RTM Media appeals a summary judgment for the City of Houston. We affirm.
I.
Houston’s sign code threatens to eliminate most of the fifty-nine billboards owned by RTM, an outdoor advertising company. The city sued in state court, accusing RTM of violating the sign code and being a public nuisance; RTM then sued in federal court, alleging that the code violates the First Amendment and that it cannot be enforced against billboards that have been separately licensed by the state.
RTM says that the First Amendment prohibits the sign code’s disparate treatment of commercial and noncommercial speech. The code classifies signs as “on-premise” or “off-premise,” depending on whether they provide information related to the premises on which they are located; 1 the code requires the abatement of off-premise signs. It excludes from regulation all noncommercial signs, defined as
a structure that is used exclusively and at all times (except when there is no copy at all on the structure) for messages that do not constitute advertising, including, but not limited to, political messages, religious or church related messages, public service, governmental and ideological messages and other copy of a nature that is not commercial advertising ....
Sign Code § 4619(c). 2
RTM also contends that Houston does not have the authority to regulate RTM’s signs. The signs in question are located in the city’s extraterritorial jurisdiction (“ETJ”), and the state Department of Transportation has issued state permits for them. RTM argues that the city does not have the right separately to regulate the ETJ and that any attempt to supersede the state permits is a due process violation.
*223 At the outset of the federal litigation, the district court granted RTM’s request for a preliminary injunction to prevent Houston from enforcing the code. The court determined that the code is probably unconstitutional and that RTM is therefore likely to succeed on the merits. A year later, however, the court reversed course and granted summary judgment for the city, explaining that commercial signs are far more numerous than are noncommercial ones, a fact that provides an adequate rationale for treating them differently given the objective of reducing visual clutter and distraction along public roadways.
Having affirmed the constitutionality of the code, the court abstained on the ETJ issue so that it could be resolved in the pending state court proceedings. RTM appeals, reasserting that the code violates the First Amendment and contending that the district court should not have abstained.
II.
“We review grants of summary judgment
de novo,
applying the same legal standard used by the district court. Summary judgment is proper when the evidence demonstrates that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
Chacko v. Sabre, Inc.,
III.
As recognized by the district court and the parties, the First Amendment issue is governed by
Metromedia, Inc. v. City of San Diego,
A.
In Metromedia, the Court addressed the constitutionality of a San Diego ordinance that permitted on-site commercial advertising, banned off-site commercial advertising, and allowed only certain content-specific categories of non-commercial advertising (e.g., “[tjemporary political campaign signs ... maintained for no longer than 90 days and which are removed within 10 days after election [sic] to which they pertain.”). 3 The ordinance therefore made three different kinds of speech distinctions: (1) Within commercial speech, it distinguished between on-premise and off-premise commercial speech; (2) within non-commercial speech, it distinguished between various categories of noncommercial speech; and (3) most broadly, it treated commercial speech differently from non-commercial speech. All three of those distinctions were challenged.
A fractured Court unambiguously held that the city could discriminate between on- and off-premise commercial speech.
4
The Court began by noting that
*224
commercial speech enjoys lesser, intermediate-scrutiny constitutional protection. Commercial speech restrictions are evaluated under the four-part framework established in
Central Hudson Gas & Electric Corp. v. Public Service Commission,
(1) The First Amendment protects commercial speech only if that speech concerns lawful activity and is not misleading. A restriction on otherwise protected commercial speech is valid only if it (2) seeks to implement a substantial governmental interest, (3) directly advances that interest, and (4) reaches no further than necessary to accomplish the given objective.
Metromedia,
The Court acknowledged that the ordinance targeted signs that advertised lawful activity and were not misleading. It found that the city’s goal of ameliorating traffic hazards and aesthetic unpleasantness was a sufficiently substantial interest. On the fourth prong, it concluded that the city had not gone further than necessary to advance its interest. 5
The Court therefore focused on whether the regulation directly advanced the city’s objectives. The plaintiff argued that banning off-site commercial billboards would not further the city’s interests, given that indistinguishable on-site advertising was allowed. The Court rejected that argument, holding that the First Amendment does not prohibit the city from choosing to “value one kind of commercial speech— onsite advertising — more than another kind of commercial speech — offsite advertising.”
Id.
at 512,
The plurality struck down the ordinance’s attempt to distinguish among various non-commercial messages, explaining that non-commercial speech is afforded greater constitutional protection, and “[although the city may distinguish between the relative value of different categories of commercial speech, the city does not have the same range of choice in the area of noncommercial speech to evaluate the strength of, or distinguish between, various communicative interests.”
Id.
at 514,
Finally, the plurality concluded that the ordinance could not favor on-premise advertising over non-commercial speech, because the First Amendment provides greater protection for non-commercial speech than for commercial speech.
