Colorado statute designed to ameliorate the same, evils.
First, [the statute] is not a regulation of speech. Rather, it is a regulation of the places where some speech may occur. Second, it was not adopted because of disagreement with the message it conveys .... Third, the State’s interests in protecting access and privacy, and providing the police with clear guidelines, are unrelated to the content of thе demonstrators’ speech.
Id.
at 719-20,
Massachusetts decided to follow the trail that Colorado had blazed. Consequently, the house of representatives struck the text of Senate Bill No. 148 and reformulated its language. The amended version— ultimately enacted and codified as section 120E)& — recast the proposed statute and, most notably, replaced the fixed buffer zones originally envisioned by the state senate with floating buffer zones of the type upheld in Hill. The house engrossed the bill on July 28, 2000, and the senate concurred the next day. On August 10, 2000, Governor Cellucci signed the Act into law.
B. The Act’s Text.
The Act, formally known as the Massachusetts Reproductive Health Care Facilities Act, is reprinted in Appendix A hereto. The Act makes it unlawful, absent consent, “knowingly to approach [within six feet of a person or occupied motor vehicle] for the purpose of passing a leaflet or handbill to, displaying a sign to, or engaging in .oral protest, education or counseling with such other person in the public way or sidewalk area within a radius of 18 feet from any entrance door or driveway to a reproductive health care facility.” Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 266, § 120E]6(b).
The statutory prohibition is not absolute. In the first place, the architecture of this floating buffer zone precludes speakers from approaching unconsenting listeners, but it neither prevents speakers from holding their ground nor requires them to retreat from passersby. In the second place, the Act’s prophylaxis does not attach unless and until an RHCF opens for business and clearly demarcates the protected eighteen-foot zone. Id. § 120E/é(e). Finally, the Act exempts persons entering or leaving an RHCF; persons using the streets to reach a destination other than the RHCF; and, while acting within the scope of their employment, (i) the RHCF’s employees and agents, and (ii) certain government officials (e.g., police officers). Id. § 120EKb).
C. The Inñuence of Hill.
In rejecting a challenge to a similar Colorado statute, the
Hill
Court made a number of pronouncements that inform
*41
our resolution of this appeal. Perhaps most important, the Court held that the Colorado law was content-neutral even though it singled out “oral protest, education, [and] counseling,” because this denoted a broad category of speech rather than specifying a particular subject matter or viewpoint.
Three other points deserve mention. First, the Court emphasized the significance of the state’s interest in preserving access to health care facilities.
Id.
at 715,
Hill bears on this case in another way as well. Although the Act was conceived in the albedo of Hill, it is not a carbon copy of the statute at issue there. There are five key differences:
• The protections of the Colorado law apply to all health care faсilities, Colo.Rev.Stat. § 18-9-122, whereas the Act applies only to free-standing clinics that provide abortions, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 266, § 120E½.
• The Colorado statute specifies an 100-foot radius around all covered facilities, Colo.Rev.Stat. § 18-9-122(3), whereas the Act specifies an eighteen-foot radius, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 266, § 120E½(b).
• The Colorado statute pretermits unwanted approaches within eight feet of anyone inside the specified area, Colo.Rev.Stat. § 18-9-122(3), while the Act constructs only a six-foot buffer zone, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 266, § 120E½(b).
• The directive that the Act apply only when an RHCF is open for business and has clearly demarcated the protected area, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 266, § 120E½(c), is not part of the Colorado scheme.
• The Act; unlike the Colorado law, exempts various groups of persons from its reach. Id. § 120E^(b).
In most of these respects, the Act arguably restricts less speech than its Colorado counterpart.
D. Proceedings Below.
The plaintiffs — Mary Anne McGuire, Ruth Schiavone, and Jean B. Zarrella — are Massachusetts residents who regularly protest, demonstrate, and provide sidewalk counseling outside RHCFs. Shortly after the passage of the Act, they sued a number of state hierarchs in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts. They argued that the Act violated their rights to freedom of speech, freedom of association, equal protection, and due process of law. To remedy these deprivations, they sought both a declaration of the Act’s unconstitutionality and an injunction against its enforcement.
The district court determined that the Act offended the First Amendment in two ways. First, the court regarded the Act as an impermissible content-based restriction because it “pertain[s] exclusively to speech that communicates a message of protest, education, or counseling spoken at the entrances of abortion clinics.”
