Plaintiffs Satellite News and Video, Inc. (“Satellite”) and Phil Matney brought suit in district court, seeking to have a Kenosha County, Wisconsin “open-booth” ordinance declared unconstitutional and to obtain an injunction prohibiting its enforcement. The ordinance requires that movie-viewing booths at “adult entertainment” establishments, such as the one owned by Satellite and patronized by Matney, be totally accessible from a public area and have at least one side totally open to a lighted public aisle. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Kenosha County (“County”) and the plaintiffs appeal. We affirm.
I.
Satellite owns and operates an “adult entertainment” business in Kenosha County, Wisconsin, which displays sexually explicit but non-obscene films and videotapes in small, single-person viewing booths. Each booth is equipped with a monitor connected to several videotape players. By depositing a token in a device located within each booth, patrons of Satellite can activate the monitors and choose one of the several videotapes or films offered. The video booths are specifically designed and built so that persons standing outside the booths cannot determine the content or the specific nature of the film being viewed. Phil Matney is a resident of Kenosha County and a patron of Satellite. Matney does not wish to have the content of the videos he views and listens to revealed to persons passing by the booths.
In 1992, the Kenosha County Board of Health issued regulation HD-1.01-1, which establishes standards for the construction and maintenance of booths, rooms, or cubicles available for the private viewing of “adult entertainment” at “adult-oriented” establishments. The stated purpose of the regulation is to preserve health, prevent the spread of AIDS and other communicable or sexually transmitted diseases, and prevent unsanitary, unsafe and unhealthy conditions. Specifically, the regulation states:
(1) PURPOSE. It is a lawful purpose of the Kenosha County Board of Health to enact rules and regulations as are necessary for the preservation of health and to prevent the spread of AIDS and other communicable or sexually transmitted diseases in Kenosha County. It has been found by localities throughout the State of Wisconsin, particularly Milwaukee, Racine, Waukesha, Delafield, and Kenosha, as well as communities around the country, that many adult-oriented establishments install movie viewing booths with doors in which patrons view adult-oriented videotapes, movies, films and other forms of adult entertainment, and that such booths have been and are being used by patrons to engage in sexual acts resulting in unsanitary, unhealthy and unsafe conditions in said booths and establishments. This regulation establishes standards for booth construction and maintenance in order to prevent the spread of AIDS and other communicable or sexually transmitted diseases.
The Board considered evidence from the sheriffs departments in Kenosha County and other communities in reaching its conclusion that activity occurring in booths at adult oriented establishments leads to unhealthy and unsanitary conditions and to the transmission of AIDS and other sexually transmitted and communicable diseases.
Under the regulation, adult entertainment viewing booths must be “totally accessible to and from aisles and public areas ... and shall be unobstructed by any door, lock, curtain, blind, or other control-type devices.” HD-1.10-l(3)(a). Further, each booth “shall be separated from adjacent booths ... by a wall” and “shall have at least one side totally open to a public lighted aisle so that there is an unobstructed view at all times of anyone occupying the same.” HD-1.10-l(3)(b). The regulation also speaks to the lighting in and around the booths as well as to the color, texture, and material of booth walls and *695 floors. In addition, the regulation provides that only one individual occupy a booth at any time and that no occupant shall “engage in any type of sexual activity, cause any bodily discharge or litter while in the booth.” HD-1.10-l(8)(c). The regulation does not attempt to restrict or control in any way the content of the adult videos shown.
Satellite received several citations for violating HD-1.10-1 and the County has threatened to continue enforcing the regulation, thereby prompting the instant litigation. Satellite and Matne/s complaint alleged that the open booth regulation violates their First Amendment rights because it 1) impermissibly chills their “expressive privacy rights” by revealing the content of the protected expression they wish to disseminate and receive and 2) because it imposes a content-based financial burden on Satellite’s protected expression. The plaintiffs also alleged that the regulation is not reasonably related to a legitimate government interest. The County moved for summary judgment and the district court granted its motion, finding that the proper question was whether the ordinance was. a valid time, place, and manner restriction, which the court answered in the affirmative. The court also concluded that there is no “expressive privacy right” to view adult entertainment at public establishments in seclusion and anonymity and, additionally, that the regulation did not impose a constitutionally impermissible financial burden on Satellite.
