Jeffrey D. Sadow is an associate professor of political science at Louisiana State University Shreveport. If you're an elected official, political operative or anyone else upset at his views, don't go bothering LSUS or LSU System officials about that because these are his own views solely. This publishes five days weekly with the exception of 7 holidays. Also check out his Louisiana Legislature Log especially during legislative sessions (in "Louisiana Politics Blog Roll" below).
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22.12.16
Slidell ordinance promises to shape free speech law
The actions of Slidell may end up shaping First
Amendment jurisprudence, as result of an ordinance it enacted requiring
licensing for panhandling.
Interpretation regarding this area of law went
topsy-turvy last year in the case of Reed v. Town
of Gilbert, which did not even involve panhandling. But the constitutional standard
made in that case, dealing with signage, quickly became applied to a host of
municipal ordinances that had prohibited various permutations of panhandling.
In essence, almost all instances of panhandling acquired automatic
non-neutrality in speech content, meaning that almost all regulation of it unjustifiably
restricted freedom of speech.
A wide swath of challenged laws, often by a
chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, fell as a result. In response,
Slidell abandoned its own ordinances restricting the prevalence and venue of
the practice and instead turned to licensing, an approach that then had no
challenge in the few places with something similar. The ordinance requires that
48 hours prior to commencing of begging that prospective solicitors obtain a
free annual license that aims to provide some kind of positive identification
of the holder. Information gathered for that purpose the city may use to
conduct background checks.
Slidell argues the regulation allows for
protecting the health and safety of both beggars and the public. This identifies
the measure as a conduct-based
regulation, for which the courts continue to grant municipalities in the
post-Reed environment. Regardless,
with plans of enforcement of the law announced, the Louisiana ACLU launched
a suit.
The state chapter asserted
the law’s basis rested upon the content-based standard used as the rationale in
Reed. Further, it alleges that the
ordinance places too many restrictions on free speech because the law allegedly
remains unjustified by a substantial state interest, is not narrowly tailored,
and does not leave ample alternative forums for expression, even if found not
content-based but content-neutral.
That latter complaint signals some concern that a
court will find the ordinance addresses conduct in a speech content-neutral
way. Even as Reed has broad
application, a number
of cases in the 18 months since that decision have found specific ways to
restrict restrictions of speech not based on content, so the ACLU realizes the
thin ice here.
Even so, Slidell can prove that claim meritless.
Pointing out the additional safety brought to panhandlers and the public would
demonstrate a substantial state interest, that the licensing would accomplish
that safety, and that the process creates no significant impediment to
expression would beat this argument.
Despite that, the ACLU pressed on, explained by
the fact it runs both on greed and ideology. Never forget that the ACLU is
concerned less with constitutional rectitude than with making a buck and
pushing an agenda. In these kinds of cases – a recent
one racked up bills of $2 million – it can squeeze reimbursement from the
losing party, so this encourages it to intervene so it may offer continued
employment of its staff. And it wants to keep gathering taxpayer dollars to
subsidize its leftist agenda – in this instance through facilitating the
presence and visibility of panhandling, which then gets turned around as an
indictment of an economic system reputedly unfair and supposed lack of
government redistribution that reportedly would rectify the assumed malady.
Hopefully, Slidell will not buckle but will see
this through. Extant jurisprudence suggests that this kind of law, or something
pretty close to it, will stand up. If so, it will improve the city’s quality of
life, provide potential assistance to beggars, and stamp into being law that
would find itself replicated throughout the country.
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