Plаintiff-appellant the New York Civil Liberties Union (“NYCLU”) appeals from a September 28, 2006 judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Preska, J.), dismissing as moot its complaint against defendant-appellee David Gran-deau, in his capacity as Executive Director of the New York Temporary State Commission on Lobbying (“Grandeau” and the “Commission”).
See N.Y. Civil Liberties Union v. Grandeau,
BACKGROUND
In 1981, the New York State Assembly enacted the Lobbying Act (the “Act”), designed “to preserve and maintain the integrity of the governmental decision-making process in the state” by requiring disclosure of the “identity, expenditures, and activities” of people or organizations involved in influencing state decision-making processes in certain ways. N.Y. Legis. Law § 1-a. 1 The Act contains a series of restrictions and reporting requirements for individuals and entities that engage in lobbying activities. “Lobbying activities” are defined as “any attempt to influence” governmental decision-making in a variety of forms, including, inter alia, “the passage or defeat of any legislation by either house of the state legislature or approval or disapproval of any legislation by the governor.” § l-c(c). The Act requires every lobbyist to register with the Commission and file regular reports containing detailed information on its lobbying activities. See, e.g., § 1 — h(b)(3) (requiring a description of the subject matter and legislative bill numbers associated with lobbying activities). These reports must also list “any expenses expended, received or incurred by the lobbyist for the purposes of lobbying,” § 1 — h(b)(5)(i), and, except for expenses under seventy-five dollars, detail those expenses “as to *126 amount, to whom paid, and for what purpose,” § 1 — h(b)(5)(ii).
The NYCLU is a not-for-profit membership organization that engages in “a full rangе of advocacy, including lobbying, litigation, and public education.” Compl. ¶ 10. It routinely files reports with the Commission about its lobbying activities. According to the NYCLU, “[o]n many issues about which it lobbies, the NYCLU also engages in a range of advocacy that is not lobbying: that is, does not involve communications with lawmakers or other relevant public officials. That advocacy includes, but is not limited to, public rallies, reports, newsletters, communications through media outlets, op-ed pieces, websites, reports, films, and flyers.” Appellant’s Br. 8.
One such advocacy initiative was the Crossgates Mall billboard. In March 2003, Stephen Downs was arrested at the Cross-gates Mall for wearing a t-shirt bearing the wоrds “Give Peace a Chance,” in reference to the impending war in Iraq, and for refusing to take it off when told to do so by mall security. Compl. ¶ 14. His arrest triggered a wave of media attention, and the NYCLU became involved in challenging what it deemed to be an abridgement of Mr. Downs’ free speech rights. 2 According to the NYCLU, a third party approached it seeking to collaborate on a billboard, to be placed near the Crossgates Mall, promoting free-speech rights at shopping malls. Compl. ¶ 19. Independently and subsequent to that solicitation, a New York State Assembly Member prepared a bill proposing to entitle New Yorkers to exercise cеrtain free-speech rights in shopping malls in the state. “Consistent with its position on this issue and with its longtime participation in legislative advocacy, the NYCLU extensively communicated with the Assembly Member about development of this proposal and publicly endorsed the proposal at a news conference” in March 2003. Compl. ¶ 21. At the same time the NYCLU endorsed the legislative proposal, it announced the unveiling of the billboard near Crossgates Mall. The billboard featured an image of a person who was gagged and included the following text: “Welcome to the mall. You have the right to remain silent. Value free speech. www.nyclu.org.” The billboard did not mention any lеgislative proposal or call upon anyone to take action with respect to the proposal. It remained up for one month. Compl. ¶ 22.
In its semi-annual report on lobbying activities in July 2003, the NYCLU reported “all lobbying work done in conjunction with the New York State Assembly bill, including its appearance at the [March] press conference.” Compl. ¶ 25. It did not, however, include information about the billboard or any of NYCLU’s “nonlob-bying work concerning free speech rights in shopping malls.” Id.