6
Giv
*225
en San Diego’s judgment that on-premise commercial speech outweighed its interest in safety and aesthetics, non-commercial speech must also outweigh that interest. Thus, “[ijnsofar as the city tolerate[d] billboards at all, it [could not] choose to limit their content to commercial messages; the city may not conclude that the communication of commercial information concerning goods and services connected with a particular site is of greater value than the communication of noncommercial messages.”
Id.
at 513,
In summary, Metromedia established three key propositions. It held that (1) a billboard ordinance may permit on-premise commercial advertisement while banning off-premise commercial advertisement; (2) the ordinance may not distinguish among non-commercial messages on the basis of their content; and (3) where a city permits commercial billboards, it must also permit non-commercial ones.
B.
Twelve years after
Metromedia,
the Court revisited the issue of discriminating between commercial and non-commercial speech in
Discovery Network.
There, the City of Cincinnati was concerned about the proliferation of newsracks on city sidewalks. Rather than pass a new ordinance to address the issue, it began aggressively enforcing an old ordinance that outlawed commercial handbills.
Discovery Network,
Because the ordinance was a regulation of commercial speech, the Court again applied the
Central Hudson
four-part test. This time, however, it focused on the fourth prong, which requires the city to demonstrate that the ordinance “is not more extensive than is necessary to serve” the asserted interest.
Cent. Hudson,
The court found that Cincinnati had not “established] the reasonable fit we require” to satisfy that prong.
Discovery Network,
The benefit to be derived from the removal of 62 [commercial] newsracks while about 1,500-2,000 [non-commercial newsracks] remain in place was considered “minute” by the District Court and “paltry” by the Court of Appeals. We share their evaluation of the “fit” between the city’s goal and its method of achieving it.
Id.
at 417-18,
The Court then rejected, in detail, the city’s argument that there was a reasonable fit between the ban on commercial newsracks “and its interests in safety and esthetics because every decrease in the number of such dispensing devices necessarily effects an increase in safety and an
*226
improvement in the attractiveness of the cityscape.”
Id.
at 418,
The Court therefore concluded that “[i]n the absence of some basis for distinguishing between” commercial and noncommercial newsracks “that is relevant to an interest asserted by the city,” the commercial newsrack ban was unjustified, because “the city [had] not established the ‘fit’ between its goals and its chosen means[.]”
Id.
at 428,
c.
RTM relies heavily on Discovery Network and argues that Houston has failed to articulate any reason for distinguishing between commercial and non-commercial billboards relevant to safety and aesthetics. As with the newsracks in Discovery Network, there is little here that physically differentiates commercial from non-commercial billboards. RTM also interprets Metromedia as supporting its position, because there the Court disapproved of an attempt to treat commercial and non-commercial billboards differently.
Houston argues that Discovery Network is distinguishable, because here, there is a much better fit between the ordinance and the asserted interest: Commercial billboards make up the vast majority of signs targeted by the ordinance, so the benefit from the ordinance is not “paltry” or “minute.” The city also says that Metromedia endorsed the approach of regulating commercial signs while permitting non-commercial ones. 7
Houston is correct.
Discovery Network
plainly indicates that the “minute” benefit produced by the ordinance was critical to its invalidation.
8
Further, the Court ad
*227
dressed the lack of difference between commercial and noncommercial newsracks only after agreeing with the district and appellate courts that the Cincinnati ordinance would have a minimal impact on aesthetics and safety.
Discovery Network,
That is not the case with Houston’s sign code. As the district court correctly noted, the Houston code differs from the ordinance on almost all the “reasonable fit” considerations mentioned in Discovery Network. First, the handbill ordinance pre-existed newsracks and was designed to combat littering rather than clutter; Houston’s sign code was specifically crafted to address the safety and aesthetic concerns associated with billboards. Second, Cincinnati failed to regulate newsracks’ size, shape, appearance, or number; the sign code establishes rules about all four. Finally, and most importantly, Houston produced substantial evidence that (1) the vast majority of area billboards are commercial, and (2) the sign code has been effective, reducing signage by approximately half over a twenty-eight-year period. 9
Thus, Houston has demonstrated that its approach to ameliorating the billboard problem is “carefully calculated” and that, because of their number, commercial billboards pose a greater nuisance than do noncommercial ones. Unlike Cincinnati, Houston does not need to justify its regulatory approach merely by placing a lower value on commercial speech. The sign code is therefore constitutional. 10
*228 IV.
RTM appeals the district court’s decision to abstain. 11 The city replies that RTM waived its objections to abstention by failing to address the issue after its reply in favor of a preliminary injunction. Again, the city is correct.
When RTM moved for injunction, the city argued in response that the district court should abstain. RTM replied that the court should not abstain, because (1) abstention is disfavored where the court is adjudicating First Amendment claims, (2) abstention is inappropriate where criminal prosecution has not commenced, and (3) abstention does not apply where the state court proceeding is brought in bad faith for the purpose of harassment.
The district court granted a preliminary injunction in September 2007 but explained that it would not abstain, because “facial challenges to statutes on First Amendment grounds have been exempted from the abstention doctrine[.]” 12 As a result of the court’s announced intent to proceed, RTM and the city filed a joint motion to stay state court proceedings in October 2007.