McGuire,
This interlocutory appeal ensued. On motion duly filed, see Fed. R.App. P. 8(a), we stayed the injunction pending appeal. We now reverse.
EL THE PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION STANDARD
A party who seeks a preliminary injunction must show: (1) that she has a substantial likelihood of success on the merits; (2) that she faces a significant potential for irreparable harm in the absence of immediate relief; (3) that the ebb and flow of possible hardships are in favorable juxtaposition (i.e., that the issuance of an injunction will not impose more of a burden on the nonmovant than its absence will impose on the movant); and (4) that the granting of prompt injunctive relief will promote (or, at least, not denigrate) the public interest.
Ross-Simons of Warwick, Inc. v. Baccarat, Inc.,
III. THE FIRST AMENDMENT CHALLENGE
To place the appellants’ First Amendment challenge into workable perspective, we begin-with an overview of the constitutional doctrine governing restrictions on speech. We then consider whether the Act qualifies as content-neutral legislation for First Amendment purposes. After answering this question, we then subject the Act to the appropriate level of judicial scrutiny. Throughout, we bear in mind that the plaintiffs have mounted a facial challenge to the Act as a whole, not an as-applied challenge to some particular application of it.
A. The Doctrinal Underpinnings.
Freedom of speech “is the matrix, the indispensable condition, of nearly every other form of- freedom.”
Palko v. Connecticut,
Governmental restrictions on the content of particular speech pose a high risk that the sovereign is, in reality, seeking to stifle unwelcome ideas rather than to achieve legitimate regulatory objectives.
Turner Broad. Sys., Inc. v. FCC,
Courts grow even more chary when the government attempts to differentiate between disparate views espoused by those speaking on a singular subject. That chariness — some might say hostility — is not surprising, for viewpoint-based discrimination is a particularly offensive type of content-based discrimination.
Rosenberger v. Rector & Visitors of Univ. of Va.,
Judicial review takes on a different cast when a statute does not regulate speech per se, but, rather, restricts the time, place, and manner in which expression may occur. Such laws are less threatening to freedom of speech because they tend to burden speech only incidentally, that is, for reasons unrelated to the speech’s content or the speaker’s viewpoint. Where that description applies, courts employ a less exacting level of scrutiny, upholding limitations on the time, place, and manner of protected expression as long as “they are justified without reference to the content of the regulated speech, ... are narrowly tailored to serve a significant governmental interest, and ... leave open ample alternative channels for communication of the information.”
Clark v. Cmty. for Creative Nour-Violence,
B. Classifying the Act.
The Supreme Court has explained that “the principal inquiry in determining content neutrality, in speech cases generally and in time, place, or manner cases in particular, is whether the government has adopted a regulation of speech because of disagreement with the message it conveys.”
Ward v. Rock Against Racism,
By addressing political speech on public streets and- sidewalks, the Act plainly operates at the core of the First Amendment.
See Hague v. CIO,
In holding that the Act constitutes invidious content-based discrimination against abortion-related speech, the lower court emphasized that “the Massachusetts statute applies exclusively to speech communicated at abortion clinics and not ... to all health care facilities.” Id. at 102. We believe that the court, in reaching this conclusion, misconstrued applicable First Amendment doctrine by focusing exclusively on the effects of the Act rather than on its underlying purpose.
The critical question in determining content neutrality is not whether certain speakers are disproportionately burdened, but, rather, whether the reason for the differential treatment is — or is not — content-based.
See Hill,
We conclude, without much question, that the Act’s stated goals justify its specific application to RHCFs. The Massachusetts legislature, confronted with an apparently serious public safety problem, investigated the matter thoroughly. That investigation yielded solid evidence that abortion protesters are particularly aggressive and patients particularly vulnerable as they enter or leave RHCFs. Thus, targeting these sites furthers conventional objectives of the state’s police pоwer— promoting public health, preserving personal security, and affording safe access to medical services. Although the Act clearly affects anti-abortion protesters more than other groups, there is no principled basis for assuming that this differential treatment results from a fundamental disagreement with the content of their expression. Rather, the finding required on these facts is that the legislature was making every effort to restrict as little speech as possible while combating the deleterious secondary effects of anti-abortion protests. Just as targeting medical centers did not render Colorado’s counterpart statute content-based,
Hill,
*45
To be sure, the plaintiffs insist that the state’s professed concerns about public safety, personal security, and access to medical facilities are mere pretexts for its desire to censor anti-abortion speech. This insistence gets them nowherе. For one thing, their insinuations are unsupported by any record evidence. For another thing, where differential treatment is justified, on an objective basis, by the government’s content-neutral effort to combat secondary effects, it is insufficient that a regulation may have been adopted in direct response to the negative impact of a particular form of speech.
