This case raises several First Amendment issues, including one in which the circuits are substantially divided: namely, the extent .to which prompt judicial review must be assured in adult-business licensing cases. Plaintiff Z.J. Gifts D-4, L.L.C. (“ZJ”) brought an action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 challenging the City of Littleton’s (“City’s” or “Littleton’s”) adult business ordinance as unconstitutional, seeking declaratory and injunctive relief, attorney’s fees, and damages. The district court granted summary judgment to the City. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and we reverse in part and affirm in part.
I
In 1993, the City passed an ordinance requiring businesses that specialize in adult entertainment or merchandise to obtain licenses, and restricting those businesses to certain areas of Littleton. Before passing its ordinance, the City Council heard testimony and reviewed reports from other cities concerning deleterious effects of adult businesses on property values and on crime rates.
In the fall of 1999, ZJ opened its store, known as Christal’s, on South Broadway in Littleton. Prior to the opening of Chris-tal’s, the City informed the owner of the property on which Christal’s was located that adult businesses were not permitted at this South Broadway location. -In late August 1999 — shortly before Christal’s opened — ZJ filed a § 1983 suit against the City seeking monetary, declaratory, and injunctive relief. ZJ’s complaint alleged that Littleton’s ordinance was unconstitutional because, among other things, it infringed ZJ’s First Amendment rights. ZJ also alleged that it did not intend to operate an “adult business establishment” as defined in Littleton’s ordinance. (1 Appellant’s App. at 11.)
On cross-motions .for summary judgment, the district court ruled in favor of the City, concluding that ZJ was covered by Littleton’s ordinance and that the ordinance was, in its entirety, constitutional. After the district court’s decision in this case and during the briefing for this appeal, the City amended its ordinance, clarifying certain corporate disclosure requirements and changing an age restriction for adult businesses that do not offer live entertainment. Littleton, Colo., Ordinance 13 (2001) (codified at Littleton, Colo., City Code § 3-14-2, -5, -8, -16 (2002)).
II
Both as originally enacted and as amended, Littleton’s ordinance .has two primary functions: (1) it requires all adult businesses within Littleton to obtain licenses to operate within the City’s borders, and (2) it restricts those businesses to certain sections of the City and requires that they, not locate within a minimum distance of other specified sites.
Among the adult businesses covered by Littleton’s ordinance, Christal’s would most likely qualify as an “adult bookstore, adult novelty store, or adult video store.” Littleton, Colo., City Code § 3-14-2. A commercial establishment falls into this category if, as judged by percentage of stock-in-trade, revenue, or advertising, it is primarily devoted to the sale of materials that are characterized by the depiction or description of “specified sexual activities” *1225 or “specified anatomical areas,” regardless of whether the establishment has other business purposes. Id. “Specified anatomical areas” are further defined as: “(A) Less than completely and opaquely covered human genitals, pubic region, buttocks, anus or female breasts below a point immediately above the top of the areolae; or (B) Human male genitals in a discernibly turgid state, even if completely and opaquely covered.” Id. “Specified sexual activities” are defined to include masturbation, fondling of the genitals and other specified areas, excretory functions, human genitals in a state of “sexual stimulation, arousal or tumescence,” and “normal or perverted” sex acts. Id.
No adult business covered by Littleton’s ordinance may operate within five-hundred feet of a church, school, child-care facility, public park, massage parlor regulated by local ordinances, or community correctional facility. Id. § 3-14-3. Adult businesses also may not operate within one-thousand feet of each other or a massage parlor regulated by state law. Id. In addition, multiple adult businesses may not operate within the same structure. Id.