On October 28, 2003, the NYCLU received a letter from a program analyst at the Commission stating, in pertinent part, “reportable lobbying expenses include the funding of parties, receptiоns, and all events which are hosted by the client with a special interest in pending legislation. ... The Commission is aware of an expense for advertising on a billboard. It appears that certain costs of this event are reportable lobbying expenses and, therefore, must be reported as such.” Five
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days later, the NYCLU filed its complaint. The complaint was assigned to Judge Preska as a case related to another matter pending on her docket,
Hip-Hop Summit Action Network v. New York Temporary State Commission on Lobbying,
No. 03-civ-5553,
Two days after the NYCLU filed its complaint, on November 5, 2003, Grandeau sent a letter to the NYCLU stating that it did not need to respond to the Commission’s request for reporting on the billboard because “[i]t has been determined that the billboard in question was not paid for by NYCLU; and as such it should not be included as a reportable lobbying expense on your ... Semi-Annual Report.” The next day, the NYCLU sent a letter to Assistant Attorney General James Henly explaining that withdrawal of the Commission’s request “does not resolve the controversy that led us to file our federal challenge earlier this week” because resolution “cannot and should not be based on the incorrect conclusion that the NYCLU did not incur expenses with respect to the billboard.” The NYCLU stated that it had incurred expenses on the billboard 4 and therefore “any resolution of this dispute must be based on an acknowledgment that the NYCLU’s free speech billboard is not lobbying activity subject to reporting.” The Attorney General’s office responded with a two-sentence letter reiterating that the Commission did not seek reporting related to the billboard, and that the office considered the case moot. The NYCLU followed with another letter stating its belief that the case was not moot because the Commission continued to assert the billboard was part of a lobbying effort. On December 4, 2003, Commission counsel Ralph Miccio sent the NYCLU a letter stating that the Commission’s position “has never been that the billboard in and of itself constitutеs lobbying, but rather, its use as part of a lobbying campaign would make the cost of the billboard a reportable lobbying expense if paid for by a registered lobbyist.” Miccio stated that the *128 Commission’s investigation revealed that the NYCLU had not paid for the billboard.
On December 15, 2003, the Commission moved to dismiss the action on
Younger
abstention grounds because a proceeding before the Commission was ongoing. In a reply memorandum on December 19, 2003, the Commission then “took the contradictory position that its inquiry into the Mill-board was closed and that the action should be dismissed as moot.”
See N.Y. Civil Liberties Union v. Grandeau,
(1) the contradictory positions taken by the Commission in this matter; (2) the disputed basis on which the Commission has withdrawn its request/demand for filing regarding the Billboard; (3) the appearance that the Commission’s withdrawals have been in response to litigation brought by the NYCLU; and (4) the narrowly drawn “present intention” declaration provided by the Commission in support of the present motion.
N.Y. Civil Liberties Union v. Grandeau,
Following this decision, the Commission passed a resolution affirming that it did not seek, and would not seek, additional information from the NYCLU regarding the Crossgates Mall billboard. The case also moved forward in the district court with depositions and limited discovery, after which both parties moved for summary judgment. The district court granted the defendant’s motion for summary judgment, concluding that the case was moot for two reasons. First, the district court reasoned that the Commission’s resolution indicated that it had closed the billboard inquiry “completely] and irrevocably], obviating the concern that it will recur.”
Grandeau II,
The NYCLU appeals, urging us to reverse the district court’s mootness determination and to decide the merits of its First Amendment challenge.
DISCUSSION
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo,
construing the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party and drawing all permissible inferences in its favor.
Niagara Mohawk Power Corp. v. Jones Chem., Inc.,
I. Mootness
The NYCLU is not appealing the district court’s determination that its challenge to the Commission’s billboard inquiry is moot. 5 Our mootness review *129 therefore encompasses only whether, in the absence of a dispute about the Cross-gates Mall billboard, the NYCLU’s entire case is moot.
The district court’s mootness determinatiоn appears to rest on a premature assumption that certain facts were not in dispute. The court stated that “[b]oth sides are in agreement that expenses incurred as part of the NYCLU’s non-lobbying activities, including placement of the Billboard at issue in this case, are not reportable as lobbying expenses unless they are part of a lobbying effort.”