See Hill,
In an effort to parry this thrust, the plaintiffs point conspicuously to the district court’s holding that the statutory exemption for clinic agents and employees constitutes impermissible viewpoint-based discrimination (and, therefore, taints the entire Act). The court premised this holding on its determination that, by allowing clinic employees to enter the floating buffer zone without constraint, the Act permits free-ranging expression of pro-choice views while suppressing pro-life messages.
McGuire,
A court’s findings of fact must be anchored in probative evidence.
See United States v. Frankhauser,
There is, moreover, another defect in the district court’s treatment of the employee exemption. The court ignored the matter of secondary effects as they bear on that exemption. This was an unfortunate oversight: the secondary effects, that the Act was designed to ameliorate include securing public safety in and around RHCFs, preventing traffic congestion, and balancing free speech with the need to maintain a salutary atmosphere for those seeking access to medical services. See S.B. 148, supra, § 1. There is no evidence that agents and employees of RHCFs cause these problems. 2 ’ Thus, excluding those individuals does not undermine the legitimacy of the Act as a vehicle to curb the secondary effects of particular conduct and thereby achieve the legislature’s announced purposes.
The legislative history bears witness to this conclusion. Testimony taken before the state senate indicates beyond cavil that the emplоyee exemption will promote the Act’s goals because clinic employees often assist •in protecting patients and ensuring their safe passage as they approach RHCFs. Indeed, the record contains numerous accounts of incidents in which clinic personnel had to approach patients to protect them from protesters and, sometimes, to prevent physical altercations. Since it is within the scope of their employment for clinic personnel to escort patients in this fashion, and since a primary purpose of the law is to facilitate safe access, the employee exemption serves the basic objectives of the Act. To cinch matters, the legislature rationally could have concluded that clinic employees are less likely to engage in directing of unwanted speech toward captive listeners — a datum that the
Hill
Court recognized as justifying the statute there.
See Hill,
Endeavoring to counter these points, the plaintiffs posit that the employee exemption сould not possibly have been designed to combat those undesirable secondary effects because the Act, without the exemption, permits any person to approach a non-consenting patient for purposes other than education, protest, and counseling. See Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 266, § 120E½(b). The exemption only has meaning, therefore, insofar as it , allows those who work for RHCFs to approach within six feet of non-consenting patients to engage in such activities (i.e., education, protest, and counseling). From this plateau, the plaintiffs suggest that if a clinic employee were to approach to educate or counsel a prospective patient, that education or. counseling doubtless would manifest a pro-choice viewpoint. So viewed, the sole practical purpose of the employee exemption is to promote a particular side of the abortion debate — a feature that renders the exemption discriminatory and ensures that any application would violate the First Amendment.
While this argument has a certain logic, it ultimately fails. After all, the plaintiffs have challenged the Act
on its face.
The nature of this challenge raises the bar for their success: a party who mounts a facial challenge to a statute must carry a significantly heavier burden than one who seeks
*47
merely to sidetrack a particular application of the law.
See Nat'l Endowment for the Arts v. Finley,
In the First, Amendment context, this means that a plaintiff who challenges a statute on its face ordinarily must show either that the law admits of no valid application or that, even if one or more valid application exists, the law’s reach nevertheless is so elongated that it threatens to inhibit constitutionally protected speech.
Time Warner Entm’t Co. v. FCC,
Courts owe legislаtive judgments substantial respect and, as a general matter, should be reluctant “to reduce statutory language to a merely illustrative function.”
Mass. Ass’n of HMO v. Ruthardt,
The ultimate difficulty, of course, is that the legislature’s subjective intent is both unknown and unknowable. At this juncture, we can look only to the purposes that may rationally be said to be served by the provision in question (here, the employee exemption). That is a large part of the reason why one who challenges a statute on its face must carry an appreciably heavier burden: a facial challenge, unlike an as-applied challenge, does not allow a reviewing court to base its judgments on actual experience or provide the court any room to capture nuances in a statute’s meaning.
See United States v. Raines,
That ends this aspect of the argument. Because we can envision at least one legitimate reason for including the employee exemption in the Act, it would be premature to declare the Act unconstitutional for all purposes and in all applications.
