Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge TATEL.
An unlicensed operator of a low-power FM radio station challenges a Federal Communications Commission order directing him to cease broadcasting. He contends the order and an ancillary $11,000 forfeiture are unenforceable because the Commission’s ban on low-power FM stations, in place until January 2000, contravened the Communications Act of 1934 and the First Amendment, and because the forfeiture is unreasonable, excessive, and beyond his ability to pay. We reject these claims and affirm. Absent a demonstration that the low-power ban was indisputably unlawful or unconstitutional, the Commission had no obligation to reconsider the ban in the context of an enforcement proceeding against a single unlicensed operator. Moreover, the forfeiture is reasonable under the circumstances of this case, and the operator waived his inability-to-pay claim.
I.
Section 301 of the Communications Act of 1934 makes it unlawful to operate a radio station without a license from the Federal Communications Commission. 47 U.S.C. § 301. Historically, the Commission’s elaborate licensing scheme included four classes of licenses — A, B, C, and D— distinguished on the basis of such factors as station location, antenna height, and transmission power. Until 1978, the Commission allocated Class D licenses to “mi-crobroadcast stations,” so called because they operate at power levels of less than one hundred watts and reach listeners within a two to twelve-mile radius of the point of transmission. In 1978, however, choosing to “str[ike] the balance in favor of licensing higher-powered stations to ensure that large audiences were served,”
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the Commission adopted a “microbroad-casting ban” pursuant to which it stopped awarding Class D licenses.
Creation of a Low Power Radio Serv.,
15 F.C.C. Red. 19,208, 19,236,
At all times relevant to this case, appellant Jerry Szoka knew of both the licensing requirement and the microbroadcast-ing ban. Yet from 1995 until mid-2000, Szoka operated Grid Radio, an unlicensed low-power station in Cleveland, Ohio. He never applied for a license because he believed applying would be futile given the microbroadcasting ban.
In early 1997, after receiving a complaint about Grid Radio, the Commission sent Szoka two successive letters warning him that if he continued to operate the station, he could face fines, forfeitures, or criminal sanctions. Responding to the first letter, Szoka urged the Commission to “ignore” his unlicensed operations because Grid Radio “is top quality, provides a much needed community service without commercials, and [does not] interfer[e] with other stations.”
Jerry Szoka,
13 F.C.C. Red. 10,630, 10,630-31,
Despite the Commission’s letters, Szoka continued operating Grid Radio.
Id.
at 10,631. In response, the Commission issued an order directing Szoka to show cause why he should not be ordered to cease and desist from violating section 301. The show-cause order specified two issues for consideration at an upcoming hearing: whether Szoka was “transmitt[ing] radio energy without appropriate authorization,” and if so, whether he “should be ordered to cease and desist” from that activity.
Jerry Szoka,
FCC 98D-3, 1998 FCC LEXIS 4563, *1,
The Chief of the Commission’s Compliance and Information Bureau moved for summary decision of the issues identified in the show-cause order. Although Szoka conceded he had no license to operate Grid Radio, he objected to the summary judgment motion, arguing he had no obligation to comply with Commission licensing rules because the microbroadcasting ban was both unlawful and unconstitutional. He also challenged the forfeiture as unreasonable and excessive in violation of the Fifth and Eighth Amendments to the United States Constitution.
In light of Szoka’s concession that he lacked a license to operate Grid Radio, the Administrative Law Judge concluded that no substantial issues of material fact remained, granted the Commission’s motion for summary decision, issued a cease-and-desist order, and imposed the forfeiture.
Jerry Szoka,
1998 FCC LEXIS 4563, at *3-4. In so doing, the ALJ rejected Szo-ka’s constitutional challenges to the mi-crobroadcasting ban on two alternative grounds: on the merits because the “right of free speech does not include the right to use radio facilities without a license”; and for lack of standing because Szoka failed to apply for either a license or a waiver of the microbroadcasting ban.