II.
Satellite and Matney contend on appeal that the district court erred in granting the County summary judgment on their First Amendment claims.
1
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo. Hedberg v. Indiana Bell Telephone Co., Inc., 47
F.3d 928, 931 (7th Cir.1995). Summary judgment should be granted when the pleadings and supplemental materials present no genuine issue as to any material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c);
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477
U.S. 317,
A.
The district court was correct in noting that the proper constitutional measure of an “open-booth” regulation is whether the regulation constitutes a valid time, place, or manner restriction.
See Berg v. Health and Hosp. Corp. of Marion County, Ind.,
*696
In
Ward v. Rock Against Racism,
The plaintiffs concede, with good reason, that the Kenosha County open booth regulation is content neutral. As the
Ward
Court explained, “[t]he 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,
In this case, the plain language of the regulation makes clear that
it
was passed for the purposes of preserving health, preventing the spread of AIDS and other communicable or sexually transmitted diseases, and preventing unsanitary, unsafe, and unhealthy conditions. Nothing in the words of the ordinance or in the County Board minutes suggests that the Board disagreed with the content or the message of the films and videos shown. The regulation is aimed at the “secondary effects” of private viewing booths— the possible spread of AIDS and other diseases and the creation of unsanitary, unhealthy conditions — not at the content of the films viewed in the booths.
See Berg,
The plaintiffs additionally admit that the open booth regulation serves a legitimate government interest. It cannot be doubted that fighting the spread of communicable and sexually transmitted diseases and maintaining safe and sanitary conditions constitute significant government interests, nor is there any question that the regulation at issue furthers those interests.
See Berg,
Although the plaintiffs acknowledge in their brief that the County need not employ the “least restrictive means” to achieve its stated purpose, they nonetheless argue that the Kenosha regulation is not narrowly
*697
tailored precisely because they believe there are less speech-infringing possibilities. This, of course, is not the correct inquiry under Ward We are satisfied that Kenosha’s goals of preventing the spread of certain diseases and maintaining sanitary and safe conditions at adult entertainment establishments “would be achieved less effectively absent the regulation.”
See Berg,
Moving on to the final
Ward
factor, we have previously held that open booth regulations leave open ample alternative channels of communication.
Berg,
In addition, there remain plenty of ways, other than through private viewing booths, that sexually explicit material can be disseminated and received. For example, Satellite could offer videos in a larger theater-type area, rather than in “private viewing” booths, rooms, or cubicles.
See Libra,
B.
Plaintiffs also argue on appeal that the Kenosha regulation violates the First Amendment because it impermissibly chills their “expressive privacy right,” i.e., their right to watch the films and videos in anonymity. They contend that if the doors are removed from viewing booths, persons will not be able to watch films without disclosing the content or specific nature of the videos to people standing in the required public aisles. This disclosure, plaintiffs maintain, will likely subject the viewers to embarrassment and humiliation. As a result, plaintiffs claim viewers will be chilled from receiving the protected expression, and the ability of adult entertainment establishments to disseminate the expression will be seriously burdened. Plaintiffs’ argument fails for several reasons.
Every court that has addressed a privacy claim in this situation has concluded that patrons of public adult entertainment establishments do not have a general privacy right, whether within the penumbra of the First, Fourth, or Fourteenth Amendments, to watch sexually explicit movies in seclusion and anonymity.