See United States v. Hilton,
We recapitulate. The Act, on its face, is content-neutral. Furthermore, although courts correctly regard viewpoint discrimination as a particularly pernicious form of content discrimination, the Act does not discriminate against speakers based on their views. The employee exemption too is neutral on its face, drawing no distinction between different ideologies. And to the extent (if at all) that the exemption contributes to the Act’s disproportionate impact on anti-abortion protesters, it can be justified by reference to the state’s neutral legislative goals. We conclude, therefore, that since neither the Act as a whole nor the employee exemption reflects аn impermissible bias against either the content of certain speech or the views of certain speakers, the Act’s constitutionality must be determined by reference to the intermediate level of scrutiny that attaches to content-neutral time, place, and manner restrictions.
C. Intermediate Scrutiny.
Under the intermediate scrutiny standard, a law is deemed constitutional if it is narrowly tailored to serve significant state interests while leaving open ample alternative channels of communication.
See Renton,
The state legislature ascribed four purposes to the Act:
3
to increase public safety in and around RHCFs; t'o ensure smooth traffic flow; to balance free speech with the rights of persons seeking access to RHCFs to be free from hindrance; and to create an environment conducive to safe and effective medical services. S.B. 148,
supra,
§ 1. The interests that underlie these purposes are firmly rooted in the state’s traditional police powers, and these are precisely the sort of interests that justify some incidental burdening of First Amendment rights.
See Hill
On the flip side of the coin, the Act is narrowly tailored and leaves open sufficient opportunity to communicate in other ways. A law is narrowly tailored if it promotes a substantial governmental interest that would be less effectively achieved without the law and does so without burdening substantially more speech than is necessary to further this goal.
Ward,
This argument is unconvincing. The Massachusetts legislature reasonably concluded that existing law inadequately addressed the public safety, personal security, traffic, and health care concerns created by persistent demonstrations outside RHCFs. Indeed, the state senate specifically found that existing statutory protections did not suffice — and this finding is plausible given the general terms used by those statutes (e.g., “obstruction,” “disturbing the peace”). While such wider nets might catch the big fish, there is every reason to believe that they would let the fíngerlings through. We have said enough on this subject. The short of it is that the legislature weighed the
Hill
Court’s conclusions and formq-lated a bill to suit. As a result of this careful craftsmanship, the Act, in its final form, affects only areas immediately adjacent to RHCFs; prohibits only noncon-sensual approaches within six feet; and applies only within a clearly marked eighteen-foot radius from clinic entrances and exits. This framework is more precisely focused and gives abortion protesters more opportunity for advocacy than does the Colorado statute upheld in
Hill. Compare
Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 266, § 120½
with
Colo.Rev.Stat. § 18-9-122.
4
Because the Supreme Court concluded that the Colorado statute was narrowly tailored, the Act too satisfies that requirement. If, as the
Hill
Court stated, visual and verbal images are able to cross an eight-foot floating buffer zone with sufficient ease that the “restriction on an unwanted physical approach leaves ample room to communicate a message through speech,”
D. The Equal Protection Challenge.
Without developing the argument in detail, the plaintiffs, like the court below, conclusorily assert that the Act violates the Equal Protection Clause. Because the equal protection interests involved in the differential treatment of speech are inextricably intertwined with First Amendment concerns,
Police Dep’t of Chicago v. Mosley,
From time to time, the Supreme Court has invoked equal protection rather than free speech, as the basis for invalidating a content-based speech restriction.
E.g., Carey v. Brown,
IV. THE DUE PROCESS CHALLENGE
The failure of the plaintiffs’ First Amendment challenge does not end our journey. Even if the trial court’s rationale collapses, an appellee is free to defend the judgment below on any other ground made manifest by the record.
Mass. Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Ludwig,
This exhortation hinges upon language in the Act which provides that the six-foot floating buffer zone “shall only take effect during a facility’s business hours and if the area contained within the radius ... is clearly marked.” Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 266, § 120E$(c). The plaintiffs posit that this language vests private actors — the RHCFs — with unconstrained power to restrict speech, and they cite numerous cases for the black-letter proposition that the Due Process Clause forbids standardless delegations of governmental authority, especially to private parties.
E.g., Forsyth County v. Nationalist Movement,
The district court rejected this asseveration, concluding that the quoted portion of the Act “is more logically viewed as a notice requirement serving to protect the interests of speakers such as plaintiffs.”
