MEMORANDUM OPINION
This case involves satellite carriers’ facial challenge to the constitutionality of the copyright license created by the Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act of 1999 and the license’s “must carry” provisions under the First and Fifth Amendments to the Constitution. In essence, the satellite carriers assert that the “must carry” provisions of the new copyright license infringe upon carriers’ First Amendment right to control program content and effect a “taking” of property in violation of the Fifth Amendment because the carriers are required to carry certain stations in a given market if the carriers want to take advantage of the copyright license in that market.
The specific issues before the Court are whether Plaintiffs have pled a cause of action that (1) the Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act of 1999 (“SHVIA” or “Act”), on its face, violates satellite carriers’ First Amendment rights; (2) Congress has exceeded its authority in promulgating SHVIA; (3) SHVIA effects a taking of satellite carriers’ private property without just compensation in violation of the Fifth Amendment Takings Clause; and (4) SHVIA deprives satellite carriers of their property without due process in violation of the Fifth Amendment Due Process Clause.
The problem that led Congress to pass SHVIA was that, for the most part, satellite carriers did not transmit local television stations as a part of their basic satellite packages unless they secured permission from broadcasters or secured copyright licenses to retransmit the works of copyright holders. In practical terms, a satellite home subscriber could use their satellite dish to receive premium programs like Home Box Office (“HBO”) programs, but the home viewer could not use their satellite dish to receive local news, and local independent and public programming. Home viewers were required to switch their televisions to local stations via antenna or cable television. This dual technology problem created an undesirable limitation on the home viewer’s access to local television programs. This situation also created pressure on the home viewer to opt against satellite television, and to select cable television options, or to ignore the advances in technology and rely upon traditional broadcast free television.
As the spectrum of satellite programs expanded nationally, the limit on access to local news and programming inhibited the wide flow of information to television home viewers. Congress enacted SHVIA in response to the growing concern about the future of free television and the promotion of competition, and in recognition that the Copyright Act might have been impeding development of the satellite broadcast medium and local programming.
*809 The satellite carrier plaintiffs welcome the grant of a copyright license to retransmit the copyrighted works of others without having to pay royalties, but they object to the Act’s requirement that, as a condition to carrying a single station in a geographic market area royalty-free, the satellite carriers “must carry” (i.e., retransmit) all local television stations in that geographic area upon request of the local station. Plaintiffs assert that the must-carry provisions are unconstitutional. The satellite carrier plaintiffs’ constitutional objections, while substantial, are not well taken.
The Court holds that the Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act of 1999 is constitutional and does not in any way violate the First and Fifth Amendment rights of satellite carriers. Moreover, the Act is a proper exercise of Congress’ plenary powers over copyright and Congress’ power to promote the free and full exchange of information over the broadcast spectrum. In considering the satellite earners’ First Amendment claims, the Court holds first that SHVIA is subject to review using intermediate scrutiny. Next, the Court finds that the must-carry provisions do not violate Plaintiffs’ First Amendment rights because (1) neither the provisions’ language nor their purpose are content-based; (2) the provisions are within the authority granted to the Government under the Copyright Clause; (8) the must-carry provisions further important governmental interests that are unrelated to the suppression of free expression; and (4) any incidental restriction on satellite carriers’ First Amendment freedoms is no greater than necessary to further the Government’s interests. With respect to the satellite carriers’ Fifth Amendment claims, the Court holds that SHVIA does not effect a taking of satellite carriers’ property because the carriers may choose to accept or decline a free copyright license to retransmit the local programs of any given market. Satellite carriers decide whether to incur the must-carry obligations because the obligations travel with the optional copyright license into various markets. Moreover, SHVIA’s copyright license has the potential to expand the value of satellite carriers’ property. Finally, the Court holds that the must-carry regulations do not violate due process because Congress has acted within its authority in promulgating the must-carry provisions, and the regulations do not strip satellite carriers’ property of all of its value.
For these reasons, the Court does not sustain the satellite carriers’ constitutional objections to SHVIA. Therefore, the Court grants Defendants’ motions to dismiss for the reasons detailed below.
I. BACKGROUND
Plaintiff Satellite Broadcasting and Communications Association of America (“SBCA”) is a nonprofit national trade association that represents all segments of the satellite industry. SBCA represents the interests of its members in protecting and expanding the use of satellite technology. Plaintiffs DIRECTV Enterprises, Inc., DIRECTV Operations, Inc., DIRECTV, Inc. (collectively “DIRECTV”), and Plaintiffs Echostar Communications Corporation (“ECC”) and ECC’s wholly-owned subsidiary Dish Ltd., d/b/a “The Dish Network” (collectively “Echostar”) are competing satellite carriers that provide satellite television service to subscribers over direct broadcasting satellite (“DBS”) systems. Satellite carriers are unlike cable system operators. Because satellites are a national medium, satellite carriers do not compete with local stations for local advertising revenues. Also, unlike most cable operators, satellite carriers do not enjoy a monopoly over service in *810 their service territory. Satellite carriers compete with each other and with cable systems nationwide.
