Defendant/Counterclaimant-appellant, the City of Aurora, appeals from the district" court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Plaintiff/Counterdefendant-appellee Z.J. Gifts. The district court invalidated a city zoning regulation requiring sexually oriented businesses to locate in industrially-zoned areas and enjoined its enforcement against Z.J. Gifts. Interpreting federal constitutional law, the district court held that the regulation was a content-based restriction of speech as applied to Z.J. Gifts’ retail business which sold and leased adult videos and magazines for off-site viewing only.
See Z.J. Gifts v. City of Aurora,
Background
In early 1993, Aurora city officials became concerned that the city lacked regulatory and enforcement mechanisms to minimize negative effects resulting from sexually-oriented businesses locating within city limits. In response, the city attorney’s office presented a draft ordinance regulating the operation and location of sexually-oriented businesses to the city council in September 1993.
In October 1993, Z.J. Gifts, a limited partnership, leased space in the Granada Park Shopping Center, located in a commercially-zoned area, and prepared the space for retail sales of adult novelties, magazines, and videos. After.applying for sales tax and business licenses, the shop, named “Christie’s,” opened for business on October 30,1994, and has since been in continual operation. Unlike other adult uses, such as adult theaters, peep shows, and nude dance clubs, Christie’s provides no on-site adult entertainment. The shop instead sells and rents adult materials to customers for viewing off premises.
After review of a thorough legislative record, deliberation and public hearings, the Aurora City Council enacted an ordinance regulating all sexually-oriented businesses, including adult bookstores, novelty shops and video stores, on December 13, 1994. The ordinance established comprehensive licensing, operating, and inspection requirements for sexually oriented businesses located within city limits. The ordinance further required sexually oriented businesses to locate in industrially-zoned areas, and prohibited them from locating within 1500 feet of churches, schools, residential districts or dwellings, public parks, and other sexually oriented businesses. See Aurora Mun.Code § 32.5-52; I Aplt.App. at 43-44.
Z.J. Gifts filed suit against the city, challenging the constitutionality of several provisions of the ordinance, including the zoning requirements. The city counterclaimed to enjoin Z.J. Gifts from operating Christie’s in violation of the ordinance. The city also sought a declaration that Christie’s operates in violation of the zoning provision of the ordinance and requested a permanent injunction barring Christie’s from operating in that location. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, and the district court granted Z.J. Gifts’ motion. The district court held that as applied, the zoning provision requiring Christie’s to locate within an industrially zoned area unconstitutionally infringed Z.J. Gifts’ free speech interests. Z.J. Gifts’ remaining claims for relief were dismissed as moot. The city appealed.
Discussion
Where First Amendment interests are implicated, this court is obligated to make an independent examination of the record in its entirety to ensure the challenged regulation does not improperly limit expressive interests.
See Revo v. Disciplinary Bd. of the Supreme Court,
We recognize that governmental limitations which limit expressive interests strike “[a]t the heart of the First Amendment.”
Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. v. FCC,
As an .initial matter, the district court reviewed Aurora’s ordinance as a content-based regulation of speech.
See Z.J. Gifts,
Content-based restrictions on speech, those which “suppress, disadvantage, or impose differential burdens upon speech because of its content,”
id.,
are subject to “the most exacting, scrutiny.”
Id.
Conversely, content-neutral regulations “pose a less substantial risk of excising certain ideas or viewpoints from the public dialogue” because they are unrelated to the content of speech.
Id.
Content-neutral regulations are accordingly subject to intermediate scrutiny.
See Clark v. Community for Creative Non-Violence,
The Supreme Court has long held that city zoning ordinances which place limits on the location of adult uses are valid exercises of the city’s police power.
See Young v. American Mini Theatres, Inc.,
The record clearly establishes Aurora’s purpose in enacting the ordinance: to regulate the harmful secondary effects of sexually oriented businesses. The preamble to the ordinance indicated the City’s intent to “protect[ ][its] citizens from increased crime; preserve! ] the quality of life, property values, and character of neighborhoods and businesses; deter! ] the spread of urban blight; and protect! ] against the spread of sexually transmitted diseases....” I Aplt. App. at 126;
see Renton,
Most importantly, we disagree that the ordinance’s content-neutrality is affected by the city’s reliance on studies utilizing slightly dissimilar businesses. As the Eighth Circuit noted in a case remarkably similar to this one, examining the similarity of the businesses utilized in the studies relied on to the businesses regulated in determining an ordinance’s content-neutrality “confuses distinct aspects of the
City of Renton
test.”