McGuire,
Without exception, the cases on which the plaintiffs rely involve licensing schemes that allowed public officials to make discriminatory, content-based decisions.
E.g., City of Lakewood,
V. CONCLUSION
The existence of a four-part framework for granting or denying preliminary in-junctive relief does not mean that all four components are weighted equally. In the great majority of cases, likelihood of success constitutes the proper focal point of the inquiry.
Ross-Simons,
We reverse the order granting a preliminary injunction and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. The stay previously issued is dissolved as moot.
Appendix A
Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 266, § 120E½
SECTION 120E½: Reproductive Health Care Facilities
(a)For the purposes of this section, “reproductive health care facility” means a place, other than within a hospital, where abortions are offered or performed.
(b) No person shall knowingly approach another person or occupied motor vehicle within six feet of such person or vehicle, unless such other person or occupant of the vehicle consents, for the purpose of passing a leaflet or handbill to, displaying a sign to, or engaging in oral protest, education or counseling with such other person in the public way or sidewalk area within a radius of 18 feet from any entrance door or driveway to a reproductive health care facility or within the area within a rectangle not greater than six feet in width created by extending the outside boundaries of any entrance door or driveway to a reproductive health care facility at a right angle and in straight lines to the point where such lines intersect the sideline of the street in front of such entrance door or driveway. This subsection shall not apply to the following:—
(1) persons entering or leaving such facility;
(2) employees or agents of such facility acting within the scope of their employment;
(3) law enforcement, ambulance, firefighting, construction, utilities, public works and other municipal agents acting within the scope of their employment; and
(4) persons using the public sidewalk or street right-of-way adjacent to such facility solely for the purpose of reaching a destination other than such facility.
(c) The provisions of subsection (b) shall only take effect during a facility’s business hours and if the area contained within the radius and rectangle described in said subsection (b) is clearly marked and posted.
*52 (d) Whoever knowingly violates this section shall be punished, for the first offense, by a fine of not more than $500 or •not more than three months in a jail or house of correction, or by both such fine and imprisonment, and for each subsequent offense, by a fine of not less than $500 and not more than $5,000 or not more than two and one-half years in a jail or house of correction, or both such fíne and imprisonment. A person who knowingly violates this section may be arrested without a warrant by a sheriff, deputy sheriff or police officer if that sheriff, deputy sheriff, or police officer observes that person violating this section.
(e) Any person who knowingly obstructs, detains, hinders, impedes or blocks another person’s entry to or exit from a reproductive health care facility shall be punished, for the first offense, by a fine of not more than $500 or not more than three months in a jail or house of correction, or by both such fine and imprisonment, and for each subsequent offense, by a fine of not less than $500 and not more than $5,000 or not more than two and one-half years in a jail or house of correction, or both such fine and imprisonment. A person who knowingly violates this section may be arrested without a warrant by a sheriff, deputy sheriff or police officer.
(f) A reproductive health care facility or a person whose rights to provide or obtain reproductive health care services have been violated or interfered with by a violation of this section or any person whose rights to express their views, assemble or pray near a reproductive health care facility have been violated or interfered with may commence a civil action for equitable relief. The civil action shall be commenced either in the superior court for the county in which the conduct complained of occurred, or in the superior court for the county in which any person or entity complained of resides or has a principal place of business.
Appendix B
S.B. 148, 181st Gen. Ct., Reg. Sess. (Mass. Jan. 6, 1999)
An Act relative to reproductive health care facilities
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Court assembled, and by the authority of the same as follows:
SECTION 1. It is hereby found and declared that existing law does not adequately protect the public safety in the areаs in. and around reproductive health care facilities. Indeed, such facilities in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts have been the focal point of many blockades, disturbances and even violence, particularly the shootings at two reproductive health services facilities on December 30,1994, which, left two persons dead and many injured.
It is further found that persons attempting to enter or depart from reproductive health care facilities have been subject to harassing or intimidating activity by persons approaching within extremely close proximity and shouting or waving objects at them, which has tended to hamper or impede access to or departure from those facilities.
It is further found that such activity near reproductive health care facilities creates a “captive audience” situation because persons seeking health care services cannot avoid the area outside of reproductive health care facilities if they are tо receive the services provided therein, and their physical and emotional ailments or conditions can make them *53 especially vulnerable to the adverse physiological and emotional effects of such harassing or intimidating activities directed at them from extremely close proximity.