In 1999, Congress enacted the Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act of 1999. Prior to enactment of the Act, direct-to-home satellite carriers such as Plaintiffs could not, with limited exceptions, include local television stations in the programming packages they offered subscribers. Congress had amended the Copyright Act in 1976 to grant owners of copyrights in audiovisual work, such as television programs, the exclusive right to perform or display the copyrighted work publicly, or to authorize a public display of the work. See 17 U.S.C. §§ 106(4), (5). Therefore, satellite carriers focused on broadcasting specialized premium channels and not local television stations’ programming because retransmitting local programming required carriers to obtain copyright licenses. SHVIA created a new statutory copyright license, permitting, but not requiring, satellite carriers to engage in satellite retransmission of a local television station signal into the station’s own designated market area (“DMA”) without the need to identify and obtain authorization from copyright owners to retransmit the owners’ programs. See 17 U.S.C. § 122.
The SHVIA license is similar to the cable systems operators’ license created in the Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992, 47 U.S.C. §§ 534, 535 (1992). In passing SHVIA, Congress sought to enable satellite carriers to compete more effectively with cable television operators in the marketplace by granting carriers a statutory copyright license similar to the license that had long been afforded cable operators. At the same time, Congress placed a “shall carry” (i.e., “must-carry”) requirement on any satellite carrier employing the satellite copyright license.
Specifically, 47 U.S.C. § 338(a) requires a satellite carrier that chooses to carry one local broadcast television station to carry every local broadcast station within that market (DMA) upon request. The requirement is analogous to the requirement accompanying cable operators’ statutory license that the operators carry local broadcast television stations within the operators’ local markets. However, the must-carry requirements associated with the satellite carriers’ license to transmit local television stations was drafted with modifications in recognition of the practical differences between the cable industry and the satellite industry. SHVIA’s carriage obligations, unlike cable’s corresponding “must-carry” requirement, apply only on a market-by-market basis; thus, unlike cable must-carry requirements, SHVIA allows satellite carriers to choose whether to incur must-carry obligations in a particular market in exchange for the benefits of the statutory license. In addition, carriers have no obligation to carry more than one local station in a market affiliated with a particular network. Furthermore, carriers may elect not to take advantage of the license created by SHVIA and, instead, may contract with stations or copyright owners individually in order to narrow the selection of local stations a carrier transmits. Also, SHVIA does not impose the same channel-positioning restrictions imposed on cable operators.
The satellite earners’ must-carry requirement takes effect on January 1, 2002. Plaintiffs have filed a Complaint seeking declaratory judgment that the must-carry provisions of § 338 are beyond Congress’ constitutional authority under the Copyright Clause, violate the Speech and Press Clauses of the First Amendment, and violate .the Takings and Due Process Clauses of the Fifth Amendment. Plaintiffs also seek to enjoin several federal defendants *811 from promulgating any rules or regulations or taking any other steps to enforce the allegedly unconstitutional aspects of § 338. The federal defendants that Plaintiffs seek to enjoin are the Federal Communications Commission (“FCC”), the FCC’s Chairman (William E. Kennard), the FCC’s Commissioners (Susan Ness, Harold Furehtgott-Roth, Michael K. Powell, and Gloria Tristani), the United States Copyright Office of the Library of Congress, the Librarian of the Library of Congress (James H. Billington), and the Registrar of Copyrights (Marybeth Peters). 1 The Court has granted the request of several organizations to intervene as defendants. 2 Defendants move to dismiss Plaintiffs’ Complaint.
II. PARTIES’ CONTENTIONS
A. Federal and Intervenor Defendants
As an initial matter, Defendants assert that Plaintiffs’ as-applied claims are not ripe for judicial review.
See Abbott Laboratories v. Gardner,
Furthermore, Defendants argue, the hardship prong of the ripeness test disfavors a ruling on Plaintiffs’ claims at this time. Defendants contend that because the carriage obligations do not become effective until January 1, 2002, Plaintiffs will not suffer any “immediate, direct, and significant” hardship if the Court withholds consideration of their claims.
See West
*812
Virginia Highlands Conservancy, Inc. v. Babbitt,
As to the merits of Plaintiffs’ claims, Defendants argue that SHVIA is within the scope of Congress’ power under Article I of the Constitution. Defendants assert that Congress has broad authority under the Copyright Clause to define the scope of the rights of copyright holders.
See Sony Corp. of America v. Universal City Studios,
Defendants also argue that Congress acted within its powers under the Commerce Clause in regulating satellite transmissions of television broadcasts in a way that promotes competition.
See United States v. Lopez,
Defendants also assert that SHVIA complies with the requirements of the First Amendment. Defendants emphasize that SHVIA
permits
satellite carriers to retransmit local broadcast television programming. The carriers have the choice to accept or to decline to accept the benefits of the license created by SHVIA. Thus, Defendants argue that there is no state interference with a protected activity here, only the encouragement of an alternative activity consonant with legislative policy (i.e., carrying local television stations).
