MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
The City of Lowell, Massachusetts, considers itself to have a problem with panhandling. Many officials, residents, and local stakeholders have come to believe that panhandling been becoming more common and that panhandlers have become more aggressive. In response, in 2013 the City passed an ordinance, Lowell Code § 222-15 (“the Ordinance”), to limit panhandling in the city;, the Ordinance has, since been amended twice. As, it currently stands, the Ordinance -bans all vocal panhandling in Lowell’s .downtown, and bans what are identified as aggressive panhandling behaviors citywide. This case presents a challenge to the Ordinance in the context of evolving case law from the Supreme Court and the First Circuit.
I. BACKGROUND
A Factual Background
Plaintiffs are two
The Ordinance creates two basic categories of restrictions which can be characterized as the Downtown Panhandling
The Downtown Panhandling provisions were initially enacted by the Lowell City Council on November 12, 2013. These provisions ban all panhandling in the Downtown Lowell Historic District, although important exceptions exist. § 22245(B)(1). As originally enacted, organized charities seeking donations for third parties — most iconieally, the Salvation Army — were exempt and permitted to solicit in the Historic District. This exemption was removed on February 4, 2014; plaintiffs allege that was done in response to the threаt of litigation. On March 3, 2015, a different exemption was inserted in the Downtown provisions, permitting panhandling that involves only “passively” standing, sitting, or performing music. Id. These passive panhandlers may hold a sign asking for a donation, but may not make any “vocal request” except in response to an inquiry. Id. These restrictions cover an extensive area — some 400 acres — which include some of the most trafficked areas in the City and a number of important government sites.
The Aggressive Panhandling provisions were enacted on Feb. 4, 2014. These provisions prohibit panhandling “in an aggressive manner.” § 22245(B)(2). What constitutes “aggressive” panhandling is defined as any of ten activities. § 222-15(A)(1)-(10). These ten activities can be placed into three basic categories. One category includes provisions that are duplicative of existing sanctions but directed specifically at panhandling. The first provision criminalizes panhandling that is “intended or likely to cause a reasonable person to fear bodily harm to oneself,” harm to another, or property damage. § 22245(A)(1). Causing a reasonable person “to fear immediate bоdily harm” is assault. Commonwealth v. Gorassi,
In a final category of panhandling activities, Lowell has deemed all panhandling performed in certain locations to be illegal aggressive panhandling. Panhandling from anyone who is waiting in line is banned. § 22245(A)(7). Additionally, any panhandling within a twenty feet buffer zone around a bank, ATM, check-cashing business, mass transportation facility, public restroom, pay telephone, theater, or outdoor seating area, or around the parking lot for any of those facilities, is banned. § 222-15(A)(10).
There is no passive sign holding exception for the Aggressive Panhandling provisions; as a consequence, even sitting and holding a sign asking for donations is prohibited in these locations. Originally, the Aggressive Panhandling provisions only applied in the Downtown Lowell Historic District, but they were extended citywide on March 3, 2015.
Plaintiffs have regularly panhandled in Lowell, including in the Downtown Historic District. Neither considers himself ever to have panhandled aggressively, although they concede it is possible that they have panhandled in what are prohibited locations under the Ordinance. They have stated that, since the Ordinance was passed, they have avoided panhandling downtown because they have been afraid of arrest. They seek a declaration that the Lowell panhandling ordinance is unconstitutional and a permanent injunction against its enforcement.
B. Procedural History and Standard of Review
No part of the Ordinance has yet been enforced. Plaintiffs filed for a preliminary injunction when filing their complaint in February, 2014, but their motion for interlocutory injunctive relief was rendered moot by Lowell’s agreement to forbear from enforcement until the case was decided on the merits. Mеanwhile, while governing case law has evolved, the City has considered refinements to the Ordinance. The current iteration of the Ordinance is the one which the City has chosen to defend. The parties have conducted discovery and have filed cross-motions for summary judgment regarding the current iteration of the Ordinance.