It is further found that the violence and disturbances described above have required the deployment of police officers at significant cost to the cities and towns of the Commonwealth, and continue to occur despite civil injunctions that prohibit certain persons from engaging in such conduct.
And it is further found that studies have shown that clinics with buffer zones experience far larger decreases in every type of violence than clinics without buffer zones.
Therefore, the purpose of this legislation is:
(1) to increase the public safety in and around reproductive health care facilities;
(2) to maintain the flow of traffic and prevent congestion around reproductive health care facilities;
(3) to enact reasonable time, place and manner restrictions to reconcile and protect both the First Amendment rights of persons to express their views near reproductive health care facilities and the rights of persons seeking access to those facilities to be free from hindrance, harassment, intimidation and harm; and
(4) to create an environment in and around reproductive health care facilities which is conducive towards the provision of safe and effective medical services, including surgical procedures, to its patients.
SECTION 2. Chapter 266 of the General Laws is hereby amended by inserting after section 120E the following section:—
(a) For the purposes of this section, “reproductive health care facility” shall mean a place, other than within a hospital, where abortions are offered or performed.
(b)(1) Except for those listed in subsection (2) below, no person shall, during business hours of a reproductive health care facility, knowingly enter or remain in the following area of private рroperty of a reproductive health care facility or public right-of-way:
(A) the area within twenty-five (25) feet of any portion of an entrance to, exit from, or driveway of a reproductive health care facility; and
(B) the area within the rectangle created by extending the outside boundaries of any entrance to, exit from, or driveway of, a reproductive health care facility in straight lines to the point where such lines intersect the sideline of the street in front of such entrance, exit or driveway.
(2) The provision of subsection (1) of this paragraph shall not apply to the following:
(A) persons entering or leaving such facility;
(B) employees or agents of such facility acting within the scope of their employment;
(C) law enforcement, ambulance, firefighting, construction, utilities, public works and other municipal agents acting within the scope of their employment; and
(D) persons using the public sidewalk or street right-of-way adjacent to such facility solely for the purpose of reaching a destination other than such facility.
*54 (c) Whoеver knowingly violates this section shall be punished, for the first offense, by a fine of not more than one thousand dollars or not more than six months in a jail or house of correction or both, and for each subsequent offense by a fine of pot less than five hundred dollars and not more than five thousand dollars or not more than two and one-half years in a jail or house of correction or both.
A person who knowingly violates this section may be arrested without a warrant by a sheriff, deputy sheriff, or police officer.
(d) Any reproductive health care facility or any person whose rights to provide or obtain reproductive health care services have been interfered with by a violation of this section may commence a civil action for damages or injunctive and other equitable relief, including the award of compensatory and exemplary damages. Said civil action shall be instituted either in the superior court for the county in which the conduct complained of occurred, or in the suрerior court for the county in which any person or entity complained of resides or has a principal place of business. An aggrieved person or entity which prevails in an action authorized by this paragraph, in addition to other damages, shall be entitled to an award of the costs of the litigation and reasonable attorney’s fees in an amount to be fixed by the court.
(e) A criminal conviction pursuant to the provision of this section shall not be a condition precedent to maintaining a civil action pursuant to the provision of this section.
SECTION 3. The provisions of this act shall be deemed severable, .and if any provision of this act is adjudged unconstitutional or invalid, such judgment shall not affect other valid provisions hereof.
Notes
. The plaintiffs see this targeting as a smoking gun. In this regard, they cite
Carey v. Brown,
*45
. To be sure, the record does show that, on occasion, a clinic employee has gotten into an altercation with an anti-abortion protester. But this sort of disturbance presumably would be stemmed by the exemption beсause the exemption tends to keep clinic employees and, abortion protesters apart.
. Although the state senate wrote this list of purposes as a preamble to Senate Bill No. 148, there is nothing in the subsequent legislative history to suggest that the purposes changed after the senate bill was amended in the house of representatives to produce the final version. We therefore follow the parties’ lead and assume that this litany applies to the Act.
. To illustrate, the Act creates a six-foot bubble around unwilling listeners, as opposed to the eight-foot bubble sanctioned under the Colorado law; the Act covers an eighteen-foot radius as opposed to the 100-foot radius covered by the Colorado statute; and the Act, unlike its Colorado counterpart, does not go into effect unless and until the covered area has been clearly delineated.
. We note an irony: as a practical matter the activation provision tends to favor (rather than curtail) anti-abortion expression because it establishes conditions that RHCFs must meet before the Act's prophylaxis takes effect.