See National Endowment for the Arts v. Finley,
Defendants also argue that, even if SHVIA does burden Plaintiffs’ speech under the First Amendment, SHVIA does not violate the First Amendment because it contains content-neutral provisions that are narrowly tailored to further the substantial government interests of promoting parity between the cable and satellite industries for purposes of competition, making diverse voices available to viewers, and protecting consumers against rate increases. Defendants argue that SHVIA must-carry provisions are content-neutral, like the cable “must-carry” rules at issue in
Turner Broad. Sys. v. FCC (Turner I),
Defendants contend that, due to their neutral content and intent, as with the cable “must-carry” rules, the satellite must-carry provisions should be upheld because they advance an important governmental interest and do not burden substantially more speech than necessary.
See Turner Broad. Sys. v. FCC (Turner II),
Defendants also argue that SHVIA does not effect a taking of Plaintiffs’ property without just compensation. Defendants assert that the Act does not effect a
per se
taking because there is no permanent physical occupation of Plaintiffs’ property that deprives Plaintiffs of the rights to possess, use, and dispose of their property.
See Loretto v. Teleprompter Manhattan CATV Corp.,
Finally, Defendants assert that SHVIA does not violate the due process requirements of the Fifth Amendment. There are three elements to a cognizable substantive due process claim involving property: (1) “the claimant must establish possession of a property interest,” (2) “state action must deprive the claimant of the property interest,” and (3) “the state’s action must fall ‘so far beyond the outer limits of legitimate government action that no process could cure the deficiency.’”
Front Royal and Warren County Indus. Park Corp. v. Town of Front Royal, Va.,
B. Plaintiffs
As an initial matter, Plaintiffs argue that their facial challenge to the constitutionality of SHVIA is ripe for judicial resolution. Plaintiffs emphasize that, contrary to Defendants’ assertion, Plaintiffs do not bring an “as-applied” challenge to the must-carry provisions of SHVIA; they bring a facial challenge to the statute. Plaintiffs argue that 47 U.S.C. § 338(a) includes a speech- and speaker-based restriction that burdens and chills the exercise of Plaintiffs’ editorial discretion, irrespective of the technological limits on Plaintiffs’ channel capacity. Plaintiffs contend that this “purely legal” issue is fit for judicial review.
See Thomas v. Union Carbide
*815
Agric. Prods.,
In opposition to Defendants’ substantive arguments, Plaintiffs assert that satellite carriers exercise editorial discretion in their selection of programs. Plaintiffs argue that carriers create their own speech, such as on-air programming guides, to inform consumers of available programming. Plaintiffs assert that satellite carriers do not have unlimited channel capacity to carry all of the video programming, music programming, and other programming currently available. Therefore, Plaintiffs argue, SHVIA’s must-carry requirement necessarily limits which programming satellite carriers can provide, and where, thus infringing on carriers’ editorial discretion. The channel capacity consumed by local stations already prevents satellite carriers from carrying any local stations in numerous mid-sized and smaller local markets.
Plaintiffs assert that even if satellite carriers did have unlimited capacity, they would nonetheless exercise discretion in selecting which local stations to include, based on popularity of programming among consumers, the carrier’s programming goals, whether the local stations are duplicative of national and regional programming already offered, and other eon-siderations. 3 Plaintiff argues that the must-carry provisions impose the onerous burden of compelling Plaintiff to display numerous unwanted copyrighted works contrary to Plaintiffs’ will.
Essentially, Plaintiffs argue that, under
Miami Herald Publishing Co. v. Tornillo,
the Government cannot require Plaintiffs to carry speakers unwanted by Plaintiffs but favored by the Government (e.g., independent broadcasters) as the price for carrying other desired speakers (e.g., network affiliated broadcasters).
Plaintiffs further assert that the § 122 copyright license cannot be justified as a government subsidy to the carriers. When Congress exercises its spending power, it may refrain from supporting certain speech or constitutionally-protected activity.
See Rust,
Plaintiffs contend further that the § 122 license is not a subsidy because it is not a benefit granted by the Government, but by copyright holders. Plaintiffs assert that Government funds, property, exemptions, or jobs are not provided. Instead, § 122 manipulates one private party to support another. In addition, Plaintiffs argue that the § 122 license is not a subsidy because it is not really a benefit at all. The permission to retransmit copyrighted works is *817 really the removal of an obstacle of the Government’s own creation.
Plaintiffs also argue that the Court should strictly scrutinize SHVIA’s must-cany requirement because a satellite carrier exercises First Amendment discretion in making its channel selections. Plaintiffs assert that they can be analogized to cable operators, whom the Supreme Court has held are entitled to the freedom of speech and press provisions of the First Amendment for performing the same activities and exercising the same discretion as do satellite carriers.
See Turner I,
Finally, Plaintiffs contend that an additional basis for evaluating SHVIA under strict scrutiny is the fact that the Act serves no rational purpose.
