OPINION
Rose Wilcher, a producer of public access programming, claims that Time Warner Cable rules for submitting public access programs violate her First Amend *518 ment right of free speech. The specific regulations she challenges are a $25 fee for each tape submitted for broadcast on Time Warner’s public access channel and a requirement that the person submitting the program live in the geographic area receiving Time Warner’s Akron, Ohio-based cable service. Because Wilcher is unable to show that the actions of Time Warner, a private party, constitute state action or that the regulations approved by the City violate her First Amendment rights, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of her complaint.
I.
Pursuant to its franchise agreement with the municipal government of Akron, Ohio, Time Warner Cable Northeast is obligated to provide at least one community service channel, also known as a “public access channel,” that is available to broadcast programming submitted by members of the community. In the agreement, Time Warner reserved the right to promulgate rules and regulations for the channel; but before new rules can become effective, they are “subject to approval of the Akron Public Utilities Commissioner, whose approval shall not be unreasonably withheld.” J.A. 13.
From the agreement’s inception in 1983 until 2004, Time Warner did not charge a fee when members of the public submitted tapes to be broadcast on the public access channel, nor did the cable company pre-screen the tapes before airing them. According to Wilcher’s complaint, in 1999, citizens began complaining about sexually explicit material on the public access channel. 1
In December 2004, Time Warner proposed new regulations for the public access channel. Most notably, an administration fee of $25 per program would apply to each tape submitted for broadcast and only residents of Akron and surrounding communities would be allowed to submit programs. Pursuant to the franchise agreement, Time Warner submitted the rule changes to the city. Since the city did not have an acting Public Utilities Commissioner, Mayor Don Plusquellie approved the new regulations on behalf of the city.
Rose Wilcher is a resident of Akron, who has been producing a substantial amount of programming for Time Warner’s public access channel since March 2000. (As of early 2005, Wilcher had reserved approximately 20 hours per week of broadcasting time on the Akron public access channel.) On April 1, 2005, the day the new regulations took effect, Wilcher applied for a Temporary Restraining Order to enjoin Time Warner from enforcing the $25 fee. After a telephone hearing, the district court denied the application, concluding that the fee was neutral on its face. Wilcher then moved for a preliminary injunction, which was the subject of a hearing on April 11, 2005. Following the hearing, the magistrate judge recommended denying the motion because Time Warner was not a state actor. The plaintiff did not object to the recommendation, and the district court adopted it.
In September 2005, Wilcher filed an amended complaint restating her First Amendment challenges to the $25 fee and residency requirement, and naming Time Warner, the city of Akron and Mayor Plus-quellic as defendants. In separate rulings, *519 the district court granted the motions of Time Warner and the city (including the mayor) to dismiss Wilcher’s claims because the complaint failed to allege facts showing state action. In granting the city’s motion, the court acknowledged that the city is a state actor, but held that the mere approval of Time Warner’s rule changes was not sufficient state action to trigger First Amendment scrutiny of the cable company’s actions.
Wilcher’s responses to the defendants’ motions to dismiss also asserted that the First Amendment should apply to the public access channel because it is a public forum. The district court did not specifically address this argument in its decisions, and Wilcher raises it again here.
II. State Action
It is undisputed that First Amendment protections are triggered only in the presence of state action. A private party, acting on its own, cannot ordinarily be said to deprive a citizen of her right to Free Speech. In pressing her claim against Time Warner, Wilcher is unable to cite any cases where a court has held a cable operator to be a state actor under the First Amendment or any other constitutional provision. Instead, she argues that Time Warner should be considered a state actor under the three-prong state action test employed by this court.
A private entity, such as Time Warner, can be held to constitutional standards “when its actions so approximate state action that they may be fairly attributable to the state.”
Lansing v. City of Memphis,
The public function test requires that “the private entity exercise powers which are traditionally exclusively reserved to the state, such as holding elections or eminent domain.”
Wolotsky v. Huhn,
To support this assertion, she cites a 1992 report showing a government official managing the public access channel in 12 out of 61 communities surveyed. The fact that a government official managed public access broadcasting in slightly less than 20% of communities surveyed fifteen years ago is not sufficient to meet the relatively stiff test applied by the Supreme Court in Metropolitan Edison. TV service is not a traditional service of local government. A service provided by a distinct minority of local governments cannot fairly be characterized as a function traditionally reserved to the state.
The state compulsion test requires that the state “exercise such coercive power or provide such significant encouragement, either overt or covert, that in law the choice of the private actor is deemed to be that of the state.”