Under Littleton’s ordinance, operation of an adult business within the City requires a license. Among other things, a license application must indicate or provide: names of all owners, managers, and employees of the business; information about whether the applicant has had an adult-business license denied, revoked, or suspended by any jurisdiction; an indication whether the applicant has adult-business licenses from other jurisdictions; the address, driver’s license number, and social security number of the applicant and all owners, managers, and employees; a floor plan for the proposed business; a written statement by the City’s Zoning Officer that the proposed location is in compliance with the ordinance; and a statement of whether an owner, manager, or employee of the business has been convicted of specified criminal acts. 1 Id. § 3-14-5. Certain specified persons must also be fingerprinted and photographed by the Police Department. Id.
After an application has been submitted, the City Clerk has thirty days to approve or deny the license. Id. § 3-14-8. The Clerk may deny an application for one or more specified reasons, including: the applicant is under twenty-one years old; the applicant has made a false statement on the application; the applicant or any owner has had an adult-business license revoked or suspended within Colorado in the past year; the applicant has operated an adult business deemed to be a public nuisance in the past year; a corporate applicant is not in good standing or authorized to conduct business in Colorado; the applicant is overdue in any city taxes, fees, fines, or penalties assessed in relation to an adult business; the applicant has failed to obtain the required saies-tax license; or the applicant has been convicted of specified criminal acts. Id. Specified criminal acts for the purposes of the ordinance are defined as: “Sexual crimes against children, sexual abuse, rape or crimes connected with another adult business, including distribution of obscenity, prostitution, pandering or tax violation.” Id. § 3-14-2.
If the clerk denies the application, the applicant then has twenty days to appeal the denial to the City Manager, 2 who must hold a hearing within thirty days. Id. *1226 § 3-14-8. If that appeal is denied, the applicant may seek review in state court pursuant to Colorado Rule of Civil Procedure 106(a)(4). Id.
Licenses are issued for one-year terms and may be renewed only by filing a renewal application. Id. §§ 3-14-9, -10. Licenses may be suspended for one or more specified grounds. Id. § 3-14-11. Suspension or revocation may only occur after a hearing. before the. City Manager and may be appealed to state court. Id. Finally, under the amended ordinance, all adult businesses in Littleton that do not provide live entertainment are required to restrict entrance to individuals who are eighteen or older. 3 Id. § 3-14-16.
Ill
We initially determine whether there is an Article III case or controversy before us.
Essence, Inc. v. City of Fed. Heights,
A
Standing usually requires that the plaintiff assert an injury to himself, rather than injuries to third parties not before the court. However, this rule is not strictly enforced in the context of facial challenges to laws as violative of the First Amendment, even though a facial challenge to the validity of a statute necessarily entails a challenge to the statute as applied to third parties besides the plaintiff:
In the area of freedom of expression it is well established that one has standing to challenge a statute on the ground that it delegates overly broad licensing discretion to an administrative office, whether or not his conduct could be proscribed by a properly drawn statute, and whether or not he applied for a license.
Freedman v. Maryland,
Littleton’s ordinances include within their purview sexually explicit speech, and the City does not contest that this speech is protected by the First Amendment. ZJ’s challenge to Littleton’s licensing system is based both on a claim that the City vests too much discretion in licensing officials in granting or denying a license, and that the system creates a risk of delay in granting or denying a license. Thus, ZJ has standing to bring a facial challenge to the licensing system on these two grounds.
It is true that the overbreadth doctrine discussed above “does not eliminate the need for the plaintiff to demonstrate its own cognizable injury in fact.”
Nat’l Council for Improved Health v. Shalala,
ZJ’s business depends in part on its ability to sell materials that are protected by the First Amendment. ZJ has alleged in its complaint that the City views it as an adult business that is in violation of the licensing requirements of the ordinance, and it has also presented a letter from the City denying ZJ’s sales-tax license application because ZJ’s business “may be categorized as an adult business.” (3 Appellant’s App. at 450.) ZJ has thus, adequately shown that, at least from the City’s perspective, its business is proscribed by the ordinance.
Finally, the City has proceeded with a civil complaint in state court against ZJ for violation of the ordinance based on ZJ’s failure to apply for an adult-business license and ZJ’s operation of an adult business without a license.