III. DISCUSSION
A. Ripeness
Plaintiffs’ claims are ripe for review. Defendants argue that Plaintiffs’ “as-applied” claims are not ripe for judicial review. However, Plaintiffs do not bring an as-applied challenge to the must-carry provisions of SHVIA; they bring a facial challenge. (PL Opp’n to Mot. to Dismiss at 3.) Plaintiffs argue that the must-carry provisions are speech-triggered in structure, and, as such, they are speech- and speaker-based restrictions ■ on Plaintiffs’ freedom of expression. The Court finds that the issue of SHVIA’s facial constitutionality is ripe for judicial review because it will not be clarified by further factual development.
See Thomas v. Union Carbide,
B. Standard of Review
A Court reviewing a motion to dismiss a complaint brought under Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure accepts the complaint’s factual allegations as true and views the allegations in a light most favorable to the non-moving party.
See Mylan Labs., Inc. v. Matkari,
Upon consideration of a federal statute or regulation, the Court begins with a presumption of constitutionality.
See Heller v. Doe,
Accompanying the presumption of constitutionality, the Court must determine what level of scrutiny to give the Congressional act at issue here. Different levels are applicable depending on the nature of a statute’s restriction, if any, upon speech.
C. Intermediate Scrutiny Applies
1. SHVIA is Contentr-Neutral
SHVIA is not subject to the highest level of scrutiny because neither its language nor its purpose is content-based. Regulations that are content-based on their face must survive the stringent mode of constitutional analysis termed “strict scrutiny.”
See United States v. Playboy Entertainment Group, Inc.,
Plaintiffs cannot demonstrate that the statute on its face, or by its purpose, is unconstitutional, such that compelling satellite carriers to comply with the statute violates the carriers’ First Amendment rights. First, the language of the statute does not evidence any content-based distinctions. The statute provides:
In general: Subject to limitations of paragraph (2), each satellite carrier providing, under section 122 of title 17, United States Code, secondary transmissions to subscribers located within the local market of a television broadcast station of a primary transmission made by that station shall carry upon request the signals of all television broadcast stations located within that local market, subject to section 325(b).
47 U.S.C. § 338(a). Nowhere in the language of this “must-carry” provision is there any indication as to the kinds of local stations that must be carried, or the nature of the programs the local stations must carry. In fact, Plaintiffs have acknowledged that the language of the statute does not reflect a content preference:
THE COURT: [I am asking] whether there is some particular message here that is favored over the other. Is there any reference to ideas or views in the statute?
MR. COOPER: No, your Honor, there is not.
(Tr. of Mot. to Dismiss Hearing at 40 (Feb. 9, 2001) (interchange between Plaintiffs’ counsel and the Court).) The
Timer I
Court has noted that a law is content-based which, by its terms, distinguishes favored speech from disfavored speech on the basis of the ideas or views expressed.
The Supreme Court has already found a statute analogous to SHVIA’s must-carry rules to be neutral on its face.
See, e.g., Turner I,
First, the Supreme Court in
Turner I
found that cable operators were engaged in speech.
See id.
at 636,
Similarly, the SHVIA must-carry provisions contain nothing that restrict, penalize, or burden based on the views, programs, or stations that a satellite carrier might select. In the same manner as cable, satellite transmission constitutes speech.
See id.
at 636,
Under SHVIA’s must-carry provisions, satellite carriers must choose which television station, or “speaker,” the carrier will carry. Plaintiffs argue that they will have to carry the “speech” of more local stations than they would otherwise choose. However, a differential burden on speakers alone is not sufficient to raise First Anendment concerns.
See Leathers,
The Supreme Court has held explicitly that
Miami Herald
does not govern a context such as this one: “Unlike the access rules struck down in
[Miami Her
ald], the must-carry rules are content neutral in application. They are
not
activated by any particular message spoken by cable operators and thus exact no content-based penalty.”
Turner I,
SHVIA’s must-carry provisions are not content-based by their purpose. Both the House and Senate have stated numerous times and in numerous ways that the purposes behind SHVIA are to promote competition in television and to protect customers from rate increases, see H.R. Rep. No. 106-79 (Part I), at 11 (1999); S. Rep. No. 106-51 at 2 (1999), to promote healthy competition in industry, see id.; H.R. Rep. No. 106-464, at 93-94 (stating SHVIA would eliminate any competitive disadvantage of satellite carriers, while creating parity and enhanced competition between satellite and cable television in the provision of local television broadcast stations), and to maintain free over-the-air television, see H.R. Rep. No. 106-464, at 101. Without the limitations on the use of copyrighted works and the retransmission of local stations, Congress feared that satellite carriers’ market share would increase, and local broadcasters would be prevented from reaching local viewers. These are not viewpoint-related concerns.
Plaintiffs argue that Congress imposed the must-carry conditions of § 338 in order to manipulate the editorial decisions and policies of satellite carriers. As support, Plaintiffs cite the House of Representatives Report: “The Conference Committee is concerned that, absent must-carry obligations, satellite carriers would carry the major network affiliates and a few other signals.” H.R. Rep. No. 106-464, at 101. However, a mere incidental effect on the carriers’ editorial decisions does not amount to content-based regulation of speech. The Supreme Court has noted that the principal inquiry in determining whether legislation is content neutral is to examine “whether the government has adopted a regulation of speech because of [agreement or] disagreement with the message it conveys.”