ILQ Investments, Inc. v. City of Rochester,
Given the uncontroverted sexual nature of Z.J. Gifts’ business, we are convinced the city has met its burden. The record indicates several of the studies examine the effects of adult businesses or sexually oriented businesses generally. Significantly, at least three of these studies examine the effects of adult bookstores on surrounding communities. 1 Although Z.J. Gifts argues and attempts to prove that all other adult bookstores provide some form of on-premises viewing of sexually explicit materials, see Aplee. Br. at 13, 16, 22, II Aplt.App. at 344 (Jackson aff.), we think the record fully supports the city’s regulation of sexually oriented businesses providing both on- and off-site viewing of sexually explicit materials.
*688
Properly analyzed as a content-neutral regulation, Aurora’s zoning ordinance survives constitutional scrutiny, and the city is entitled to relief, if the city can establish the ordinance is narrowly tailored to serve a significant governmental interest and leaves open ample alternative channels of communication.
See Renton,
Z.J. Gifts does not in any real sense question the substantiality of Aurora’s interests in preventing crime and disease, protecting property values, and preserving the quality of life of the city’s residents. Indeed, the district court recognized that the city had demonstrated “the legitimacy of its concern” regarding adult uses which provide on-site adult entertainment, but not to those which provide adult materials for off-site consumption.
See Z.J. Gifts,
To the extent Z.J. Gifts argues that the city has not “demonstrate[d] that the recited harms are real, not merely conjectural,”
Turner,
Similarly, Z.J. Gifts cannot dispute that Aurora’s ordinance allows for reasonable alternative avenues of communication. Sexually oriented businesses may locate within the city’s industrial zones, which comprise approximately 10.9 percent of the city’s area.
See
I Aplt.App. at 120. Approximately 3,200 acres of this land — fully 3.6 percent of the city’s total area — are located near existing water'and sewer services.
See id.
Thus, Z.J. Gifts is left with more land on which to relocate than was found to be adequate in
Renton
and its progeny.
See, e.g., Renton,
*689
Z. J. Gifts’ only remaining argument is that Aurora’s zoning provision is not narrowly tailored to further the interests asserted.
See Renton,
The district court derived its “least restrictive means” language from
O’Brien,
which stated that an incidental restriction on free speech should be “no greater than is essential to the furtherance of [the] interest.”
O’Brien,
This reading of O’Brien’s narrow tailoring inquiry harmonizes with that crafted by the Court in
Renton.
In regulating the harmful effects of sexually oriented businesses, the city need not address all the potential problems created by adult businesses at once.
See Renton,
The Court’s interpretation of the narrow tailoring prong in time, place and manner analyses recognizes the judiciary’s limited role in reviewing content-neutral limitations on speech. “It is not [the court’s] function to appraise the wisdom of [the city’s] decision[.]”
Renton,
In invalidating Aurora’s reasonable legislative choices, the district court exceeded the limits imposed by
Renton
and
O’Brien.
Unlike other zoning provisions held unconstitutional, Aurora’s ordinance does not attempt to regulate businesses which have a minimal or nonexistent connection to sexually oriented entertainment.
See, e.g., Schad v. Borough of Mount Ephraim,
*690
adult oriented videos in total video rental inventory);
World Wide Video v. City of Tukwila,
On this record, Aurora’s ordinance satisfies Renton and O’Brien, as it promotes the city’s well-established interest in regulating harmful secondary effects caused by sexually oriented businesses reasonably similar to those studied by other municipalities without unnecessarily regulating dissimilar businesses. We accordingly REVERSE the district court’s judgment. On REMAND, the district court shall vacate its judgment and conduct further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. See I Aplt.App. at 158 (summary of Garden Grove, California land use study reviewing impact of adult businesses); id. at 161 (summary of Austin, Texas land use study reviewing crime rates, property values, and trade area characteristics for areas surrounding adult bookstore, theater, and topless bar); id. at 162 (summary of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma study examining effect of adult bookstore on property values and crime); id. at 163 (summary of Indianapolis, Indiana study examining the effects of sexually oriented businesses on crime rates and property values in surrounding areas; report concludes that "even relatively ... passive use[s] such as ... adult bookstore[s] ... have a serious negative effect on their immediate environs.”); id. at 166 (summary of Minneapolis, Minnesota land use report concluding "concentrations of sexually oriented businesses have [a] significant relationship to higher crime and lower property values.”); id. at 168 (summary of Whittier, California study of effects of sex,ually oriented businesses, including two adult bookstores, on surrounding residential and commercial areas); id. at 169 (summary of Amarillo, Texas study of'adult businesses, including “bookstores ... with publications featuring nudity and explicit sexual activities," concluding that such businesses lead to increases in street crime).