Id.
at *6-8 (citing
NBC v. United States,
The Commission affirmed the ALJ’s order, finding Szoka without standing to challenge the licensing regulations and rejecting his constitutional challenges to the microbroadcasting ban and forfeiture. Jerry Szoka, 14 F.C.C. Red. 9857 (1999). The Commission informed Szoka that he could file a claim of inability to pay the forfeiture by submitting tax returns or other financial statements covering the previous three years. Id. at 9867.
Szoka filed petitions for reconsideration and for a stay of the orders against him, claiming, among other things, that he was unable to pay the forfeiture. In support, Szoka submitted a financial statement and tax returns for 1996 through 1998 showing $8,500 in assets and an annual adjusted gross income averaging about $12,000.
Jerry Szoka,
14 F.C.C. Red. 20,147, 20,150,
Following the Commission’s rejection of Szoka’s motion for reconsideration and for a stay, the cease-and-desist order became effective. Because Szoka continued to operate Grid Radio, the Commission filed suit in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio to compel compliance.
See
47 U.S.C. § 401(b) (authorizing Commission to “apply to the appropriate district court of the United States for the enforcement of [most orders of the Commission]”). Finding the cease- and-desist order “regularly made and duly served,” the district court ordered Szoka to stop broadcasting by March 1, 2000.
United States v. Szoka,
In the meantime, Szoka filed this appeal of the cease-and-desist order and forfeiture. He alleges that: (1) prior to issuing the cease-and-desist order, the Commission was obligated to demonstrate that shutting down Grid Radio would further the public interest; (2) the now-defunct microbroadcasting ban contravened the Act’s requirement that the Commission regulate “in the public interest,” 47 U.S.C. § 303(g); (3) the ban violated the First Amendment; (4) the forfeiture constitutes an “excessive fine[]” in violation of the Eighth Amendment; and finally, (5) the forfeiture is not the product of reasoned decision-making and should be reduced in light of Szoka’s financial hardship. Although the Commission recently abandoned its microbroadcasting ban and
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adopted new rules authorizing the licensing of low-power stations,
see Ruggiero v. FCC,
II.
The Commission argues that because Szoka failed to apply for a license or to seek a waiver of the microbroadcasting ban, he lacks standing to raise his constitutional and statutory challenges. Since this argument implicates our jurisdiction, we consider it first.
The Commission’s standing argument rests on its assertion that Szoka could have challenged the microbroadcasting ban without operating illegally-and therefore without subjecting himself to the cease- and-desist order or incurring the forfei- ture. For example, the Commission points out that had Szoka applied for a waiver and the Commission denied his ap- plication, he could have appealed to this court and raised his constitutional and statutory challenges to the microbroad- casting ban at that time. 47 U.S.C. § 402(b)(1). Further, if Szoka had re- quested a waiver and the Commission had dragged its feet in responding to the re- quest, Szoka could have petitioned this court for a writ of mandamus to compel Commission action.
See Telecomm. Research & Action v. FCC,
unpersuaded. To begin with, the cease-and-desist order and forfeiture are, as Szoka argues, present injuries, both of which are fairly, if circuitously, tracea- ble to the Commission’s microbroadcasting ban. The record before us is clear: But for the ban, Szoka would have applied for a license, and the Commission points to no individual characteristics-of either Szoka or Grid Radio-that would have led it cate- gorically to deny his application in the absence of the ban. Moreover, we agree with Szoka that applying for a waiver would have been futile.
See Prayze FM v. FCC,
III.
