OPINION
Robert A. Neinast, a patron of the Columbus Metropolitan Library (Library) was evicted from the Library as a result of going barefoot. Neinast brought suit against the Board of Trustees of the Columbus Metropolitan Library (Board) and others under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming violations of his rights under the First, Ninth, and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution, Article I of the Ohio Constitution, and Ohio Revised Code § 3375.40. All parties moved for summary judgment. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of defendants-appellees. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I.
Plaintiff-appellant Neinast, a resident of Pickerington, Ohio, regularly goes barefoot and often uses the Library. Defendant-appellee Board serves as the regulating authority of the Library and is authorized by Ohio Revised Code § 3375.40 to “[m]ake and publish rules for the proper operation and management of the free public library and facilities under its jurisdiction, including rules pertaining to the *589 provision of library services to individuals, corporations, or institutions that are not inhabitants of the county.” Defendant-ap-pellee Larry D. Black is the Executive Director of the Library, and defendant-appellee Vonzell Johnson is the Assistant Manager of Security for the Library. Although the Patron Regulations of the Library (approved by the Board) do not contain a prohibition on using the Library without shoes, the Library’s Eviction Procedure (approved by the Executive Director) does provide that patrons not wearing shoes be given a warning and be “asked to leave [the] premises to correct the problem.”
On several different occasions between 1997 and 2001, Neinast was asked to leave the Library for failure to comply with the Library’s requirement that patrons wear shoes while on its premises. Neinast first was asked to leave the Library for not wearing shoes on September 12, 1997. On November 10, 2000, Neinast again was informed that he would have to wear shoes in order to use the Library’s facilities and was asked to leave. On January 23, 2001, Neinast was asked to leave for the same reason. On March 2, 2001, Neinast again entered the Library barefoot, and subsequently was approached by two security officers and taken to the security desk, where one of the officers, acting under the supervision of Johnson, presented Neinast with a one-day eviction from the Library.
After being asked to leave on November 10, 2000, Neinast wrote a letter to Black dated November 16, 2000, and a letter to the Board dated December 11, 2000, complaining of the enforcement of the Eviction Procedure and the procedure’s alleged inconsistency with the Patron Regulations. In a response dated December 14, 2000, the Board informed Neinast that Black had “the authority to make such decisions” and that the Board believed that Black “had made the correct one.” According to the Library Organization Policy, Black (as the Executive Director) is responsible for “determining internal policies and procedures, ... public relations, relations with the community and governmental agencies, and the handling of all other matters involved with the operation of the library system.”
On January 19, 2001, Neinast wrote another letter expressing his concerns about the prohibition on using the Library without shoes, and on January 30, 2001, Black asked the Franklin County Prosecutor’s Office “for the legal reasons that [the Board] can give for requiring its customers to dress appropriately for a public place.” In a letter dated February 7, 2001, the prosecutor’s office responded that in accordance with
Kreimer v. Bureau of Police of Morristown,
On March 5, 2001, following his one-day eviction from the Library on March 2, 2001, Neinast sent another letter to Black, the Board, and the prosecutor’s office. On March 12, 2001, Black informed Neinast that he had “been made aware that we require our customers to wear shoes while using the Columbus Metropolitan Library facilities” and that he had been “provided a legal opinion ... stating that the Library has the legal authority to make and enforce such a rule,” and concluding that the Library “will not respond to further correspondence on this matter.”
On April 3, 2001, Neinast, acting pro se, filed a complaint in the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas alleging violations of 42 U.S.C. § 1983 based on deprivations of his First, Ninth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights under the United *590 States Constitution and his rights under Article I of the Ohio Constitution. Defendants-appellees removed this case to the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio on May 11, 2001 and filed an answer on May 24, 2001. Neinast filed an amended complaint on June 27, 2001. On July 9, 2001, defendants-appel-lees filed an answer to the amended complaint. Both parties then filed motions for summary judgment. On March 27, 2002, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of defendants-appellees. Neinast timely filed his notice of appeal on April 25, 2002.
II.