Under Rule 56, I may grant summary judgment only if there is no genuine dispute of material fact and if the undisputed facts demonstrate that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a); Carmona v. Toledo,
II. ANALYSIS
A Panhandling as Protected Speech under the First Amendment
Panhandling, as defined by the Ordinance, is expressive activity within the
Panhandling is an expressive act regardless of what words, if any, a panhandler speaks. Even “the presence of an unkempt and disheveled person holding out his or her hand or a cup to receive a donation itself conveys a message of need for support and assistance.” Loper v. New York City Police Dep't,
Lowell casts its argument that “modern” panhandling lacks the expressive quality deserving protection in language that demonstrates the opposite. The City contends that the panhandlers of today are not the “lone needy person” whose acts might “keep the issues of poverty and/or homelessness in the public eye.” Rather, it claims, they represent a “raucous alternative culture,” -both “festive and sinister,” engaged in “a war on the publie sentiment.”
B. The Downtown Panhandling Provisions
L The Downtown Panhandling Ban and Strict Scrutiny
The Downtown Panhandling provisions regulate speech in public fora,
As explained in the Supreme Court’s opinion last term in Reed v. Town of Gilbert, Ariz., — U.S. -,
The Downtown provisions are plainly content-based under current Supreme Court guidance. On its face, the Ordinance distinguishes solicitations for immediate donations from all others. A person could vocally request that passersby in the Historic District make a donation tomorrow, but not today (a distinction that may be of great import to someone seeking a meal and a bed tonight). He could ask passersby to sign a petition, but not a check. The City’s definition of panhandling targets a particular form of expressive speech — the' solicitation of immediate charitable donations — d applies its regulatory scheme only to that subject matter.
Reed makes earlier cases, which had split over what forms of regulation of panhandling were content-based, of limited continuing relevance.
While Reed may prove to refine First Amendment law materially, I find thе Ordinance content-based for additional reasons based on other recent Supreme Court precedent. The Court has held that a regulation is content-based if it requires “enforcement authorities to examine the content of the message that is conveyed to determine whether a violation has occurred.” McCullen v. Coakley, — U.S. -,
As a point of comparison, the First Circuit recently declared a Portland, Maine ordinance banning standing or sitting on median strips to be content-neutral. Cutting,
Lowell argues that its ordinance can escape being treated as content-based pursuant to the “secondary effects” doctrine. Under this doctrine, zoning ordinances meant to address not the content of adult establishments but effects on crime, property values and other neighborhood characteristics can be evaluated as content-neutral regulations. City of Los Angeles v. Alameda Books, Inc.,
2. No Compelling Interest Supports the Downtown Ban
Because the Downtown provisions are content-based, they “must be the least restrictive means of achieving a compelling state interest.” McCullen v. Coakley, — U.S. -,
Strict scrutiny analysis of content-based regulation begins by identifying the compelling interest to' which a regulation must bé tailored. The interests'originally pursued by the City of Lowell when it enacted the Downtown provisions — tourism and economic development — are set forth in the preamble to the Ordinance:
Tourism is one of Lowell’s most important economic industries; and
The Downtown Historic District is essential for the Lowell tourism experience; and
The City has a compelling interest in providing a safe, pleasant environment and eliminating nuisance activity within the Downtown Historic District; and Solicitation, begging or panhandling substantially burdens tourism within the Downtown Historic District.- 1
Fostering economic revitalization in a challenging urban area like Lowell is undoubtedly a critical task for city policymakers and may rise to the level of a significant, indeed a substantial, government interest sufficient to justify content-neutral regulations. See Smith v. City of Fort Lauderdale, Fla.,
The mechanism by which Lowell’s ban on. panhandling downtown would promote tourism flies in the face of the First Amendment. The First Amendment does not permit a city to cater to the preference of one group, in this case tourists or downtown shoppers, to avoid the expressive acts of others, in this case panhandlers, simply on the basis that the privileged group does not like what is being expressed. It is core First Amendment teaching that on streets and sidewalks a person might be “confronted with an uncomfortable message” that they сannot avoid; this “is a virtue, not. a vice.” McCullen,
For First Amendment puiposes, economic revitalization might be important, but it does not allow the sensibilities of