4
While ZJ’s sales-tax license application was denied and a civil complaint was brought in state court only after ZJ’s federal complaint was filed, these events nonetheless are evidence that when ZJ filed its lawsuit there was “a credible threat of prosecution” under Littleton’s ordinance and that the threat of prosecution continues.
Babbitt,
*1228 B
ZJ also has standing to challenge the location requirements in Littleton’s ordinance. Both parties agree that ZJ’s business is located on a site in which adult businesses are not permitted under the ordinance. Based on the location of ZJ’s business, the City has refused to grant ZJ a sales-tax license, and the City’s complaint in state court is based in part on the location of ZJ’s business. This is sufficient evidence for ZJ to meet the injury-in-fact requirement. By enacting and enforcing its ordinance, the City brought about ZJ’s injury, and injunctive and declaratory relief, if granted by this court, would redress ZJ’s injury.
C
ZJ has challenged the provisions in Littleton’s ordinance that require the City to reject adult-business license applications when the applicant has been convicted of specified past criminal acts. ZJ has never alleged that these restrictions would apply to any of the owners or operators of ZJ’s business. ZJ therefore has not even argued that it might be affected by these provisions in Littleton’s ordinance, and accordingly it does not have standing to challenge these provisions.
See FW/PBS,
ZJ also attacks the ordinance’s license revocation and suspension provisions. ZJ, however, has never obtained a license from the City, nor has it indicated that it plans to obtain a license. Instead, ZJ stated in its complaint that it “does not intend to operate an adult entertainment establishment in a B-2 zone.” (1 Appellant’s App. at 11.) ZJ has neither alleged nor provided any evidence that the licensing suspension or revocation proceedings will apply to it. As it is “pure conjecture,”
Essence,
D
ZJ decries as overly vague- the ordinance’s definition of an “adult bookstore, adult novelty store, or adult video store” as a business that “devotes a significant or substantial portion” of its floor space, inventory, or advertising to adult materials, or that obtains “a significant or substantial portion” of its revenue from those materials. Littleton, Colo. City Code § 3-14-2.
*1229
In the First Amendment context, the Supreme Court has determined that a plaintiff
may
have standing to challenge a statute as overly vague with respect to third parties
even if
the suspect statute is “unquestionably applicable” to the plaintiff.
Young v. Am. Mini Theatres, Inc.,
Nevertheless, as the Court in
Young
explained, “if the statute’s deterrent effect on legitimate expression is not both ‘real and substantial,’ and if the statute is ‘readily subject to a narrowing construction by the state courts,’ the litigant is not permitted to assert the rights of third parties.”
Id.
at 60,
In
Young,
the Court concluded that the ordinance in question did not have a “real and substantial” deterrent effect on legitimate expression because “there is surely a less vital interest in the uninhibited exhibition of material that is on the borderline between pornography and artistic expression than in the free dissemination of ideas of social and political significance.”
Id.
at 61,
As to the second issue raised by
Young
— whether the ordinance is readily subject to a narrowing construction — we note that language similar to the “significant or substantial” language used in this ordinance has been interpreted previously by state courts in a sufficiently narrow manner to avoid constitutional problems. A common method of narrowing construction has been to develop a percentage that will act as a guide as to what constitutes “significant or substantial.”
See, e.g., Dandy Co. v. Civil City of South Bend,
In short, we agree with the district court that ZJ “does not have standing to challenge the constitutionality of [Littleton’s ordinance] under the void for vagueness doctrine.” (3 Appellant’s App. at 561.)
E
Finally, Littleton’s ordinance as originally enacted prohibited individuals under twenty-one years of age from being licensees, owners, managers, employees, or customers of an adult business. ZJ, argues that it is unconstitutional to restrict individuals between the ages of eighteen and twenty-one from entering or working in its business. We need not address ZJ’s challenge to the age restrictions, however, because the City has amended its ordinance to provide that anyone over eighteen years of age may enter an adult business that does not offer live entertainment. 7 Thus, ZJ’s challenge to the age restrictions on customers and employees of its business is now moot, and we will not address it.