Wolotsky,
Under the symbiotic relationship test, the action of a private party constitutes state action where “there is a sufficiently close nexus between the state and the challenged action of the regulated entity so that the action of the latter may be fairly treated as that of the state itself.”
Wolotsky,
The case law does not, however, support such a finding where, as here, the mayor simply approved a decision made by a private party per a contractual arrangement between the two.
Metropolitan Edison,
While our Court has never considered the question of state actor liability for a cable operator, the Second Circuit has held that a cable operator is not a state actor where it enacted regulations designed to eliminate indecent broadcasting on a leased access channel.
Loce v. Time Warner Entm’t Advance/Newhouse P’ship,
In dismissing Wilcher’s complaint against the city, the district court held that the city’s approval of Time Warner’s regulations did not constitute state action because of the city’s limited role in the process. We do not agree with the conclusion that such an explicit exercise of municipal power falls outside the orbit of the Fourteenth Amendment.
The district court’s finding that the city’s actions did not constitute state action was based on the Supreme Court’s holding in
Blum v. Yaretsky,
[O]ur precedents indicate that a State normally can be held responsible for a private decision only when it has exercised coercive power or has provided such significant encouragement, either overt or covert, that the choice must in law be deemed to be that of the State ... Mere approval of or acquiescence in the initiatives of a private party is not sufficient to justify holding the State responsible for those initiatives under the Fourteenth Amendment.
Id.
A close analysis of the facts in Blum suggests, however, that the holding in that case does not apply here! In Blum, a class of nursing home residents whose care was funded by a state-administered Medicaid program sued the state to stop their nursing homes from moving them to a less intensive level of care without the benefit of a hearing. The Supreme Court noted that the decision to move the patients was made exclusively by the doctors at the nursing homes and the state’s only role was to reduce the corresponding reimbursements to the nursing homes to reflect the reduced charges of the lowered level of care. The Court specifically noted that the federal regulations governing the Medicare reimbursement program did not afford the state any independent review of the doctors’ decisions. If the doctor recommended a patient be transferred, the state’s only role was to ensure that the recommendation was carried out. Where the state’s discretion is constrained in such a manner, the Supreme Court held that there was no state action.
Here, on the other hand, the city’s role in administering the public access channel was carefully spelled out in its contractual agreement with Time Warner. Instead of *522 granting Time Warner the discretion to administer the channel as it saw fit, the city specifically reserved the power to approve any changes Time Warner made to the rules governing the channel’s administration. Unlike the state officials in Blum, then, city officials reserved express power to review and overrule decisions made by Time Warner governing the public access channel.
It was under this contractual arrangement that the mayor approved the new regulations Time Warner proposed. In administering this oversight, the city is bound by constitutional constraints, just as it is in any exercise of government power. Since the district court’s reliance on Blum was in error, we proceed to city’s second argument, that even if its actions constituted state action, Wilcher’s complaint fails to state a claim under the First Amendment.
III. Standing
Wilcher claims that the new rules promulgated by Time Warner and approved by the city violate her First Amendment right of free speech. For the reasons that follow, we hold that Wilcher does not have standing to challenge the residency requirement.
In order to have standing to challenge government action, a plaintiff must satisfy three requirements: (1) injury in fact; (2) a causal connection between the injury and the challenged conduct; and (3) the likelihood that the injury will be “redressed by a favorable decision.”
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
One of the regulations that Wil-cher challenges states that tapes for broadcast on Time Warner’s public access channel may only be submitted by residents of Akron, Barberton, Cuyahoga Falls, Modadore, Munroe Falls, and Wads-worth Township. J.A. 75. According to Wilcher’s first amended complaint, she resides at 704 Copley Road, Akron, Ohio, a residence that would permit her to submit tapes for the public access channel. Because the regulation does not prohibit Wil-cher from submitting tapes for broadcast, she has suffered no injury in fact from this rule and, therefore, cannot establish standing to challenge it.
IV. First Amendment Claim Against City
Whether we characterize the public access channel as a “public forum” (those places “which by long tradition or by government fiat have been devoted to assembly and debate,”
Perry Educ. Ass’n v. Perry Local Educators’ Ass’n,
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. Time Warner denies that the regulations were promulgated in response to the complaints about sexually explicit content on the public access channel. Since this court is reviewing the District Court's grant of a motion to dismiss, the plaintiff's allegations are taken as true.
. Leased access stations allow programmers to purchase air time from the cable operator *521 for commercial broadcasting. Like public access channels, they are open to anyone, and are controlled by the local cable operator.
. For a comprehensive discussion of the definitional difficulties underlying the "public forum” doctrines, see Tribe, American Constitutional Law 986-1010 (2nd ed.1988).