The City also suggests that the Downtown provisions serve the compelling government interest of public safety, arguing both that promoting public safety is an independent purpose of the Ordinance and that it is a mechanism by which the Ordinance promotes tourism and business. Plaintiffs do not contest that protecting public safety and preventing coercion are compelling government interests. However, public safety serves as a post-hoc rationalization for the Downtown provisions. The purpose of the ordinance was authoritatively set forth in its preamble, quoted above, which was duly enacted by the City Council along with the Ordinance. It is undisputed that only tourism and nuisance abatement (with a passing reference to an associated “safe” environment) were included in that original preamble. There is a dispute between the parties whether later depositions established public safety as an additional reason for the Ordinance. That dispute, however, is immaterial, because after-the-fact explanations cannot help a law survive strict scrutiny. This principle is firmly established for strict and even intermediate scrutiny under the Equal Protection Clause. Shaw v. Hunt, 517 U.S. 899, 908 n. 4,
C. Aggressive Panhandling
L The Aggressive Panhandling Ban and Strict Scrutiny
The Aggressive Panhandling provisions are governed by the same First Amendment framework as are the Downtown Panhandling provisions. The Aggressive Panhandling provisions regulate expressive conduct that is protected by the First Amendment. An aggressive, perhaps disconcerting and indeed frightening, panhandler still conveys messages .related to need and deprivation or, in the City’s characterization, about the alternative lifestyle of panhandling. And as with the Downtown’ provisions, these are content-based regulations of activity in public fora. The same definition of “panhandling” is employed in both, regulating only requests for immediate donations. As noted in the discussion of the Downtown Panhandling provisions in Section II.B. above, this definition, on its face, distinguishes between some solicitations and others based on the content of that solicitation. A person following someone to ask for a donation would be treated as illegally panhandling under the Aggressive Panhandling provisions, whereas someone following another asking for a petition signature would be permitted to continue exercising such a right to political expression. As content-based regulation, the Aggressive Panhandling provisions must be the least restrictive means for achieving a compelling state interest.
Unlike the Downtown Panhandling provisions, However,.the Aggressive Panhandling provisions were enacted in furtherance of a compelling: state interest: public safety. Plaintiffs do not contest that preventing “truly aggressive behavior,” such as unwanted touching, is a compelling interest. Nor could they: public safety is “the heart of government’s function.” Houston Chronicle Pub. Co. v. City of League City, Tex.,
Plaintiffs offer a number of arguments as to why the Aggressive Panhandling provisions are not the least restrictive means available for achieving the goal of public safety. I address at the threshold one which applies to the provisions generally. Plaintiffs assert that Lowell has failed to try a less speech-restrictive alternative— better enforcing existing laws, such as disorderly conduct or assault — before enacting the Aggressive Panhandling Ordinances. Under McCullen, the justification for a restriction on speech cannot simply allege without evidence that other approaches “do not work,” nor is it enough to say that a speech restriction would be easier to enforce. McCullen,
McCullen, however, does not require Lowell to have exhausted every en
I begin with the duplicative provisions of the definition of aggressive panhandling, and in particular with the ban on panhandling while using .'fighting words, § 22245(A)(5). That provision is unconstitutional undér the express holding of R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul, Minn.,
The City has not demonstrated that public safety requires harsher punishments for panhandlers than others who commit assault or battery or other crimes. To the contrary, in its briefing the City justified'these duplicative provisions on the grounds that they provide “a useful clarifying function for both the public and panhandlers,” and serve a “hortatory function.” R.A.V. sрecifically rejected such communicative justifications ■ for content-specific criminal laws. The Court there addressed St. Paul’s argument that “displaying the city council’s special hostility” to the speech “singled out” could justify that ordinance, observing “[tjhat is precisely what the First Amendment forbids.” Id. at 396,
Next, I turn to the second category of actions that the 'Ordinance deems aggressive panhandling: those that constitute non-criminal, allegedly coercive behaviors. Specifically, these are continuing to panhandle from an individual who has already given a negative response to solicitations, § 222-15(A)(2), following a person with the intent of asking them for money, § 222-15(A)(6), and panhandling in a group of two or more in an “intimidating” manner, § 222-15(A)(9).