IV
We now address ZJ’s claims that Little-ton’s licensing scheme grants excessive discretion to licensing officials.
Because this case was decided on summary judgment, we review the district court’s decision de novo, applying the same legal standard as the district court.
Simms v. Oklahoma ex rel. Dep’t of Mental Health & Substance Abuse Servs.,
165 F.3d-1321, 1326 (10th Cir.1999). Summary judgment is appropriate “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R.Civ.P. 56(c) para. 4. ‘When applying this standard, - we view the evidence and draw reasonable inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to the non-moving party.”
Simms,
Littleton’s ordinance requires all adult businesses to obtain a license prior to opening for business.. “Adult businesses,” as defined by the ordinance, include adult bookstores and adult video stores,
see
Lit-tleton, Colo., City Code § 3-14-2, that sell materials presumptively protected by the First Amendment.
8
A very similar licensing scheme was analyzed as a “prior restraint” on speech by six of the Justices of the Supreme Court in
FW/PBS,
Ordinarily, a duly enacted law is presumed to be constitutional. When a, law infringes on First Amendment rights, however, the proponent of the law bears the burden of establishing its constitutionality.
Wilson v. Stocker,
A
Standards for analysis of a prior restraint of speech were initially developed in the context of censorship schemes in
Freedman,
where the Supreme Court held that (1) a censorship scheme must assure the exhibitor, “by statute or authoritative, judicial construction, that the censor will, within a specified brief period, either issue a license or go to court to restrain showing the film”; (2) the censorship scheme must “assure a prompt final judicial decision” following a refusal to license; and (3) “the burden of proving that the film is unprotected expression must rest on the censor.”
In
FW/PBS,
a divided Supreme Court considered whether
Freedman’s
procedural requirements applied to adult-business licensing schemes as well. Two Justices joined Justice O’Connor in announcing the judgment of the Court that the Dallas licensing scheme at issue was unconstitutional.
FW/PBS,
Justice O’Connor then reiterated the
Freedman
procedural requirements:
*1232
Id.
at 227,
*1231 [T]he following three procedural safeguards were necessary to ensure expeditious decisionmaking by the motion picture censorship board: (1) any restraint prior to judicial review can be imposed only for a specified brief period during which the status quo must be' maintained; (2) expeditious judicial review of that decision must be available; and (3) the censor must bear the burden of going to court to suppress the speech and must bear the burden of proof once in court.
*1232
The remainder of the Court was sharply divided. Justice Brennan, joined by two other Justices, agreed that the Dallas ordinance was an unconstitutional prior restraint, but would have applied all three of the
Freedman
procedural requirements.
Id.
at 238-39,
Faced with the fractured decision in
FW/PBS,
our sibling courts of appeals have struggled to determine which of Freedman’s requirements apply to licensing schemes. Joined by several other circuits, we have concluded that the first two
Freedman
requirements — maintenance of the status quo and expeditious judicial review — are applicable to the licensing context.
See Essence,
1998);
11126 Baltimore Boulevard, Inc. v. Prince George’s County,
1999). Because ZJ does not argue that the Littleton ordinance fails to satisfy the third Freedman requirement, we limit our analysis here to the two procedural safeguards clearly adopted in FW/PBS.
B
Our first inquiry is whether Littleton’s ordinance satisfies the requirement that “any restraint prior to judicial review can be imposed only for a specified brief period during which the status quo must be maintained.”
FW/PBS,
Justice O’Connor’s opinion in
FW/PBS,
which announced the judgment of the Court, held that the Dallas ordinance in question allowed for indefinite postponement of a license because the premises had to be approved in advance by “the health department, fire department and the building official.”