Gran-deau II,
This ongoing disagreement about what activities are reportable is reflected in the complaint as a challenge to the Commission’s alleged policy of targeting non-lobbying advocacy work for reporting and investigation and supports the NYCLU’s argument that this case is not moot. For example, the complaint alleges, inter alia, that the Commission’s “effort to extend the ... lobbying reporting and disclosure regime to advocacy that makes no mention of any pending legislation and that calls for no action on any such legislation substantially and unnecessarily burdens the First Amendment rights of advocacy organizations.” Compl. ¶ 4. The NYCLU sought an injunction tо prevent the Commission from “further inquiry ... into [its] non-lobbying advocacy work,” id., as well as a preliminary and a permanent injunction “enjoining the defendant from forcing the NYCLU to report as lobbying advocacy that makes no mention of pending legislation nor exhorts any action with respect to pending legislation, including but not limited to its erection of the billboard outside the Crossgates Mall.” 6 Compl. ¶ 41 (emphasis added). In addition, the complaint describes the Commission’s investigation of Hip-Hop Summit Action Network’s advocacy activities, Compl. ¶¶ 34-35, and expresses concern about the potential chilling effects of allowing the Commission to target non-lobbying advocacy *130 work in the future, Compl. ¶¶ 30, 36, 37. The NYCLU also asserted in its statement of allegedly undisputеd facts, submitted pursuant to Rule 56.1 of the Local Civil Rules of the United States District Courts for the Southern and Eastern Districts of New York (“Rule 56.1”), that the Commission construes the lobbying law to “required reporting about all forms of non-lobbying advocacy ... by an organization also engaged in lobbying if that advocacy addresses a topic about which the organization is engaged in lobbying and the organization believes the nonlobbying advocacy will have some beneficial effect on its lobbying.”
These allegations, read in the light most favorable to the NYCLU, plainly challenge conduct beyond the Commission’s request for reporting with respect to the Cross-gates Mall billboard. 7 They demonstrate thе existence of a live controversy between the parties regarding what constitutes reportable activity “in support of a lobbying effort,” and how broadly the Commission may interpret that phrase without running afoul of the First Amendment. We there fore conclude that the district court erred in finding that this case was moot.
II. Ripeness
Grandeau argues that even if we read the complaint to challenge a policy of targeting non-lobbying advocacy efforts for reporting and investigation, the alleged policy “has not been adopted by the Commission, let alone enforced against the NY-CLU or anyone else.” Invoking the ripeness doctrine, Grandeau contends that this challеnge is unfit for judicial review because “a court cannot coherently rule on a policy’s constitutionality where, as here, it is at best unclear to what extent an agency has actually adopted a policy or how stringently the agency will enforce it.” 8 We agree.
“The ripeness doctrine is drawn both from Article III limitations on judicial power and from prudential reasons for refusing to exercise jurisdiction.”
Nat’l Park Hospitality Ass’n v. Dep’t of Interior,
Both [criteria] are concerned with whether a case has been brought prematurely, but they protect against prematureness in different ways and for different reasons. The first of these ripeness requirements has as its source the Case or Controversy Clause of Article III of the Constitution, and hence goes, in a fundamental way, to the existence of jurisdiction. The second is a more flexible doctrine of judicial prudence, and constitutes an important exception to the usual rule that where jurisdiction exists a federal court must exercise it.
These two forms of ripeness are not coextensive in purpose. Constitutional ripeness is a doctrine that, like standing, is a limitation on the power of the judiciary. It prevents courts from declaring the meaning of the law in a vacuum and from constructing generalized legal rules unless the resolution of an actual dispute requires it. But when a court declares that a case is not prudentially ripe, it means that the case will be better decided later and that the parties will not have constitutional rights undermined by the delay. It does not mean that the case is not a real or concrete dispute affecting cognizable current concerns of the parties within the mеaning of Article III.... Prudential ripeness is, then, a tool that courts may use to enhance the accuracy of their decisions and to avoid becoming embroiled in adjudications that may later turn out to be unnecessary or may require premature examination of, especially, constitutional issues that time may make easier or less controversial.
Id.
at 357 (internal citations omitted);
see also Suitum v. Tahoe Reg'l Planning Agency,
Despite Grandeau’s arguments to the contrary, there can be little dispute that the NYCLU has demonstrated the existence of a “case or controversy” over the Commission’s alleged reporting requirements sufficient to establish standing and constitutional ripeness. At the time of the complaint, the NYCLU was charged with providing additional information on the expenses incurred in connection with the Crossgates Mall billboard. It argued that to allow the Commission to demand reporting on non-lobbying advocacy, including but not limited to the billboard controversy, would greatly increase its administrative burden and would infringe its First Amendment rights. These facts demonstrate a “concrete dispute affecting cognizable current concerns of the parties” sufficient to satisfy standing and constitutional ripeness.