Turning to the merits, we begin with Szoka's argument that under the Communications Act the Commission should have considered whether shutting down Grid Radio would further the public interest. According to Szoka, his station served a "niche audience" "not adequately serv[ed]" by full-power FM stations: "gay men and women and the arts community." Appellants' Br. at 11. Valuable as Grid Radio's broadcasts may have been, we think it clear that the Commission had no obligation to consider the station's individual circumstances before shutting it down. At the time this controversy began, the Commission had determined that the public interest was best served by uniformly denying licenses to low-power stations to promote "the establishment of more efficient, stable, full powered stations." Creation of a Low Power Radio Serv., 15 F.C.C.Rcd. at 19,236 n. 93 (internal citations omitted). Although Szoka strenuously disagrees with that determination, the Oommission need not reevaluate well-worn policy arguments each time it implements an existing rule in a narrow adjudicatory proceeding against an acknowledged rule-breaker. Turro,
Nothing in C.J. Commnnity Services v. FCC,
Szoka's broader claims-that the microbroadcasting ban itself was unlawful and unconstitutional, facially and as applied to him-present a harder question, for we generally permit "a party against whom a rule is [enforced] [to] pursue
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substantive objections to the rule” at the time of enforcement.
Indep. Cmty. Bankers of Am. v. Bd. of Governors of the Fed. Reserve Sys.,
Szoka first argues that the microb-roadcasting ban conflicts with the Commission’s “affirmative mandate to maximize use of the spectrum resource.” Appellants’ Br. at 48. Yet the Commission resolved just this issue in its 1978 rulemak-ing when it concluded that licensing low-power stations would interfere with the propagation of higher-power stations. Because Szoka offers nothing to suggest that the 1978 policy was indisputably unlawful, we decline now to consider his challenge to it.
Recasting his public-interest argument as a challenge to the ban itself, Szoka next claims that under the Act, the Commission must be “flexible and responsive in applying its [microbroadcasting] rule[ ], so that the public interest in a particular case is not undermined by a rigid adherence to preestablished rules and regulations.”
Id.
at 49.
Turro
also answers this claim: “Strict adherence to a general rule may be justified by the gain in certainty and administrative ease.”
We reach a similar conclusion regarding Szoka’s facial and as-applied constitutional claims. According to Szoka, to survive First Amendment scrutiny, “the ban must have been at least a narrowly tailored method of achieving a substantial governmental interest.” Appellants’ Br. at 35 (citing
FCC v. League of Women Voters,
We need not decide whether intermediate scrutiny is the appropriate standard of review, see, e.g., News America Publ'g Inc. v. FCC,
IV.
This brings us to Szoka's challenge to the $11,000 forfeiture. Decrying this sum as "grossly disproportionate to the gravity of the offense," Szoka first argues that the forfeiture violates the Eighth Amendment's Excessive Fines Clause. Appellants' Br. at 50. We disagree. In the case on which Szoka relies, United States v. Bajakajian, the government imposed a fine of over $350,000 for failure to report the export of currency.
Szoka next argues that the forfeiture is "[n]ot the [pjroduct of [r]easoned [d]ecisionmaking." Appellants' Br. at 52. As in any arbitrary-and-capricious challenge, we "presume the validity" of the agency's action, Kisser v. Cisneros,
Finally, in support of his argu.ment that the Commission should have reduced the fine because he demonstrated his "inability to pay," Szoka points to three years of tax returns showing adjusted gross income below the poverty line. Appellants' Br. at 58. He also argues that his three capital assets-radio equipment, a 37% interest in a nightclub lease, and a ~l2th interest in a commercial building-are ffliquid and unavailable to pay the forfeiture. When Szoka presented this evidence to the Commission, however, the agency noted certain "apparent contradictions" and concluded the evidence was "not sufficient to justify reduction of the proposed forfeiture." Jerry Szoka, 14 F.C.C. Red. at 20,150. Moreover, the Commission indicated that although its Compliance and Information Bureau had invited Szoka to supplement his financial information, he declined to do so. Id. at 20,150 n. 2. Indeed, Szoka's counsel confirmed at oral argument that Szoka neither submitted the requested supplemental information nor requested a hearing at which to address the contradictions. We therefore find Szoka's inability-to-pay claim waived.
V.
The decision of the Federal Communications Commission is affirmed.
So ordered.
