OPINION
Plaintiffs Vivid Entertainment, LLC; Califa Productions, Inc.; Kayden Kross; and Logan Pierce are organizations and individuals who make adult films in Los Angeles County. The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, whose director is a defendant here, sent Plaintiffs a letter stating its intention to enforce the voter-initiated County of Los Angeles Safer Sex in the Adult Film Industry Act (2012) (commonly known as Measure B) (codified at Los Angeles County, Cal., Code tit. 11, div. 1, ch. 11.39, and amending tit. 22, div. 1, ch. 22.56.1925). Measure B imposes a permitting system and additional production obligations on the makers of adult films, including a requirement that performers wear condoms in certain contexts. Plaintiffs sued for declaratory and injunctive relief, arguing that Measure B burdens their freedom of expression in violation of the First Amendment. Defendant Los Angeles County answered that, although it would enforce the ordinance unless ordered by a court not to, it did not intend to defend Measure B because it took a “position of neutrality” with respect to the ordinance’s constitutionality. The official proponents of Measure B intervened to defend it.
The district court issued a preliminary injunction forbidding Defendants from enforcing Measure B’s fee-setting provision, which gave Defendants discretion to set fees for permits; a provision that allowed warrantless searches by county health offi-eers of any location suspected of producing adult films; and the broad permit modification, suspension, and revocation process. The court denied preliminary injunctive relief, though, for much of the ordinance, including its condom and permitting requirements. Plaintiffs appeal the district court’s decision nоt to enjoin Measure B in full. 1 We affirm.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The citizens of Los Angeles County enacted Measure B in November 2012 by means of the initiative process; it became law on December 14, 2012. The text of the ordinance declared that it was passed in response to documentation by the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health of the widespread transmission of sexually transmitted infections among workers in the adult film industry. Under Measure B, producers of adult films 2 must obtain a newly designated “public health permit” before shooting an adult film in Los Angeles County.
Under Measure B as enacted, to obtain such a permit, producers of adult films must pay a fee, provide the Department with proof that certain employees have completed a county-approved training program concerning blood-bornе pathogens, display the permit while filming, post a notice at the film site that the use of condoms is required, report to the Department any changes in the permitted business, and comply with all applicable laws, including title 8, section 5193 of the California Code of Regulations. Measure B
In addition to providing for monetary and criminal penalties, Measure B allows enforcement of the permitting requirements through a surprise inspection by a Los Angeles County health officer at “any location suspected of conducting any activity regulated by this chapter.” Id. 11.39.130. “[F]or purposes of enforcing this chapter,” the health officer “may issue notices and impose fines therein and take possession of any sample, photograph, record or other evidence, including any documents bearing upon adult film producer’s compliance with the provision of the chapter.” Id. Measure B authorizes the district attorney to bring a civil enforcement action for injunctive relief against any producer who fails to cooperate with the health officer. Id. 11.39.140.
On the day that Measure B took effect, Defendant Department of Public Health mailed Plaintiffs a letter notifying them of the new ordinance and stating that it had established provisional permitting fees of $2,000 to $2,500 per year. Plaintiffs then filed this action challenging Measure B as facially unconstitutional under the First Amendment. 3 Plaintiffs allege that Measure B’s permitting scheme and its condom requirement operate as prior restraints on Plaintiffs’ ability to create expression, in the form of adult films, which is protected by the First Amendment.
Over Plaintiffs’ objection, the district court allowed supporters of Measure B to intervene. Following the Supreme Court’s decision in
Hollingsworth v. Perry
, — U.S. -,
The district court granted in part and denied in part Intervenors’ motion to dismiss, and granted in part and denied in part Plaintiffs’ request for a preliminary injunction. In granting preliminary in-junctive relief, the district court severed one chapter of Measure B in its entirety and severed portions of three other chapters. Appendix A contains Measure B and shows the parts that the district court enjoined and severed.
Plaintiffs timely appeal the denial of complete preliminary injunctive relief. 4 They argue that the enjoined provisions are not properly severable, so the likely invalidity of some parts of the ordinance requires enjoining the entire ordinance. In the alternative, Plaintiffs argue that the district court erred in denying рreliminary injunctive relief with respect to Measure B’s requirements that producers: (1) acquire a permit before beginning production on an adult film; (2) demonstrate that employees have completed a county-approved training program concerning blood-borne pathogens as a condition precedent to issuance of the permit; and (3) require performers to use condoms “during any acts of vaginal or anal sexual intercourse.”