Tuner I,
2. Rational Basis Test Does Not Apply
Intervenor Defendants argue that the Court should review SHVIA using rational basis scrutiny, not intermediate scrutiny; but rational basis scrutiny is not the appropriate analytical scheme under which to review SHVIA’s must-carry provisions. The Supreme Court has already held that provisions such as those at issue here regulate speech.
See Turner I,
Intervenor-Defendants argue that the Red Lion rational basis test is appropriate here because, like traditional broadcasting, satellite transmission is subject to physical limitations. However, there is no evidence before the Court to support Intervenor-Defendants’ assertion. Noting the lack of factual development of this point, Plaintiffs have emphasized that their challenge to the must-carry provisions is a facial challenge, not an as-applied challenge. 6 (PI. *824 Opp’n to Mot. to Dismiss at 3.) Therefore, this Court holds that rational basis analysis is not appropriate here, and, instead, analyzes the satellite must-carry provisions using intermediate scrutiny.
D. SHVIA’s Must-Carry Survives Intermediate Scrutiny
Regulations that are content-neutral but place an incidental burden on speech are subject to intermediate scrutiny.
See O’Brien,
1. Congressional Authority
Plaintiffs argue that Congress exceeds its enumerated powers when it conditions the use of a statutory copyright license on the display of copyrighted works carried on local stations. This Court holds that Congress has acted well within its powers under the Copyright Clause of the United States Constitution in promulgating the limited license under SHVTA.
See
U.S. Const., art. I, § 8, cl. 8. The Copyright Clause states that “Congress shall have Power To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries.”
Id.
In large part, Plaintiffs take issue with the existence of the copyright laws themselves. (Pl. Opp. at 11, 21-24.) In essence, Plaintiffs argue that it is wrong of Congress to impose restrictions on the ability of broadcasters to “retransmit any broadcast programming in any market without anyone’s permission,” and then condition lifting those restrictions on satellite carriers’ willingness to support the public policy of providing a multiplicity of voices and exposure to viewers. (Id) However, Congress has the power to use copyright,
or exceptions thereto,
to promote particular types of work, or works by particular authors, in preference to other types of works or authors.
See Goldstein,
The satellite must-carry provisions are a prime example of an exception to copyright that is used to promote the works of potentially unrecognized copyright owners. The majority of stations obtain revenues through advertising. In turn, stations compensate copyright owners who provide programming to the stations. The wider the viewer base, the more revenues in advertising a station may receive. Therefore, popular shows (e.g., “Dateline,” “Friends,” or “Oprah”) can make more money from advertisements purchased to run during their breaks than unpopular shows. Consequently, stations may not elect to broadcast less popular shows, or programs that interest only a small audience (e.g., a local audience). By permitting all local stations in a particular market to be retransmitted, Congress enables copyrighted works displayed on non-network affiliates to be promoted, in addition to those on network affiliates. Thereby, copyright owners who display their work on local stations have an opportunity to receive compensation for their work, and, at the same time, to provide a diversity of views out of “mainstream” popularity. See H.R. Rep. No. 106-464, at 101 (stating that a purpose of SHVIA is to satisfy the strong public interest in providing viewers with information from a variety of sources); H.R. Rep. No. 106-6, at 4 (1999) (stating that local television stations need advertising revenue to continue to broadcast the public affairs and news programming for people in their communities). The SHVIA § 122 license and § 338 must-carry provisions further these goals. Therefore, Congress has acted within its authority in promulgating SHVIA.
2. Important Governmental Interest
The Supreme Court has held that the same interests that form the basis for
*826
SHVIA are “important governmental interests.”
See Turner I,
Plaintiffs argue that the interests articulated above cannot support a finding that SHVIA’s must-carry provisions are constitutional because these interests are different from those forming the basis of the Copyright Act. The Copyright Act’s purpose is to encourage creative freedoms, while the must-carry provisions seek to create fair competition. Plaintiffs’ arguments miss the mark. The Copyright Act, and SHVIA’s § 122 license creating an exception to the Copyright Act’s effects, need not be based on identical interests. The key inquiry is whether Congress has a substantial interest in creating the exception to the Copyright Act. As detailed above, Congress does have substantial and important interests in creating the § 122 license. Moreover, these interests are related to Congress’ Copyright power, because fair competition encourages creative freedom. Television writers and producers need a variety of outlets for their broadcast works. Local television, and public and educational television outlets are vital sources for the wide dissemination of creative works. National networks and premium cable channels form additional outlets for television writers and *827 producers. SHVIA’s license advances television writers and producers’ creative freedoms by affording these artists’ works wider dissemination over multiple broadcast avenues.
3. Interests Unrelated to Free Expression
Under the
O’Brien
intermediate scrutiny test, a governmental interest that a regulation seeks to further must not only be substantial, it must also be “unrelated to the suppression of. free expression.”