Ehrenfeld v. Mahfouz,
The real issue is one of prudentiаl ripeness: whether the alleged policy at this stage is sufficiently definite and clear to permit sound review by this Court of the NYCLU’s First Amendment challenge. To determine whether a challenge to administrative action is ripe for judicial review, we proceed with a two-step inquiry,
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“requiring us to evaluate both the fitness of the issues for judicial decision and the hardship to the parties of withholding court consideration.”
Abbott Labs.,
A. Fitness for Judicial Review
“[T]he ‘fitness’ analysis is concerned with whether the issues sought to be adjudicated are contingent on future events or may never occur.”
Simmonds,
Similarly, in
American Savings Bank, FSB v. UBS Financial Services, Inc.,
The Commission policy in this case is vague at best. Other than the billboard controversy, the NYCLU purports to demonstrate the existence of a policy principally from: (1) paragraph 49 of its unopposed Rule 56.1 statement in support of summary judgment, crafted largely frоm statements Grandeau made in a deposition after the NYCLU filed this case; 10 (2) the Commission’s investigation of nonlobbying advocacy activities relating to the Hip-Hop Summit Action Network; and (3) certain statements in the Commission’s Guidelines on the Lobbying Law. None of these sources suffices to establish the existence of a Commission policy that is fit for judicial review.
First, an opposing party’s failure to controvert a fact in a Rule 56.1 statement “does not absolve the party seeking summary judgment of the burden of showing that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law, and a Rule 56.1 statement is not itself a vehicle for making factual assertions that are otherwise unsupported in the record.”
Holtz v. Rockefeller & Co., Inc.,
Second, the Commission’s investigаtion of the co-founders of Hip-Hop Summit Action Network principally concerned who must register and report to the Commission as a lobbyist. The plaintiffs’ First Amendment claim in that case emphasized the chilling effect of the Commission’s threats to subpoena, levy fines, and bring criminal charges against entities who were suspected lobbyists because of their public activities, but who had not registered as such. Here, the NYCLU’s challenge concerns the extent to which non-lobbying activities may constitute a reportable expense for registered lobbyists when those activities are in support of a lobbying effort. While these two issues overlap to some extent, the NYCLU cannot estаblish the existence of a policy regarding when a lobbyist’s non-lobbying activities are reportable based on the Commission’s investigation into whether certain parties were lobbyists.
The NYCLU’s best effort to demonstrate the alleged policy is the Commission’s Guidelines, posted on its website, which state that “reportable expenses” include:
any expenditure incurred by or reimbursed to the lobbyist for the purpose of lobbying[.] Reportable expenses include, but are not limited to the following: advertising, telephone, electronic advocacy, food, beverages, tickets, entertainment, parties, receptions or similar events, advocacy rallies, cоnsultant services, expenses for non-lobbying support staff, and courier services when said expenses are part of a lobbying effort.
New York State Commission on Public Integrity, Guidelines to New York State Lobbying Act, http://www.nyintegrity.org/ law/lob/guidelines.html (last visited June 5, 2008). We recognize that this reference to electronic advocacy, advocacy rallies, receptions, and advertising creates a basis for concern that the Commission will require the NYCLU and other organizations to report non-lobbying advocacy that is only loosely related to lobbying. But the potential breadth of “reportable expenses” depends on how the Commission determines what is “part оf a lobbying effort,” and the Guidelines offer no indication of a Commission policy on this point. Nor was the NYCLU able to point this Court to any evidence, other than in Grandeau’s deposition, of how the Commission interprets this principle.
In short, judicial review of the NYCLU’s First Amendment challenge would certainly benefit from additional factual development and is in many ways contingent on future events, such as an inquiry by the Commission into activity that the NYCLU deems non-lobbying advocacy.
See Sim-monds,
B. Hardship to Plaintiff of Withholding Judicial Review
The second step in our ripeness analysis is “whether and to what extent the parties will endure hardship if decision is withheld.”