Every retail business in Colorado must obtain a sales-tax license. Colo.Rev.Stat. § 39-26-103. Because this requirement is not specific to adult businesses, it is irrelevant to the constitutionality of the licensing ordinance at issue in the present case. The City does not argue, however, that the other two requirements are similarly applicable to all businesses, and we therefore presume that they are specific to adult businesses. Littleton’s ordinance provides no assurance that the City will promptly act on a pre-application request for a certification of zoning compliance or for fingerprinting or photography.
During oral argument of the present case, counsel for the City offered to make a “judicial admission” on behalf of the City that “if the Zoning Official doesn’t act, the application can be complete without his statement.” Littleton’s ordinance, however, explicitly states that the “City
Clerk shall not accept any application that is not complete in every detail.” Littleton, Colo., City Code § 3-14-5. Such details presumably include the provision of the Zoning Official’s letter as well as the requirements of photography and fingerprinting by the Police Department. By interpreting the ordinance as allowing for the submission of an incomplete application in the event of delay by the Zoning Official, appellee’s counsel is stating a legal conclusion, and courts are reluctant to treat opinions and legal conclusions as judicial admissions.
See MacDonald v. General Motors Corp.,
. Moreover,
Freedman
requires that either a “statute or authoritative judicial construction” must specify the time limit within which the license must be issued or denied,
Although the Colorado Supreme Court upheld a similar requirement that a zoning permit must accompany the application for a sexually-oriented-business license in
City of Colo. Springs v. 2354, Inc.,
c
Having held that Littleton’s ordinance fails to meet the first test of
FW/PBS,
we must decide whether the unconstitutional provisions are severable. Under Colorado law, a section of a legislative enactment is severable if the remaining portion of the statute is autonomous and the legislature’s will in passing the entire statute is not thwarted by the excision.
City of Lakewood v. Colfax Unlimited Ass’n,
At issue in the present case is an ordinance that contains a severability clause, both in its original version and in the amended version. Littleton, Colo., Ordinance 13, § 8 (2001); Littleton, Colo., Ordinance 27, § 8 (1993). More importantly, other requirements of the ordinance do not depend upon the constitutionally suspect pre-application requirements for coherence or consistency, and the purpose of the ordinance is not thwarted by their excision. As a result, we conclude that the pre-application licensing provisions of the ordinance are severable.
D
Because other provisions of Littleton’s ordinance, if constitutional, may be enforced without the pre-application requirements, we must decide whether the
*1235
remainder of the ordinance is constitutional. Thus we consider the “prompt judicial review” requirement adopted by the Supreme Court in
FW/PBS,
The circuits are divided over this question. Some have held that “prompt judicial review,” at least with regard to licensing decisions, requires only that the government provide prompt
access
to the courts.
See, e.g., Boss Capital, Inc. v. City of Casselberry,
Access
to prompt judicial review was selected as the appropriate standard by the Eleventh Circuit in
Boss Capital,
Focusing on' Justice O’Connor’s language, the Eleventh Circuit points out that Justice O’Connor uses different terminology than Justice Brennan in describing
Freedman’s
second requirement.
Id.
at 1255 (citing
FW/PBS,
Justice O’Connor’s language could arguably mean that the
FW/PBS
Court modified the second
Freedman
requirement in the context of licensing cases.
See Boss Capital,
Parties always have
access
to the courts.
See FW/PBS,
The Eleventh Circuit further points out in
Boss Capital
that
Freedman
and the line of cases following it can be distinguished from adult-business licensing cases on the grounds that they involved
*1237
censorship rather than licensing. Justice O’Connor held in
FW/PBS
that licensing schemes do not involve “the grave ‘dangers of a censorship system,’ ” and therefore “the full procedural protections set forth in
Freedman
are not required.”
In addition, the Eleventh Circuit notes, “unlike movie distributors who might show a given film in hundreds of theaters around the country,” applicants for adult-business licenses arguably have a greater incentive “to stick it out and see litigation through to its end.”
Id.
at 1256.
Freedman’s
rationale therefore arguably makes less sense in the licensing context, and
Boss Capital
concludes that the need for a prompt judicial decision is therefore “less compelling.”