We review for abuse of discretion denial of a preliminary injunction.
Alliance for the Wild Rockies v. Cottrell,
DISCUSSION
A. Jurisdiction
Citing Perry, Plaintiffs argue that we lack jurisdiction over this appeal, because Intervenors lack Article III standing. We disagree with their reading of Perry and with their contention that Intervenors must have standing for this appeal to proceed.
The Supreme Court has held that a party must have Article III standing both to initiate an action and to seek review on appeal.
Arizonans for Official English v. Arizona,
To the extent that Plaintiffs contend that the district court erred in granting intervention, we cannot consider their challenge. An order allowing intervention under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 24(a) is not a final order and is not an interlocutory order appealable by statute, so an appeal on that issue is premature until entry of final judgment.
Alsea Valley Alliance v. Dep’t of Commerce,
B. Severability
Plaintiffs next urge that, having held that they are likely to succeed on the merits with respect to some provisions of Measure B, the district court had to enjoin operation of the entire ordinance whether or not the remainder independently satisfies the standards for injunctive relief. For the reasons that follow, we disagree.
Federal courts should avoid “judicial legislation” — that is, amending, rather than construing, statutory text — out of respect for the separation-of-powers principle that only legislatures ought to make positive law.
United States v. Nat’l Treasury Emps. Union,
Because a court may not use severability ás a fig leaf for judicial legislation, courts have fashioned limits on when a statute may be severed.
See Yu Cong Eng v. Trinidad,
California law directs courts to consider first the inclusion of a severability clause in the legislation.
Cal. Redev. Ass’n v. Matosantos,
Measure B contains this severability clause:
If any provision of this Act, or part thereof, is for any reason held to be invalid or unconstitutional, the remaining provisions shall not be affected, but shall remain in full force and effect, and to this end the provisions of the Act are severable.
Measure B § 8. Section 8 states clearly that the people, acting in their legislative capacity, intended any provision and any part of a provision, if invalid or unconstitutional, to be severed from the ordinance. The district court thus properly held that Measure B’s severability clause establishes a рresumption of severability.
Next, California law directs courts to “consider three additional criteria: The invalid provision must be grammatically, functionally, and volitionally separable.”
Cal. Redev. Ass’n,
“Grammatical separability, also known as mechanical separability, depends on whether the invalid parts can be removed as a whole without affecting the wording or coherence of what remains.”
Id.
(internal quotation marks omitted). “[T]he* ‘grammatical’ component of the test for severance is met by the severability clause considered in conjunction with the separate and discrete provisions of [the statute].”
Barlow v. Davis,
Here, Plaintiffs contend that the district court abused its from the definition of an adult film. Specifically, the district court struck part of 11.39.010 of Measure B as follows:
An “adult film” is defined as any film, video, multimedia or other representation of sexual intercourse in which performers actually engage in eraly vaginal, or anal penetration, including, but not limited to, penetration by a penisy-fingery or-inanimate object; — or-al-contact with the anus or genitals of another performer; and/or any other sexual activity that may result in the transmission of blood and/or аny other.potentially infectious materials.
In large part, as can be seen, the district court severed distinct clauses. The district court also severed some individual words but, grammatically, they are understood by the reader to include complete clauses. For example, the compound clause “engage in oral, vaginal, or anal penetration” means — and easily could have been drafted to say — “engage in oral penetration, engage in vaginal penetration, or engage in anal penetration.” For that reason, the district court did, in fact, sever only distinct provisions from Measure B, and that severance did not alter the meaning of the remaining text in any way. California courts have long held that parts of a compound clause are grammaticаlly severable from a statute if their omission would not affect the meaning of the remaining text.
Ex parte Blaney,
Our final consideration, volitional severability, “depends on whether the remainder [of the statute] is complete in itself and would have been adopted by the legislative body had [it] foreseen the partial invalidation of the statute.”