A district court’s grant of a motion for summary judgment is reviewed
de novo. See Braithwaite v. The Timken Co.,
A.
Neinast claims that the Board’s enforcement of the requirement that patrons of the Library wear shoes deprived him of his right to receive information under the First and Fourteenth Amendments.
1
The district court assumed that Neinast had a First Amendment right of access to the Library, but rejected his claim, finding the Board’s requirement that patrons of the Library wear shoes to be “a valid, content-neutral regulation that promotes communication of the written word in a safe and sanitary condition.”
Neinast v. Bd. of Trs. of Columbus Metro. Library,
The First Amendment protects the right to receive information.
Stanley v. Georgia,
For the purposes of First Amendment analysis, the Library is a limited public forum.
Kreimer,
As previously noted, the requirement for our consideration provides for the denial of access to the Library based upon a patron’s failure to wear shoes. In
Ward v. Rock Against Racism,
the United States Supreme Court reviewed a regulation in which the government “regulate[d] expression” according to a heightened standard of scrutiny.
In
Ward,
the Court reviewed use guidelines promulgated by the City of New York that only the City could provide sound equipment and sound technicians for performances given at the Central Park Bandshell.
Id.
at 788,
Instead we review the Library regulation under a rational basis standard.
See Thompson v. Ashe,
B.
Even if we were to conclude that heightened scrutiny is appropriate in the instant case, we believe that the Library regulation would meet this standard. The requirement that patrons of the Library wear shoes is “narrowly tailored to serve a significant governmental interest” and “leave[s] open ample alternative channels for communication of information.”
Ward,
In Kreimer, a homeless man challenged several public library rules regulating patron behavior, one of which provided that:
Patrons shall not be permitted to enter the building without a shirt or other covering of their upper bodies or without shoes or other footwear. Patrons whose bodily hygiene is offensive so as to constitute a nuisance to other persons shall be required to leave the building.
[I]t seems obvious that the Library may regulate conduct protected under the First Amendment which does not actually disrupt the Library.... Indeed, the district court itself implicitly acknowledged this point when it modified its order so that it did not invalidate the *593 rule requiring the wearing of shoes, since it can hardly be imagined that a person simply by being barefoot would disrupt the Library.
Id. at 1263 n. 25.
In this case, Neinast argues that he was “using the Library for its intended purpose when he was asked to leave, and that his bare feet did not disrupt the library.” As the Third Circuit observed in
Kreimer,
however, “the Library is not confined to prohibiting behavior that is actually disruptive.”
“Throughout our history the several States have exercised their police powers to protect the health and safety of their citizens. Because these are primarily, and historically, ... matter[s] of local concern, the States traditionally have had great latitude under their police powers to legislate as to the protection of the lives, limbs, health, comfort, and quiet of all persons.”
Medtronic, Inc. v. Lohr,
Having established the existence of a significant risk of harm to individual barefoot patrons, this court next must determine whether a significant cost to the general public also has been shown. “To justify the state in ... interposing its authority in behalf of the public, it must appear—First, that the interests of the public ... require such interference; and, second, that the means are reasonably necessary for the accomplishment of the purpose, and not unduly oppressive upon individuals.’ ”
Fair Hous. Advocates Ass’n, Inc. v. City of Richmond Heights, Ohio,
Here, the Board’s stated rationale for its requirement that patrons of the Library wear shoes is not only to protect individual barefoot patrons from harm to themselves, but also to protect the general public “by averting tort claims and litigation expenses stemming from potential claims by barefoot patrons who could have suffered injuries that shoes could have prevented.” Avoiding the expense of litigation is a legitimate governmental interest.
See Listle v. Milwaukee County,
In addition, the Board’s requirement that patrons of the Library wear shoes is sufficiently narrow. In order to satisfy the “narrowly tailored” requirement, a regulation “need not be the least restrictive or least intrusive means” of serving the government’s legitimate, content-neutral interests.
Ward,
Finally, the requirement that patrons wear shoes leaves open alternative channels for communication. “[S]o long as a patron complies with the rules, he or she may use the Library’s facilities.”