14
See Boss Capital,
Boss Capital
draws a rational distinction between licensing cases and censorship cases. The purpose of Justice O’Connor’s language distinguishing between these two categories, however, is most logically understood as an attempt at explaining why
Freedman’s
third safeguard — that the burden of going to court and the burden of proof must be on the censor — is not appropriate to the licensing context.
See FW/ PBS,
Other circuits have held that the judicial review requirement of
Freedman
was not altered by
FW/PBS.
As the Sixth Circuit notes, Justice O’Connor “gave no indication that she was modifying the second requirement of prompt judicial review” in the licensing context.
Nightclubs,
*1238
Even if the rationale behind
Freedman
is specific to censorship cases, there is an equally valid rationale for requiring prompt judicial review in adult-business licensing cases. Although adult-business licensing ordinances are technically considered “content-neutral,”
ZJ Gifts D-2, L.L.C. v. City of Aurora,
Adult businesses are controversial, and the possibility exists that licensing officials might allow their personal views on the morality of sexually explicit entertainment to sway a decision on an application. Given the strong feelings that adult businesses can engender, there must be a prompt judicial determination to ensure that licensing officials do not exceed their authority under the ordinance in their zeal to protect the local community. ZJ sells sexually explicit magazines and videocassette tapes, which are presumptively protected by the First Amendment,
see FW/PBS,
In short, we are not persuaded by those circuits that have concluded that mere “access” to judicial review is sufficient in licensing cases. Following the Fourth, Sixth and Ninth Circuits, we hold that, in the event that an adult-business license is denied,
FW/PBS
requires a prompt final judicial
decision
regarding the validity of the denial. “[A] theoretical possibility of expeditious judicial review is not constitutionally sufficient.”
Nightclubs,
Littleton’s ordinance allows a party whose license has been denied to appeal to the Colorado district court under Colorado Rule of Civil Procedure 106(a)(4). This Rule allows an adverse decision regarding the license to be given expedited review in the trial court’s discretion.
2354. Inc.,
Y
Finally, ZJ attacks the location restrictions in Littleton’s ordinance as unconstitutional because they do not provide reasonable alternatives of communication, as required by
City of Renton v. Playtime
*1239
Theatres, Inc.,
Renton
considered a local ordinance that restricted the location of adult businesses.
How much land is sufficient to constitute “reasonable alternative avenues of communication” is a question that the
Renton
Court left open. In
Renton,
the ordinance left “520 acres, or more than five percent of the entire land area of’ the city, open for adult businesses, with the land “in all stages of development from raw land to developed, industrial, warehouse, office, and shopping space that is criss-crossed by freeways, highways, and roads.”
Id.
at 53,
Under Littleton’s ordinance, there are approximately one-hundred acres of land that are within industrial zones and outside the minimum distance from nearby schools, day care centers, and correctional facilities.
16
This land constitutes between 1.2 and 1.3% of the total acreage of the City of Littleton. At least one other court of appeals has found this proportion of land to be sufficient under
Renton. See Lakeland Lounge of Jackson, Inc. v. City of Jackson,
ZJ argues that portions' of this land are unavailable because specific parcels are (1) currently occupied by large-scale manufacturing uses,
see Topanga Press, Inc. v. City of Los Angeles,
*1240
First, we disagree with the notion that warehouses and other large-scale manufacturing uses must be excluded per se from any calculation of whether there is sufficient land for adult business uses. In
Renton
itself the Supreme Court noted the diversity of property that was available for adult business use under the ordinance— “industrial,
warehouse,
office, and shopping space,”
Renton,
As for inclusion of the government-owned properties, we need not decide whether that is permissible under the Ren-ton analysis. Even excluding those parcels that are government-owned according to evidence introduced by ZJ, there is sufficient property zoned for adult business uses to meet the requirements of Renton. ZJ submitted evidence identifying only one specific property — the Little-ton City Shops between Belleview Avenue and Prentice Avenue, constituting twelve acres — as being owned by the government. Other properties mentioned by ZJ in its brief — a fire training center, a nature area, and the Arapahoe County Government Center — are not identified by parcel, nor does ZJ provide any information as to their total acreage. However, even giving ZJ the benefit of the doubt as to these additional properties, based on the information we can glean from the record, removing these properties would only reduce the total available area by approximately ten acres. 18 Thus, the total area available excluding government properties would be about seventy-eight acres, or just under one percent of the total area of the City.