Santa Barbara Sch. Dist.,
The district court preserved the requirements that producers of adult films in Los Angeles County obtain permits, train employees about the sexual transmission of disease, and require performers to wear condoms when engaged in vaginal or anal intercourse. The district court also preserved the enforcement mechanisms of fines and criminal penalties. As the court correctly noted, the “Findings and Declaration” section of the initiative emphasizes (1) a growing public concern over the spread of HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted infections in the adult film industry; (2) the importance of safe sex practices, and the use of condoms in partiсular, in limiting the spread of HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted infections; and (3) a failure to enforce current state laws mandating the use of condoms by performers in adult films. Measure B § 2. Thus, the Declaration demonstrates that the public’s attention was focused primarily on heightening enforcement of the condom requirement. That is, even in the absence of the severed segments, the remaining provisions centrally address the voters’ stated concerns. The district court permissibly concluded that the condom and permitting requirements are volitionally
Plaintiffs counter that the fee provisions ' are not volitionally severable, because the voters would not have passed Measure B as an “unfunded mandate.” But the Declaration contained in Measure B says nothing about money or revenue neutrality. Rather, the text demonstrates that the core purpose of the initiative “was presented to the electorate as a distinct aim, separate and apart from the measure’s funding mandate.”
McMahan v. City of San Francisco,
In sum, the district court did not abuse its discretion in granting preliminary in-junctive relief with respect to only certain parts of Measure B, while allowing enforcement of other provisions as severable. We now turn to Plaintiffs’ assertion that, even if severance is permissible, the district court erred in denying preliminary injunctive relief with respect to additional parts of the ordinance: the condom mandate and the permitting rеquirement.
C. Denial of Preliminary Injunctive Relief
In deciding whether a preliminary injunction should issue, a district court must consider four factors: (1) whether the plaintiff has shown a likelihood of success on the merits; (2) whether the plaintiff has shown a likelihood of irreparable harm in the absence of preliminary relief; (3) whether the balance of equities tips in the plaintiffs favor; and (4) whether preliminary relief is in the public interest:
Winter v. Natural Res. Def. Council, Inc.,
Courts asked to issue preliminary injunctions based on First Amendment grounds face an inherent tension: the moving party, bears the burden of showing likely success on the merits ... and yet within that merits determination the government bears the burden of justifying its speech-restrictive law_
Therefore, in the First Amendment context, the moving party bears the initial burden of making a colorable claim that its First Amendment rights have been infringed, ... at which point the burden shifts to the govеrnment to justify the restriction.
Thalheimer v. City of San Diego,
a First Amendment claim “certainly raises the specter” of irreparable harm and public interest considerations, proving the likelihood of such a claim is not enough to satisfy Winter. Stormans, [Inc. v. Selecky,586 F.3d 1109 ,] 1138 [(9th Cir.2009)]; see also Klein v. City of San Clemente,584 F.3d 1196 , 1207 (9th Cir.2009) (even where the plaintiff was likely to succeed on the merits of his First Amendment claim, he “must also demonstrate that he is likely to suffer irreparable injury in the absence of a preliminary injunction, and that the balance of equities and the public interest tip in his favor”) (citing Winter,555 U.S. at 20 ,129 S.Ct. 365 ).
DISH Network Corp. v. FCC,
1. Condom. Mandate
The district court held that Plaintiffs are unlikely to succeed on the merits of their First Amendment challenge to
As a threshold matter, Plaintiffs argue that the district court applied the wrong standard — intermediate scrutiny — and that the condom mandate should be subject to strict scrutiny. We disagree.
The Supreme Court has recognized that nearly all regulation of the adult entertainment industry is content based.
See City of Los Angeles v. Alameda Books, Inc.,
We assume, but need not and do not decide, that Measure B’s condom mandate is a content-based regulation of speech. Nonetheless, Measure B regulates sexual speech in order to prevent the secondary effects of sexually transmitted infections, thus falling within the Alameda Books exception. Plaintiffs argue that, despite that exception, the district court should have applied strict scrutiny because the condom mandate amounts to a complete ban on their protected expression.
As an initial matter, Plaintiffs’ argument presupposes that their relevant expression for First Amendment purposes is the depiction of condomless sex. But “simply to define what is being banned as the ‘message’ is to assume the conclusion.”
City of Erie v. Pap’s A.M.,
In light of those cases, we must examine more carefully whether Plaintiffs’ relevant expression is the depiction of condomless sex. Plaintiffs submitted declarations stating that condomless sex differs from sex generally because condoms remind the audience about real-world concerns such as pregnancy and disease. Under this view, films depicting condomless sex convey a particular message about sex in a world without those risks. The Supreme Court has cautioned, however, that “ ‘[i]t is possible to find some kernel of expression in almost every activity a person undertakes-for example, walking down the street or meeting one’s friends at a shopping mall-but such a kernel is not sufficient to bring the activity within the protection of the First Amendment.’ ”
Barnes v. Glen Theatre, Inc.,
To determine whether conduct is protected by the First Amendment, we ask not only whether someone intended to convey a particular message through that conduct, but also whether there is a “grеat” likelihood “that the message would be understood by those who viewed it.”