The bans on following a person and panhandling after a person has given a negative response are not the least restrictive means available, for similar reasons. A panhandler who asks for change from a passerby might, after a rejection, seek to explain that the change is needed because she is unemployed or state that she will use it to buy food. These additional post-rejection messages do not necessarily threaten public safety; their explanations of the nature of poverty sit at the heart of what makes panhandling protected expressive conduct in the first place. Likewise, a panhandler might follow someione in order to convey a longer message. Both behaviors might be utilized where a promising target — someone who might want to hear a panhandler’s message — walks by a panhandler without noticing him at all. If panhandling is truly valuable expressive speech, then panhandlers may have a right to more than one shot at getting their message across.
As for the prohibition on panhandling in a group of two or more in an intimidating mannеr, § 222-5(A)(9), it is difficult to know even what it is that is proscribed; “intimidating” is left undefined. Perhaps the most plausible limiting interpretation of this provision is that “intimidating” group panhandling is that which rises to the level of assault, disorderly conduct, or some other conventionally illegal activity. Under this interpretation, however, the analysis concerning duplicative provisions, as developed above, governs and a ban would violate the First Amendment. An alternative interpretation in which “intimidating” was not merely duplicative would restrict more speech and require a stronger justification still.
Moreover, under any definition of “intimidating,” this provision singles out for punishment expression conducted by multiple people rather than alone. Burdening the expression of those who join their voices together infringes upon not only the First Amendment’s protection of speech, but also of assembly. Coates v. City of Cincinnati,
The third category of “aggressive panhandling” provisions defines all panhandling in certain locations as aggressive and therefore prohibited. Panhandling from anyone waiting in line is considéred aggressive. § 222-15(A)(7). Also prohibited is all panhandling within a 20 foot buffer zone surrounding the following locations: a bank, an ATM, a check-cashing business, a transit stop, a public restroom, a pay telephone, a theater, or any outdoor seating, as well as any parking area associated with these facilities. § 222-15(A)(10). In delineating these locations as closed off for panhandling, the City fails to use the least restrictive means available for protecting public safety. The locations where the City has prohibited panhandling are divided between those, like a bus stop or a line, where people are essentially captive audiences for panhandlers, and those, like near ATMs or public restrooms, where there is an elevated risk or fear of physical harm. The first set is not tailored to public safety at all; .while it may be more bothersome, and even in some sense more coercive, for a person to be panhandled when they cannot, or find it difficult to leave, it is not demonstrably more dangerous.
In contrast, those at a public restroom or in a parking lot might reasonably feel particularly vulnerable physically and those withdrawing money from an ATM might be at higher risk of being robbed or threatened. Restricting panhandling in those locations might satisfy the narrow tailoring requirement for content-neutral regulations. See, e.g., Gresham,
Similarly, the location-based restrictions would prohibit organized charitable groups from soliciting immediate donations in buffer zones. While there is nothing inherently less threatening about someone raising money for a third-party as opposed to for* themselves, it is clear that many organized groups seeking donations — firemen and Girl Scouts,'for example — are not ■Widely viewed- as threats to public safety. Yet these groups would also be bаrred from operating near a parking lot or a bus stop, foreclosing, ■ for example, traditional fundraising locations like sites outside a grocery store entrance.