O’Brien,
4. Sufficiently Narroivly Tailored
A determination that SHVIA seeks to further substantial government interests is not sufficient if SHVIA places an incidental restriction on alleged First Amendment freedoms greater than is essential to the furtherance of those interests.
See O’Brien,
The must-carry limitations on a satellite carrier’s receipt of the valuable, discretionary license does not unduly burden the carrier’s First Amendment rights because the viewpoints expressed by a carrier remain within the carrier’s control. First, given satellite’s role as a conduit for broadcast signals, there is little risk that satellite viewers would assume that the stations carried on a satellite system convey the ideas or messages endorsed by the satellite carrier.
See Turner I,
Notwithstanding the voluntary nature of the SHVIA license, Plaintiffs argue that the must-carry obligations are overly burdensome because carriers must sacrifice their editorial discretion. “[T]he doctrine of unconstitutional conditions limits the government’s ability to make [carriers] surrender constitutional rights even to obtain an advantage that could otherwise be withheld.”
Clifton v. Fed. Election Comm’n,
Furthermore, editorial discretion is preserved because it is an individual satellite carrier, not Congress, that decides whether the carrier will take advantage of the § 122 license, or opt to negotiate with individual owners of copyrighted works:
Rather than require carriage of stations in the manner of cable’s mandated duty, this Act allows a satellite carrier to choose whether to incur the must-carry obligation in a particular market in exchange for the benefits of the local statutory license.... Satellite carriers remain free to carry any programming for which they are able to acquire the property rights. The provisions of this Act allow carriers an easier and more inexpensive way to obtain the right to use the property of copyright holders when they retransmit signals from all of a market’s broadcast stations to subscribers in that market. The choice whether to retransmit those signals is made by carriers, not by the Congress.
H.R. Rep. No. 106-464, at 101. Although Plaintiffs argue that it is “wholly impractical” to negotiate individually with the holder of every copyrighted work aired by a local station, (PI. Opp. at 12), it is not impossible to negotiate individually. Plaintiffs may exercise the full range of their editorial discretion by opting not to take advantage of the § 122 license. Plaintiffs’ choice to conform to “the broadcast industry’s business practices” and avoid negotiating individually for copyright retransmission rights is Plaintiffs’ business decision.
(Id.
at 12 n. 4.) Therefore, foregoing the benefits of the § 122 license in the interest of their editorial discretion is not, as Plaintiffs describe, “a choice between exercising First Amendment rights and obtaining the benefit,”
Brooklyn Inst. of Arts & Sciences v. City of New York,
E. Congress has not Exceeded Authority
SHVIA creates a license, not a subsidy. Although Congress conceived of the SHVIA license as “a matter of legislative grace, in the nature of subsidies to satellite carriers,” H.R. Rep. No. 106-464, at 101, the SHVIA license is not a subsidy. The parties engage in an extensive debate about whether the license granted by § 122 is a subsidy. Defendants argue that a satellite carriers’ license to broadcast copyrighted works without obtaining permission from the owners of the copyrighted works is a benefit upon which Congress can place conditions. Plaintiffs argue that the SHVIA license is not a subsidy because subsidies are an exercise of Congress’ spending power, not its regulatory power. Plaintiffs argue further that, through SHVIA, Congress is regulating inappropriately to favor one type of speech over another. The Court finds that language used to define and describe a “subsidy” makes clear that the SHVIA license does not qualify. Legal and lay dictionaries define a subsidy as “a grant of money:”
Subsidy. A grant of money made by government in aid of the promoters of any enterprise, work, or improvement in which the government desires to participate, or which is considered a proper subject for government aid, because such purpose is likely to be of benefit to the public.
BlaCK’s Law Dictionary 1428 (6th ed.1990); see also Random House Webster’s College Dictionary 1306 (2000) (defining “subsidy” as: “1. a direct financial aid furnished by a government, as to a private commercial enterprise, an individual, or another government. 2. any grant or contribution of money”); The Amerioan Heritage Dictionary 1213 (2d College ed.1991) (defining “subsidy” as: “1. Monetary assistance granted by a government to a person or a private commercial enterprise. 2. Financial assistance ....”). In addition, Government subsidies come under the heading “Appropriation Accounting” and refer to sums “payable” in the United States Code. See 31 U.S.C.A. § 1501(a)(5) (1983) and accompanying Notes.
Section 122 of SHVIA does not grant a “subsidy” because it does not entail the grant of government funds, or other benefits obtained through the use of government funds (i.e., property, government-created jobs, etc.), to confer a benefit. See 17 U.S.C. § 122. Subsection 122(c) provides that satellite carriers regulated under § 122 do not have to pay royalty fees to copyright owners, but if this is considered a grant of money (i.e., by way of a payment exemption), the money savings are derived from the copyright owners, not from the Government. Absent § 122(c), satellite carriers would have to pay copyright owners to retransmit copyrighted works, not pay the Government. See id. (setting “limitations on [a copyright owner’s] exclusive rights”). Therefore, because § 122 does not amount to a benefit conferred through the expenditure of government funds, § 122 is not accurately characterized as a subsidy.