Moreover, excluding both the government properties to which ZJ objects as well as those properties that are implicated by the minimum distance requirements of the ordinance, the City has listed over twenty sites within the industrial districts that its real estate expert stated would be available for adult businesses. Given the small population of Littleton (forty-thousand people), and the fact that ZJ is the only adult business that is currently located in Littleton, this is a sufficient number of available sites.
See Diamond v. City of Taft,
VI
In sum, we conclude that ZJ has standing to challenge the pre-application and location requirements of the ordinance and the' judicial review procedure. ZJ lacks standing, however, to challenge the ordinance as vague, attack the ordinance’s license revocation and suspension provisions, or challenge the age and criminal history restrictions in the ordinance. As to the merits of ZJ’s challenge, we hold that the judicial review procedure and pre-application requirements of Littleton’s ordinance are unconstitutional, but that the location- requirements of the ordinance are constitutional.
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED in part and REVERSED in part. 21
Notes
. In amending its ordinance in 2001, the City added more specific corporate disclosure requirements, but did n.ot significantly alter the key provisions. Littleton, Colo., Ordinance 13 (2001).
. This is the time limit under the amended ordinance. Before the amendments, the ordinance gave the applicant only ten days to request a hearing before the City Manager. Littleton, Colo., Ordinance 27 (1993).
. Under the original ordinance, admission to all adult businesses was limited to persons over twenty-one. Littleton, Colo., Ordinance 27 (1993).
. In supplemental briefing the City explicitly waived the applicability of abstention under
Younger v. Harris,
. While ZJ has never applied for an adult-business license, this is not a requirement for standing to mount a facial challenge against an ordinance.
See ACORN v. Municipality of Golden,
ZJ, the City argues, has no standing to challenge the licensing requirements of the ordinance because — even if such a challenge were successful — ZJ would nonetheless be in violation of the location requirements of the ordinance. However, ZJ challenges both sets of requirements, and if both challenges tire successful, then ZJ will obtain its desired relief.
See N. Ave. Novelties, Inc. v. City of Chicago,
. Having reviewed the evidence provided by the parties in the present case, including the videotape of the interior of ZJ’s business, we conclude that the ordinance is “unquestionably applicable” to ZJ — i.e., a “significant or substantial” portion of ZJ’s stock-in-trade, interior floor space, or revenue is devoted to material that is "characterized by the depiction or description” of the defined "specified sexual activities" or "specified anatomical areas.”
. To the extent that other provisions of Little-ton’s ordinance conflict with this amendment, they have been repealed. Littleton, Colo., Ordinance 13, § 9 (2001).
. In the instant case, the City does not argue that the materials sold by "adult businesses” are obscene and therefore unprotected by the First Amendment. The City has therefore effectively made the same concession that the City of Dallas made in
FW/PBS:
i.e., that the ordinance applies to businesses that purvey speech protected by the First Amendment.
See FW/PBS,
. Littleton's original ordinance required all principal owners, managers and employees to be photographed and fingerprinted. Little-ton, Colo., Ordinance 27 (1993). In 2001, the *1233 City eliminated the requirement with respect to employees, but specified that managers, general partners and (in the,case of a corporation) the president of the corporation must be photographed and fingerprinted. Little-ton, Colo., Ordinance 13 (2001). No time limit for the fingerprinting and photography was specified either in the original ordinance or in the amended ordinance.