Nor is a buffer zone always required to protect public safety. For example, the City’s concern about panhandling near the outdoor seating of 'a restaurant is, essentially, that restaurant patrons who cannot leave mid-meal will be pestered by panhandlers.'Even if this concern touched on public safety rather than a business’s customer experience, imposing a 20-foot buffer around the public seating area is not necessary. That buffer "prohibits panhandling on the sidewalk, not panhandling from those in the outdoor seating area. No theory or evidence has been offered as to how pedestrians walking near an outdoor café are unusually threatened' by panhandlers. While a buffer zone of some sort might be appropriate around some facilities, such as ATMs, the Ordinance imposes buffer zones uniformly.
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, I GRANT plaintiffs motion for summary
Section 222-15 of the City of Lowell Code (the “Ordinance”) is in its entirety violative of the United States Constitution
(A) The Downtown • Panhandling provisions of the Ordinance are violative of the First - Amendment of the United States Constitution; and
(B) The Aggressive Panhandling provisions of the Ordinance are violative of the First Amendment of the United States Constitution, in that none of the ten behaviors identified can be proscribed as they are through the Ordinance.
Notes
. A third plaintiff was dismissed from this case in July 2015 after he failed without notice to appear for his deposition and plaintiffs' counsel notified the court they had been unable to reach or communicate with him despite numerous attempts to do so. '
. This language is deployed at the outset in the City’s memorandum of law in support of its motion for summary judgment, p. 1-4. In addition to demonstrating the expressive value of panhandling, the City’s fervent denunciation of the culture of panhandling also evidеnces the City’s content-based intent in enacting the Ordinance. As demonstrated below, however, I find the Ordinance to be content-based on its face and do not need to turn to issues of intent. If required to address intent, I would easily conclude that the City’s prohibition of panhandling was specifically intended to restrict the speech and expressive context of begging that is within First Amendment protection.
. Compare Clatterbuck v. City of Charlottesville,
We decline to follow the reasoning in Part II of Justice Kennedy’s concurrence in Lee for three reasons. First, to the extent that Part II of Justice Kennedy’s concurrence argues that the "physical exchange of money" may be isolated from the act of solicitation, it runs contrary to Schaumburg’s holding that solicitation of charitable donations is "characteristically intertwined with-informative and perhaps persuasive speech[.]” Schaumburg, 444 ,U.S. at 632,100 S.Ct. 826 . Schaumburg does not suggest that the physical exchange of money may be isolated; it is "intertwined” with speech that the First Amendment protects. Second, Part II of Justice Kennedy’s concurrence is not Lee’s holding. And third, Justice Kennedywrote Part II without another Justice joining him.
Speet v. Schuette,
. The Springfield ordinance, like Lowell’s, prohibited oral requests for immediate donations of money, while allowing signs requesting money or requests to send money later. Norton v. City of Springfield, Ill.,
. I note, in the wake of Reed, the Supreme Court also vacated the First Circuit’s decision in Thayer v. City of Worcester,
. In Reed, Justice Thomas framed the standard for strict scrutiny somewhat differently, as requiring “the Government to prove that the restriction furthers a compelling interest and is narrowly tailored to achieve that interest.” Reed v. Town of Gilbert, Ariz., — U.S.
“For a content-neutral time, place, or manner regulation to be narrowly tailored, it must not burden substantially more speech than is necessary to further the government’s legitimate interests. Such a regulation, unlike a content-based restriction of speech,’need not be the least restrictive or least intrusive means of serving the government’s interests. But the. government still may not regulate expression in such a manner that a substantial portion of the burden on speech does not serve to advance its goals.”