Spence v. Washington,
With Plaintiffs’ expression so defined, we conclude that strict scrutiny is inappropriate because the condom mandate does not ban the
relevant
expression completely. Rather, it imposes a de minimis restriction. In
Pap’s A.M.,
the Supreme Court held that the pasties-and-G-string requirement did not violate the First Amendment because, even if the ban “has some minimal effect on the
erotic message
by muting that portion of the expression that occurs when the last stitch is dropped,” that effect was de minimis.
Many of our sister circuits have relied on
Pap’s AM.
in upholding de minimis restrictions on speech using intermediate
A similar analysis applies to the condom mandate. The requirement that actors in adult films wear condoms while engaging in sexual intercourse might have “some minimal effect” on a film’s erotic message, but that effect is certainly no greater than the effect of pasties and G-strings on the erotic message of nude dancing. In light of Pap’s A.M. and the other precedent cited above, we conclude that the restriction on expression in this case is de minim-is. And a de minimis restriction on expression is, by definition, not a complete ban on expression, and so does not trigger strict scrutiny. Accordingly, the mandate is subject to intermediate scrutiny.
The district court properly exercised its discretion in concluding that the condom requiremеnt likely would survive intermediate scrutiny. “A statute will survive intermediate scrutiny if it: (1) is designed to serve a substantial government interest; (2) is narrowly tailored to serve that interest; and (3) does not unreasonably limit alternative avenues of communication.”
Gammoh,
The purpose-of Measure B is twofold: (1) to decrease the spread of sexually transmitted infections among performers within the adult film industry, (2) thereby stemming the transmission of sexually transmitted infections to the general population among whom the performers dwell. Plaintiffs do not contest that the government has a substantial interest in preventing certain secondary effects of the adult film industry, including the spread of sexually transmitted infections.
See Rubin v. Coors Brewing Co.,
In order to be narrowly tailored for purposes of intermediate scrutiny, the regulation “ ‘need not be the least restrictive or the least intrusive means’ available to achieve the government’s legitimate interests.”
Berger v. City of Seattle,
Plaintiffs’ narrow-tailoring argument rests largely on the proposition that Measure B duplicates a voluntary testing and monitoring scheme that already is in place in the industry. The adult film industry and its trade associations have established the Adult Protection Health & Safety Service, which has implemented a program whereby performers are tested, either monthly or more frequently, and the test results are made available in a database. In addition, if the Safety Service receives notification of a positive test result, it must inform the Department of Public Health. Adult film producers and performers have access to the database in order to verify that performers have been tested and that those tests have been negative. Certain employers require their performers, by contract, to submit to testing at various intervals. For example, Plaintiff Kross’ contract requires testing every 15 days, Plaintiff Pierce is tested every 14 days, and all of Plaintiff Vivid Entertainment’s performers are tested at least once every 28 days.
On the day of production, Plaintiff Vivid Entertainment requires each performer to provide identification, and each performer’s test history is drawn from the Safety Service database. Plaintiff Vivid Entertainment allows participation in the production only by performers with a current test status and a negative result. Plaintiffs Kross and Pierce declare that they undertake this screening process befоre every explicit scene in which they perform, and both Plaintiffs Kross and Pierce declare that they would not take part in an explicit scene if the screening measures were not in place. Plaintiffs also provided testimony from industry officials that this testing system is effective.
The district court considered Plaintiffs’ evidence and weighed it against contradictory evidence that the industry’s testing scheme is ineffective. In particular, the district court considered a 2009 letter from the County of Los Angeles Department of Public Health to support the conclusion that Measure B, passed in 2012, was designed to address the spread of disease and is narrowly tailored to that end. 7 The Findings and Declaration section of Measure B refers specifically to documentation by the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health of the spread of HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted infections in the adult film industry. Measure B § 2.