See Berg,
However, Satellite and Matney are not arguing that there is a general privacy right in the sense of a right to be behind closed doors or in seclusion or in a private place; rather they appear to be claiming that the First Amendment affords them a right to privacy in one’s choice or selection of speech because of the chilling effect that will occur if the choices are publicized. In other words, they seek to avoid making public the connection between the individual patrons and the content of the materials they each choose to view. They believe the First Amendment offers this protection because without it, patrons will forego their right to receive the protected speech. Plaintiffs’ basic contention is that “where a regulation’s inevitable effect is to chill persons from engaging in or disseminating protected speech, even where the purpose of a regulation is unrelated to the *699 content of speech, the regulation is unconstitutional and must be invalidated.”
This is simply not an accurate statement of First Amendment law. The Constitution does not afford a right to totally unrestricted, unchilled speech. Rather, the First Amendment affords the right to receive and disseminate protected speech,
subject to
valid time, place, and manner restrictions.
Ward,
In addition, even if the plaintiffs “chilling effect” argument were viable, nothing in the regulation forces the booths to be arranged in a manner that reveals the content or nature of the film being displayed. The regulation requires only that each booth “have at least one side totally open to a public lighted aisle so there is an unobstructed view at all times of anyone occupying the same.” Under the regulation, only the person, not the video screen, must be visible. Satellite presented no evidence that it was impossible to arrange the booths so that the screen itself was not visible, but the person inside was.
See Suburban Video,
C.
Finally, Satellite maintains that the open booth regulation is unconstitutional because it imposes a substantial, content-based financial burden on its protected expression. Satellite alleged that the regulation would deprive it of income it would normally receive from patrons since, without doors on the booths, persons would be able to view the films from the public aisles without having to pay.
The Supreme Court has held that if a law or regulation imposes a financial burden on speakers because of the content of their speech, it must be narrowly tailored to achieve a compelling state interest.
See Simon and Schuster, Inc. v. Members of the New York Crime Victims Board,
Satellite’s argument fails for several fundamental reasons. First and foremost, as discussed above, the Kenosha regulation is not content-based. It was not passed “because of a disagreement with the message”
*700
conveyed.
Ward,
III.
In sum, we find that Kenosha County’s open booth regulation is a valid time, place, and manner restriction, and as such does not violate the First Amendment. Further, we find that Satellite and Matney’s claims that the regulation violates their “expressive privacy rights” and is an impermissible content-based financial restriction are without support in fact or law. We thus Affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Kenosha County.
Notes
. We note that the County also argued that we and the district court lacked jurisdiction under Rooker-Feldman and also that we should abstain under the Younger and Pullman abstention doctrines. These claims are either without merit or have been waived, and as such will not be addressed.
. In
Berg,
which was decided prior to the issuance of
Ward,
we applied the stricter "least restrictive means” test, yet still found the ordinance to be narrowly tailored.
Id.
at 803-04,
. Satellite argues that at its facility it is physically impossible for more than one person to occupy a booth at any one time or for any patron to have interaction with patrons in neighboring booths. Further, it alleges that it strictly enforces this one-person-per-booth policy. Satellite therefore claims that sexual activity does not occur in its booths and that the transmission of AIDS and other diseases is effectively prevented with far less intrusion on First Amendment rights. Satellite contends that its claim is supported by the fact that health officials have inspected Satellite on several occasions and have never found semen residue or condoms in its booths.
. Satellite and Matney apparently recognize that the Kenosha ordinance does not on its face limit the use of single-person booths for viewing adult entertainment. They argue, however, that there are not ample alternative channels of communication because the open booth regulation will chill the use of viewing booths and will in effect foreclose such booths as a means of disseminating sexually explicit materials. First, as will be discussed, infra Section B, plaintiffs "chilling effect" argument is not supported by the record. In addition, even if single-person viewing booths are effectively foreclosed to some extent, there are still ample alternative avenues of communication. Generally, time, place, and manner restrictions limit or foreclose some avenue of communication; the question is whether there are other adequate means of dissemination. Here there clearly are. Thus, plaintiffs "chilling effect" argument does not persuade us to change our conclusion that the Kenosha regulation leaves open ample alternatives channels of communication.
. In support of its proposition that a regulation is invalid anytime it chilis First Amendment rights, the plaintiffs cite
NAACP v. Alabama,