McCullen v. Coakley, — U.S. -,
. Plaintiffs assert that the City failed to establish that panhandling actually harmed business or tourism downtown, arguing that the City’s' evidence amounts to anecdotes and hearsay. The City bears the burden of showing that the harms it seeks to mitigate "are
. Even if the promotion of business and tourism were a compelling government interest, the Downtown provisions are hardly the least restrictive means of promoting them. The restrictions have a large geographic sweep, covering essentially all of downtown Lowell, including the most trafficked areas where panhandlers could reach the most people. See Cutting,
. Even if public safety were a reason for the Downtown Panhandling provisions, strict scrutiny still would not be satisfied. The Downtown panhandling provisions are not close to the least restrictive means necessary to promote public safety — likely because they were never intended to serve that purpose, ■The Downtown Panhandling provisions ban all vocal requests for money,, regardless of whether they are aggressive or not. A Salvation Army member who briefly stopped ringing his bell and instead аsked for money
. Plaintiffs contend that only 18 out of 827 phone calls could not be covered by existing laws and that therefore the Aggressive Panhandling provisions are an overreaction to a very small public safety problem. I simply note these numbers are. contested without finding it necessary to resolve the dispute • with precision.
. As the reference to Coates demonstrates, this provision — like others in the Ordinance-raises serious due process concerns. A statutе is void for vagueness and violates the Due Process Clause of the Constitution if it “fails to provide a person of ordinary intelligence fair notice of what is prohibited, or is so standardless that it authorizes or encourages seriously discriminatory enforcement.” United States v. Williams,
Nevertheless, I recognize that the void-for-vagueness doctrine is notoriously ill-defined. See The Void-for-Vagueness Doctrine In the Supreme Court, 109 U. PA. L. REV. 67, 70 (1960) ("What gives these decisions their pool-rack-hung-up appearance is their almost habitual lack of informing reasoning”); John ' Calvin Jeffries, Jr., Legality, Vagueness, and the Construction of Penal Statutes, 71 VA. L.
. The City does not refer to any record evidence suggesting that these locations are, in- • deed, dangerous. Rather, it relies on the bare assertion that the solicitation of money contains, inherently, an element of violence. Such a contention is in a great deal of tension with Schaumburg and its progeny.
. Although I loathe to place too much evidence on this point, it bears noting — as illustrative of the unexamined character of this less restrictive alternative — that the mayor of Lowell, in his deposition, did not realize that even passive sign holding was prohibited in these buffer zones.
. Plaintiffs also argue that-the buffer zones could be smaller and therefore.be less restrictive. It is of course true that a ten-foot buffer would restrict less speech than a twenty-foot buffer. Talcing the "least restrictive means” test literally, there could be no reason to uphold a twenty-foot buffer: a nineteen and a half foot buffer would restrict less speech and surely sacrifice nothing in public safety. Yet this exercise in diminishing boundaries, which would whittle buffers down, inch by inch, is not required by the First Amendment. The number of feet a buffer zone extends, even under strict scrutiny, is not "a question of constitutional dimensión. ... it is a difference only in degree, not a less restrictive alternative in land.” Burson v. Freeman,
For similar reasons, I find plaintiff's argument that Lowell's ordinance is more rеstrictive than other anti-panhandling provisions across the country unpersuasive. Of course, the fact that the Ordinance might be "truly exceptional" is relevant in addressing the tailoring inquiry, in that it is illustrative of the seriousness of the burden, on.speech, Cutting,
. Because no part of the Ordinance survives First Amendment scrutiny, I do not decide defendant's motion for summary judgment on • plaintiffs’ Fourteenth Amendment claims, which include both due process concerns, see supra note 11, and equal protection claims. Nevertheless, 1 note that plaintiffs’ equal protection claims appear essentially coterminous with its First Amendment claims, because speech is a fundamental right. See Speet v. Schuette,
Plaintiffs’ additional equal protection theories would likely be unavailing, however. It would be difficult to show that this Ordinance rests on the "bare desire to harm a politically unpopular group.” City of Cleburne, Tex. v. Cleburne Living Center,
. No permanent injunction is required in this case. Massachusetts assumes that its municipalities will "do their duty when disputed questions have been finally adjudicated” and can “rightly be expected to set an example of obedience to law.” Commonwealth v. Town of Hudson,