Section 122 is most accurately characterized as a license. A license is defined as “[t]he permission by competent authority to do an act which, without such permission, would be illegal, a trespass, a tort, or otherwise not allowable.” BlacK’s Law DiCtionary 920. Section 122 grants a li *830 cense because, without its provisions, a satellite carrier would not be permitted to retransmit copyrighted works without gaining permission from copyright owners or paying royalties. The Copyright Act would prohibit such transmission. Defendants treat the SHVIA benefit like a subsidy because § 122 grants a benefit that satellite carriers would not have otherwise, just as a subsidy does. However, licenses perform the same purpose. In addition, both can serve to increase competition by giving the entities in receipt of the subsidies or licenses an ability to challenge another force in the market (e.g., cable systems). Yet, simply because both subsidies and licenses enure a benefit does not mean they are one and the same.
Congress cannot make the receipt of a valuable government license contingent upon the recipient’s surrender of its First Amendment rights.
See Chesapeake & Potomac Tel.,
The must-carry conditions on use of the § 122 license are not unconstitutional because, as explained in great detail above, the must-carry provisions do not infringe on satellite carriers’ First Amendment rights. The SHVIA condition requiring carriers to carry all local stations in a DMA if the carrier chooses to carry one local station in a DMA is not based on the particular “speech” or “expression” of any local station. Therefore, in regulating through SHVIA, Congress is not attempting to influence or penalize speech.
Cf. Miami Herald,
Moreover, Congress cannot be said to “deny” a benefit on the basis of
*831
satellite carriers’ speech choices because carriers are not required to take advantage of the § 122 license. If carriers choose not to invoke the copyright license created by § 122, they “remain free to carry any programming for which they are able to acquire the property rights.” H.R. Rep. No. 106-646, at 101. The need to obtain property rights or pay royalties to copyright owners on an individual basis absent utilization of the § 122 license does not violate the carriers’ First Amendment rights, because there is no First Amendment right to make unrestricted commercial use of the copyrighted works of others.
See, e.g., Harper & Row, Publishers v. Nation Enters.,
F. Remaining Causes of Action
Aside from their First Amendment argument, Plaintiffs also argue that SHVIA's must-carry provisions effect a taking of their property, and that the must-carry provisions violate due process. Plaintiffs assert that § 338 grants local television broadcast stations an easement authorizing them to interconnect with, and permanently physically occupy, a portion of a satellite carrier’s real property, facilities, and spectrum. (Compl-¶ 10.) Plaintiffs contend that this “federally-mandated transfer of private property from one person to another, without substantial or legitimate public purpose,” violates the Takings and Due Process Clauses of the Fifth Amendment. (Id. ¶¶ 10, 91-97, 100.) The Court rejects both of these arguments, but addresses both briefly.
1. SHVIA Does Not Effect a Taking
SHVIA does not effect a
per se
or a regulatory taking. A
per se
taking occurs when a regulation compels an actual physical invasion of one’s property.
See Front Royal,
Also, SHVIA’s must-carry provisions do not effect a regulatory taking. A regulatory taking occurs if regulations deny a property owner all economically beneficial or productive use of the property.
See Agins v. City of Tiburon,
2. SHVIA Conforms with Due Process
Plaintiffs argue that the must-carry provisions of § 338 violate the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment. However, the statute provides no factual basis for Plaintiffs’ allegations. Plaintiffs must demonstrate three elements to plead a cognizable due process claim: (1) that the claimant possesses an interest in property, (2) that state action deprives the claimant of the property interest, and (3) that the state’s action falls “so far beyond the outer limits of legitimate government action that no process could cure the deficiency.”
Front Royal,
V. CONCLUSION
Thus, for the reasons stated above, the Court finds that the Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act of 1999 is constitutional and dismisses Plaintiffs’ Complaint. SHVIA does not violate the First Amendment because it does not regulate imper-missibly satellite carriers’ speech, and it promotes free television and the wide dissemination of programming. Furthermore, there is no First Amendment violation because Congress has the authority to grant a copyright license to retransmit local television programs. In addition, SHVIA does not effect a Fifth Amendment “taking” because (1) SHVIA has the potential to expand the value of satellite carriers’ property; (2) exposure to the must-carry obligations is voluntary; and (3) satellite carriers retain control over their property by deciding whether to accept a copyright license to retransmit local television stations and thereby incur the must-carry obligations in local markets. Finally, the must-carry regulations do not violate due process because Congress has acted within its authority in granting a copyright license with accompanying must-carry provisions, and the must-carry provisions do not strip the satellite carriers’ property of its value.
Accordingly, for the reasons stated above, Defendants’ motions to dismiss are GRANTED.
The Clerk is directed to forward a copy of this Memorandum Opinion to counsel of record.