In the 2009 letter, the Department of Public Health reported that its analysis of 2008 data showed a markedly higher rate of sexually transmitted infections for performers within the adult film industry, 20%, than for the general public, 2.4%, and even for the county area with the highest rate of infection, 4.5%. The Department of Public Health also found that 20.2% of performers in adult films diagnosed with an infection were reinfected within one year. Further, the Department of Public Health opined that the data with respect to infection rates were likely underestimat
The district court weighed all the evidence before it and, finding the 2009 lеtter especially compelling, held that Plaintiffs were unlikely to succeed on the merits in their First Amendment challenge to the condom mandate. In so doing, the district court did not abuse its discretion. 8
On appeal, Plaintiffs also argue that Measure B’s condom mandate is not narrowly tailored, and is largely ineffective, because makers of adult films can produce films across county lines without having performers wear condoms. As an initial matter, it bears noting that Plaintiffs offered evidence before the district court that Measure B has drastically reduced the number of adult films produced by the industry because the productions, which depend heavily on the “regular” film industry’s infrastructure in Los Angeles County, cannot be moved elsewhere. That evidence undermines Plaintiffs’ new contention that Measure B is ineffective because of the adult film industry’s ready mobility.
But, more importantly, Plaintiffs’ argument overstates the standard for narrow tailoring, which simply requires that the regulation “promote[] a substantial government interest that would be achieved less effectively absent the regulation.”
Colacurcio,
Finally, Plaintiffs contend that Measure B’s condom mandate unconstitutionally forecloses alternative channels of communication. As we noted in
Gammoh,
“[t]his inquiry is analogous” to our analysis of whether the condom mandate is a complete ban on expression.
2. Permitting System
The portions of Measure B’s permitting system left in place by the district court also survive constitutional scrutiny.
9
Plaintiffs first argue that the
CONCLUSION
We have jurisdiction over this appeal whether or not Intervenors have demonstrated Article III standing. The district court did not abuse its discretion in holding that the invalid portions of Measure B are severable. Nor did the district court abuse its discretion in denying a preliminary injunction with respect to the condom and permitting provisions of Measure B.
AFFIRMED.
APPENDIX A
The district court did not provide a line-edited version of its severance analysis. For purposes of clarity, we provide the attached interрretation of the district court’s analysis.
Notes
. No one challenges the partial grant of preliminary injunctive relief.
. Measure B defines “producer of adult film” as “any person or entity that produces, finances, or directs, adult films for commercial purposes.” Measure B, § 4, pt. 11.39.075 (all citations herein are to parts of section 4 unless otherwise noted).
. Plaintiffs raised other theories as well, but they are not at issue in this appeal.
. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1).
. Plaintiffs rely on
Acosta v. City of Costa Mesa,
In
Acosta,
the severability clause itself was narrow, providing that only "sections, paragraphs, clauses and phrases” were severable from the ordinance in question.
Id.
at 820. We interpreted that particularized list to prohibit, by inference, the severance of "individual words.”
Id.
As directed by California law, we read that narrow severability clause " 'in conjunction with the separate and discrete provisions of the text to determine whether the ‘grammatical component of the test for severance is met.' ”
Id.
(quoting
Barlow,
. We also note that even if the relevant expression were the depiction of condomless sex, Measure B still might warrant intermediate scrutiny. On its face, Measure B does not ban expression; it does not prohibit the
depiction
of condomless sex, but rather limits only the way the film is
produced.
In that way, Measure B's condom mandate is akin to the two-foot required distance between exotic dancers and patrons that we upheld in
Gam-moh,
which did not "ban any form of dance” or address the content of the dance.
. The district court properly relied on the letter because it is referred to in Measure B itself. Moreover, the letter is "not subject to reasonable dispute” because it “can be accurately and readily determined from sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned.” Fed.R.Evid. 201(b);
see Sachs v. Republic of Austria,
. That the condom mandate has a de minimis effect on expression also suppоrts the conclusion that the ordinance is narrowly tailored.
Cf. Sensations, Inc.,
. Plaintiffs also argue that the district court failed to conduct a narrow-tailoring analysis with respect to the permitting provisions. We reject their procedural objection for two reasons. First, the district court analyzed the merits of this issue, albeit in the context of considering the motion to dismiss. Second, because Measure B’s condom mandate, which the district court analyzed at length with specific reference to narrow tailoring^ is part of the permitting process, the court necessarily conducted a narrow-tailoring analysis of the permitting scheme as part of its consideration of the condom mandate.