Three months later, the city moved for summary judgment, arguing that the district court should abstain on “RTM’s remaining non-First Amendment claims.” RTM’s response to that motion, filed February 2008, does not mention abstention. RTM filed its own motion for summary judgment in May 2008, which did not mention abstention. The city’s response again asked the court to abstain on the non-First Amendment claims. RTM’s June 2008 reply did not respond to those abstention arguments.
The district court granted summary judgment for the city in September 2008; in that order, it also granted abstention. At the time the order issued—-and despite the city’s repeated request that the court abstain—the last (and only) argument RTM had made regarding abstention was over a year before in its reply in support of the preliminary injunction.
On appeal, RTM makes a number of arguments against abstention that it never presented to the district court. It primarily contends that abstention is inappropriate because the state court proceedings had been stayed pending resolution of the federal suit. RTM failed not only to raise that point in district court but also to even bring the stay to that court’s attention. Instead, it requests that we take judicial notice of the stay on appeal.
We will not reverse a district court based on issues not presented to it.
13
At best, then, we should consider only the
*229
arguments presented by RTM in its preliminary-injunction reply.
14
The single argument made both to the district court and this panel is that abstention is not appropriate because Houston has acted in bad faith. But “[t]he bad faith exception is narrow and is to be granted parsimoniously.”
Wightman v. Tex. Supreme Ct.,
Finally, RTM avers that the city waived its abstention argument by conducting full discovery and fully briefing the merits of the case in its various motions. As discussed above, however, the city consistently requested that the district court abstain. 15
Because the sign code does not violate the First Amendment, and RTM has waived its arguments against abstention, the summary judgment is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. To be precise, according to the code, an on-premise sign is "any sign identifying or advertising the business, person, activity, goods, products or services primarily sold or offered for sale on the premises where the sign is installed and maintained when such premises is used for business purposes." Sign Code § 4603(a). An off-premise sign is "any sign that advertises a business, person, activity, goods, products or services not usually located on the premises where the sign is installed and maintained, or that directs persons to any location not on the premises." Id.
. Thus, the familiar gas-station sign listing prices for various grades of gas qualifies as a permitted "on-premise” commercial sign, but a roadside billboard advertising "Shell Gas Station, Exit 5 Miles Ahead” is a prohibited “off-premise” commercial sign. Signs with non-commercial messages, such as “Attend Epiphany Catholic Church” or “All change is bad!”, are not regulated by the code.
.
Metromedia,
. Justice White wrote the plurality opinion, which was joined in full by Justices Stewart, Marshall and Powell. Justice Brennan authored a concurring opinion joined by Justice Blackmun. Justice Stevens’s partial concur *224 rence agreed with the plurality’s discussion of commercial speech but dissented from the discussion of non-commercial speech. Justice Rehnquist and Chief Justice Burger each dissented separately.
. "If the city has a sufficient basis for believing that billboards are traffic hazards and are unattractive, then obviously the most direct and perhaps the only effective approach to solving the problems they create is to prohibit them. The city has gone no further than necessaiy in seeking to méet its ends. Indeed, it has stopped short of fully accomplishing its ends: It has not prohibited all billboards, but allows onsite advertising and some other specifically exempted signs.”
Metromedia,
. See
id.
at 513 n. 18,
.
See id.
at 521 n. 26,
. In addition to the discussion in part III.B,
supra, see also Discovery Network,
. Houston submitted an affidavit from its sign administrator describing city records about the number of sign fixtures and sign faces over time. RTM objected to her testimony as hearsay, but the court admitted it under the business records exception of Federal Rule of Evidence 803(6). RTM renews the objection on appeal.
We review evidentiary decisions for abuse of discretion.
Johnson v. Ford Motor Co.,
RTM also complains that, during the sign administrator’s in-court testimony, she referred to the 1986 ETJ sign data as a "common knowledge number” that was just an estimate by her predecessor. But the administrator’s affidavit stated that the number of signs in the ETJ in 1986 was “at least 5058 off-premise structures” based on business records; the in-court testimony RTM complains about is her estimate that the true number was closer to 7000. The district court did not abuse its discretion. And regardless of the precise numbers, it is plain that Houston’s code has had more than a "minute” or "paltry” effect on the number of billboards.
. This conclusion accords with the one other circuit court decision that has directly confronted the same issue.
See Riel v. City of Bradford,
. The district court exercised
Younger
abstention in deference to the pending state civil suit brought by Houston against RTM before this federal litigation. “Although
Younger
abstention originally applied only to criminal prosecutions,
see Younger v. Harris,
.
See Dombrowski v. Pfister,
.
See Miller v. Nationwide Life Ins. Co.,
. At worst, we should not consider RTM’s arguments at all, given that it repeatedly failed to respond to the city’s requests for abstention in its summary judgment motions.
.
See O’Neill v. Coughlan,