ORDER
THIS MATTER is before the Court on the Motion to Dismiss filed by Defendants the Federal Communications Commission (“FCC”), the FCC’s Chairman (William E. Kennard), the FCC’s Commissioners (Susan Ness, Harold Furchtgott-Roth, Michael K. Powell, and Gloria Tristani), the United States Copyright Office of the Library of Congress, the Librarian of the Library of Congress (James H. Billington), and the Registrar of Copyrights (Mary-beth Peters), 1 and on the Motion to Dismiss filed by Intervenor-Defendants the Association of America’s Public Television Stations, the Public Broadcasting Service, and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
*834 This case involves satellite carriers’ facial challenge to the constitutionality of the copyright license created by the Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act of 1999 and the license’s “must carry” provisions under the First and Fifth Amendments to the Constitution. In essence, the satellite carriers assert that the “must carry” provisions of the new copyright license infringe upon carriers’ First Amendment right to control program content and effect a “taking” of property in violation of the Fifth Amendment because the carriers are required to carry certain stations in a given market if the carriers want to take advantage of the copyright license in that market.
The specific issues before the Court are whether Plaintiffs have pled a cause of action that (1) the Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act of 1999 (“SHVIA” or “Act”), on its face, violates satellite carriers’ First Amendment rights; (2) Congress has exceeded its authority in promulgating SHVIA; (3) SHVIA effects a taking of satellite carriers’ private property without just compensation in violation of the Fifth Amendment Takings Clause; and (4) SHVIA deprives satellite carriers of their property without due process in violation of the Fifth Amendment Due Process Clause.
For the reasons set forth in the accompanying Memorandum Opinion, the Court holds that the SHVIA is constitutional and does not in any way violate the First and Fifth Amendment rights of satellite carriers. Moreover, the Act is a proper exercise of Congress’ plenary powers over copyright and Congress’ power to promote the free and full exchange of information over the broadcast spectrum. In considering the satellite carriers’ First Amendment claims, the Court holds first that SHVIA is subject to review using intermediate scrutiny. Next, the Court finds that the must-carry provisions do not violate Plaintiffs’ First Amendment rights because (1) neither the provisions’ language nor their purpose are content-based; (2) the provisions are within the authority granted to the Government under the Copyright Clause; (3) the must-carry provisions further important governmental interests that are unrelated to the suppression of free expression; and (4) any incidental restriction on satellite carriers’ First Amendment freedoms is no greater than necessary to further the Government’s interests. With respect to the satellite carriers’ Fifth Amendment claims, the Court holds that SHVIA does not effect a taking of satellite carriers’ property because the carriers may choose to accept or decline a free copyright license to retransmit the local programs of any given market. Satellite carriers decide whether to incur the must-carry obligations because the obligations travel with the optional copyright license into various markets. Moreover, SHVIA’s copyright license has the potential to expand the value of satellite carriers’ property. Finally, the Court holds that the must-carry regulations do not violate due process because Congress has acted within its authority in promulgating the must-carry provisions, and the regulations do not strip satellite carriers’ property of all of its value.
For these reasons, the Court does not sustain the satellite carriers’ constitutional objections to SHVIA. Accordingly, it is hereby
ORDERED that Defendants’ motions to dismiss are GRANTED.
The Clerk is directed to forward a copy of this Order to counsel of record.
Notes
. The individuals that Plaintiffs seek to enjoin Plaintiffs sue in their official capacities.
. The parties that have intervened as defendants are the National Association of Broadcasters, Association of Local Television Stations, Inc., Univision Network Limited Partnership, Univision Television Group, Association of America’s Public Television Stations, Public Broadcasting Service, and Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
. Arguably, the carrier's decisions could reflect the image the carrier wants to project, etc. (e.g., a more family-oriented carrier in some markets, or a more “hip” carrier in others).
. A satellite carrier’s point-to-point connection is not physical. Instead, the connection is maintained through a satellite television subscriber's antenna or "dish.” (Compl^23.) Yet, the dish operates like cable systems' point-to-point optical fibers or cables. Only cable subscribers connected to a cable operator's optical fiber or cable could receive programming transmitted by the operator. Similarly, only satellite subscribers that have programmed dishes can receive programming transmitted by the satellite carrier. By contrast, any television owner within a broadcast station’s range can receive the programming that traditional broadcast stations radiate, without having a contractual relationship with the broadcast station.
See Turner I,
. SHVIA's regulations are arguably less burdensome than cable's because they do not contain a strict requirement that satellite carriers carry local stations. Satellite carriers become obligated under SHVIA’s musl-cariy provisions only it they choose to cariy a station in a particular market area. See 47 U.S.C. § 338(a).
. Plaintiffs previously placed a motion for summary judgment before the Court, arguing that SHVIA's must-carry provisions infringed Plaintiffs First Amendment rights in light of *824 satellite's limited channel capacity. Plaintiffs asserted that the must-carry provisions would narrow satellite carriers' speech choices because the majority of carriers "speech” space would be commanded by local television stations. However, Plaintiffs have withdrawn this argument and have asserted only facial unconstitutionality in their opposition to Defendants' motions to dismiss.
. The individual Defendants are parties to this suit in their official capacities.