Simmonds,
This Court recently found unripe a claim by a consortium of national banks that enforcement of the Fair Housing Act against its members was preempted by the National Bank Act because the New York Attorney General had threatened but not filed an FHA action.
See Clearing House Ass’n L.L. C. v. Cuomo,
For similar reasons, the NYCLU has not demonstrated that it will suffer hardship by our withholding judicial review. Although the NYCLU must grapple with some ambiguity in preparing its regular reports, it has not shown that this lack of clarity is the cause of “present detriment,” rather than a “mere possibility of future injury” if the Commission initiates another inquiry or enforcement action.
See Sim-monds,
Because the NYCLU’s policy challenge is not fit for judicial review at this time, and because the NYCLU has not demonstrated that withholding judicial review will subject it to hardship, we hold that its First Amendment claim is not ripe for adjudication.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the defendants and dismissal of the complaint under our prudential ripеness doctrine.
Notes
. The Act was recently amended by the Public Employee Ethics Reform Act, effective April 25, 2007. 2007 N.Y. Sess. Laws ch. 14, A. 3736-A (McKinney). None of the substantive provisions at issue in this case were amended, although the New York State Temporary Commission on Lobbying was abolished and its duties have been replaced by the Commission on Public Integrity. See id. § 2. For the sake of consistency, we refer simply to "the Commission."
. The NYCLU wrote to the private management company that owned the mall, and the NYCLU's Legal Director spoke out publicly against the arrest. In addition, shortly after the criminal charges against Mr. Downs were withdrawn, he retained the NYCLU to represent him in possible civil proceеdings associated with the arrest. At the time the NYCLU filed its complaint, it still represented Mr. Downs. Compl. ¶¶ 16-18.
. The plaintiffs in
Hip-Hop Summit
were the subject of an investigation by the Commission, allegedly prompted by their role in organizing a rally at City Hall in Manhattan that was intended to raise public awareness of the Rockefeller Drug Laws.
See Hip-Hop Summit,
. It is unclear whether the NYCLU maintains that it paid for the billboard or merely incurred expenses in connection with its collaboration with whoever actually paid for the billboard. Resolution of this issue is not relevant to this appeal.
. The NYCLU does not, however, concede mootness of the billboard dispute. Rather, it suggests that the Commission may not have met its “formidable burden” under the "stringent” standard for determining whether “a case has been mooted by the defendant's voluntary conduct.”
Friends of the Earth, Inc. v. Laidlaw Envtl. Servs., Inc.,
. The NYCLU also sought a declaratory judgment that the Commission “violated the First Amendment by demanding that the NYCLU report as lobbying advocacy that makes no mention of pending legislation nor exhorts any action with respect to pending legislation.” Compl. ¶ 41.
. Grandeau has provided no support for the assertion that pleading a facial challenge requires the allegations or request for relief to take a particular form, and we find his argument that the NYCLU's complaint is sоmehow deficient in this regard unavailing. As discussed above, it is enough here that the complaint challenges an alleged Commission policy, rather than simply the application of that policy to the billboard incident.
. Grandeau further argues that the NYCLU lacks standing "[f]or essentially the same reasons already described” with respect to ripeness — because the NYCLU has “not shown that any Commission policy has harmed it or threatens imminent harm.” Standing and ripeness are closely related doctrines that overlap "most notably in the shared requirement that the [plaintiff’s] injury be imminent rather than conjectural or hypothetical.”
Brooklyn Legal Servs. Corp. v. Legal Servs. Corp.,
. The two-step inquiry is relevant for both constitutional and prudential ripeness analysis.
See Simmonds,
. Paragraph 49 reads in full: "As construed by the Lobbying Commission, the lobbying law requires reporting about all forms of non-lobbying advocacy — including radio spots, public rallies, op-ed pieces, websites, organizational newsletters, letters to the editor, books, and even flyers handed out on street corners — by an organization also engaged in lobbying if that advocacy addresses a topic about which the organization is engaged in lobbying and the organization believes the nonlobbying advocacy will have some beneficial effect on its lobbying.” (citations omitted).
. Indeed, although Grandeau’s position as executive director made him the "chief administrative officer of the commission,” N.Y. Legis. § l-d(b) (McKinney 2004), nothing in the Lobbying Act gives the executive director the authority to set Commission policy.