. As noted above, this defect in Littleton's ordinance cannot be cured by "judicial admission,” as the City’s counsel suggests. Appropriate procedures under Colorado law for the amendment of a city ordinance must be followed. It is not our role to sit as a party to negotiations concerning the implementation of the City’s code. Littleton's ordinance can easily be amended to state that an application may be submitted without zoning approval, fingerprinting, or photography if a good faith request is not acted on by the Zoning Official or the Police Department within a specified brief time period.
. If the O’Connor opinion did modify
Freedman's
“prompt judicial review” requirement for the licensing context, then it arguably
*1236
struck down the ordinance at issue in
FW/PBS
on a narrower ground (failure to provide prompt
access
to judicial review) than the Brennan concurrence would have (failure to provide the prompt judicial
determination
required by Freedman). If that is the case, then the O'Connor restatement of the "prompt judicial review” requirement might well state the law, at least in the context of adult business licensing.
See Marks v. United States,
.
Baby Tam
draws an analogy to baseball. Judicial review without a decision "would be like throwing a pitch and not getting a call. As legendary major league umpire Bill Klem once said to an inquisitive catcher: 'It ain’t nothin' till I call it.' This is also true of judicial review. Until the judicial officer makes the call, it ain’t nothin'.”
. Littleton’s ordinance, for example, lists eight specific reasons to deny a license — although the ordinance does not explicitly state that this list is exclusive — and these reasons do not involve discretion on the part of the licensing official. Littleton, Colo., City Code § 3-14-8.
. Analyzing the constitutionality of a permit requirement for a public forum, the Supreme Court has recently held that an ordinance that gives no discretion to the licensing official does not threaten to stifle free expression.
See Thomas v. Chi. Park Dist.,
. In its reply and supplemental briefing, ZJ argued that the location restrictions in Little-ton's ordinance should be viewed as "content-based” restrictions on speech subject to strict scrutiny. In particular, ZJ argues that the recent Supreme Court decision in
Thomas,
. ZJ argues that some of these parcels are unavailable because portions of the parcels are within five-hundred feet of schools, day care centers, and correctional facilities. However, as the record shows, the majority of these parcels are outside the distance limits. Under Littleton’s ordinance, the distance limits are only violated if the exterior wall of the structure in which the adult business is located is within the minimum distance from the neighboring use. Thus, these parcels are available for use by an adult business as long as the business locates in the portions of the parcels where such uses are permitted.
. We add that we do not address a situation where all or nearly all properties consist of large-scale manufacturing and warehouse uses, such that the diversity of land uses described in
Renton
does not exist. In such a situation, the municipality may be "effectively denying” adult businesses "a reasonable opportunity to open and operate.”
Renton,
. In reaching this conclusion, we draw the following inferences in ZJ's favor: Littleton's fire protection center and the abandoned city property are located in an industrial zone that comprises approximately eight acres near the intersection of Chenango and Vallejo Streets. We assume that all of those properties were used by both the fire protection center and the abandoned city property, and we remove them from our analysis. As for the Arapahoe Government Center, ZJ relies on the City's maps in the record as evidence regarding its location on "South Crestline Avenue.” We can find only an ambiguous reference for a parcel south of West Crestline Avenue, which appears to occupy about two acres of the industrial zones. ZJ has provided us with absolutely no information from which an inference can be drawn regarding the specific location or acreage of Littleton’s nature area.
. Where an adult-business zoning regulation prohibits the location of one adult business within a minimum distance of another one— as Littleton's ordinance does — some courts have required the analysis of the minimum number of sites to take into account those spacing requirements, dramatically reducing the potential number of sites.
See, e.g., Young v. City of Simi Valley,
. ZJ urges us to hold that the Colorado Constitution provides broader protections than the United States Constitution in this context. None of the cases cited by ZJ in support of this proposition, however, involves a challenge to adult-business licensing ordinances.
See Bock v. Westminster Mall Co.,
.We grant the City’s motions to file additional supplemental appendices.