Kreimer,
C.
Neinast asserts that the Board’s enforcement of the requirement that patrons of the Library wear shoes deprived him of his right of personal appearance under the First, Ninth, and Fourteenth Amendments. Specifically, Neinast argues that the district court erred by failing “to recognize, as a matter of law, the existence of the right of personal appearance, either as a fundamental right or as a protected liberty interest.” Neinast claims that while rational basis review may be appropriate in situations involving government employees, the instant case requires strict scrutiny, since it involves “a member of the general public.”
In
Kelley v. Johnson,
In general, “[l]iberty under law extends to the full range of conduct which the individual is free to pursue.”
Bolling v. Sharpe,
Assuming the existence of a liberty interest in personal appearance, we must next determine whether the Board unconstitutionally infringed upon Neinast’s liberty interest by mandating that he wear shoes in the Library. The Sixth Circuit previously has held that personal appearance is not a fundamental right.
See Gfell v. Rickelman,
“Even foolish and misdirected provisions are generally valid if subject only to rational basis review.”
Craigmiles v. Giles,
D.
Neinast claims that Black presently is “enforcing a barefoot policy that is not authorized by State Law” or by the Board, and that Johnson “enforced that barefoot policy in a manner sanctioned by neither State Law, nor the Eviction Procedure,” thereby depriving Neinast of procedural due process. These claims lack merit.
First, Neinast cannot base his procedural due process claim on the Board’s allegedly “improper adoption of a rule of general applicability.”
Reichelt v. Gates,
Neinast admits that the Board “properly promulgated their Patron Regulations,” but observes that the Patron Regulations themselves contain no express requirement that patrons of the Library wear shoes. However, the issue of whether the Board’s delegation of authority to the Executive Director to establish the Eviction Procedures was proper is a matter of state law. Section 1983, upon which Neinast bases his claim, authorizes courts to redress violations of “rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and [federal] laws” that occur under color of state law. “The statute is thus limited to deprivations of federal statutory and constitutional rights. It does not cover official conduct that allegedly violates state law.”
Huron Valley Hosp., Inc. v. City of Pontiac,
With regard to his second claim, Neinast argues that the procedures employed by Johnson when serving Neinast with a one-day eviction from the Library departed from the Eviction Procedure, thereby depriving him of procedural due process. The Eviction Procedure states that patrons wearing “inappropriate dress, to include but -not be limited to: no shirts and no shoes” are to be “asked to leave [the] premises to correct the problem.” After violating this provision on March 2, 2001, however, Neinast was served with a one-day eviction for a violation described as “improper dress/staff harassment.”
While “[t]he touchstone of due process is protection of the individual against arbitrary action of government,”
Wolff v. McDonnell,
III.
For all of the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. At the district court level, Neinast also asserted that walking barefoot constituted speech protected by the First Amendment, that the shoe regulation violates his equal protection rights, and that the individual defendants were not entitled to qualified immunity. The district court found that Neinast’s practice of going barefoot in public buildings did not qualify as symbolic speech, that his equal protection rights had not been violated, and that the individual defendants were shielded from liability.
See Neinast v. Bd. of Trs. of Columbus Metro. Library,
. Neinast argues that the Board’s stated interests are not genuine and notes that the Eviction Guidelines refer only to "[¡Inappropriate dress,” while making no mention of health and safety or economic well-being. There is some evidence in the record suggesting that the Board had an interest in requiring proper attire. As previously mentioned, in a letter to the Franklin County Prosecutor's Office dated January 30, 2001, Black requested "the legal reasons that [the Library] can give for requiring its customers to dress appropriately for a public place.” As the Supreme Court has noted, in the intermediate scrutiny context the state is expected "to give its real reasons for passing an ordinance.”
Watchtower Bible and Tract Soc’y of New York, Inc. v. Vill. of Stratton,
. Neinast mischaracterizes the extent of the authority granted to Black by the Board. As previously noted. Black was not merely limited to "internal policies and procedures,” but also was responsible for “public relations, relations with the community, ... and the handling of all other matters involved with the operation of the library system.”
