Joelner, Eric v. Village Washington ( 2004 )


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  •                            In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________
    No. 03-2669
    ERIC JOELNER, FISH, INC. d/b/a XXXTREME
    ENTERTAINMENT, FREE SPEECH, INC.,
    and FIRST AMENDMENT, INC.,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    VILLAGE OF WASHINGTON PARK, ILLINOIS,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    ____________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Illinois.
    No. 03 C 325—G. Patrick Murphy, Chief Judge.
    ____________
    ARGUED NOVEMBER 7, 2003—DECIDED AUGUST 4, 2004
    ____________
    Before COFFEY, RIPPLE, and KANNE, Circuit Judges.
    KANNE, Circuit Judge.
    I. Background
    A. The Parties
    Eric Joelner, a resident of the Village of Washington
    Park, Illinois, is president and sole shareholder of Fish, Inc.
    2                                                No. 03-2669
    d/b/a XXXtreme Entertainment, Free Speech, Inc., and First
    Amendment, Inc. (collectively, “Plaintiffs” or “Joelner”). All
    of these entities conduct, or seek to conduct, adult enter-
    tainment business within the corporate limits of Washing-
    ton Park. Joelner, through Fish, Inc., has owned and
    operated an adult video and bookstore located at 2226
    Kingshighway since at least 1995.1
    In an effort to balance Washington Park’s revenue needs
    and its desire to protect its citizens from what ostensibly it
    views as the negative effects of adult entertainment bus-
    inesses, the municipality has enacted ordinances, which
    limit the number of adult entertainment outlets within its
    corporate limits, including both “bookstores” and “cabarets,”
    see infra Part I.B., and impose license fees for such estab-
    lishments. However, with a population of only 5,300
    covering 2.5 square miles at the confluence of two interstate
    highways leading into St. Louis, Missouri, adult entertain-
    ment has been the industry of Washington Park. As of May
    2003, there were four licensed, one unlicensed, and two
    newly licensed adult cabarets. Each licensed cabaret
    generates around $100,000 annually in licensing and other
    fees for the Village. And because the population of Washing-
    ton Park decreased by more than 2,000 residents between
    1990 and 2000, with a corresponding loss of about $300,000
    a year in state funding, the income which the adult enter-
    tainment industry generates for the Village is critical. John
    McCormick, Cash-strapped Town Relies on Strip Clubs to
    Pay Bills, Chi. Trib., Apr. 29, 2003, at A1. (R. 1, Ex. 11.)
    1
    Joelner claims to have been doing business at the 2226
    Kingshighway location since 1990 or 1991. But on the record, we
    can know affirmatively only that Joelner has been licensed to
    operate such a business since 1995.
    No. 03-2669                                                       3
    B. The Ordinances
    Ordinance 069-99, adopted by the Village Board of Trustees
    on September 7, 1999, defined “adult entertainment” as
    anything “featuring acts, performances, videos, and/or movies,
    involving nudity, or partial nudity, but within the permitted
    community standards of the Village of Washington Park . . . .”
    It limited the number of such establishments to four, imposed
    an annual license fee of $3000, prohibited the sale or other
    transfer of licenses, set hours of operation, and included a
    severability clause.2
    Then, four months later on January 11, 2000, Ordinance
    01-00, although making no express reference to the prior
    ordinance, increased the annual licensing fee tenfold to
    $30,000. The stated goal of the increase was to protect the
    “public health, safety, and welfare” and to defray the in-
    crease in police, fire, and other costs associated with adult
    entertainment establishments.
    Ordinance 01-22, adopted two years later on November 6,
    2002, differentiates between “adult entertainment” es-
    tablishments.3 It defines “adult bookstores” as “[a]ny
    business which sells what is commonly known as adult en-
    tertainment books, magazines, other reading materials,
    movies, novelties, or paraphernalia” and “adult cabarets” as
    2
    All ordinances referred to herein are included in the appendix.
    3
    Problematically, neither Ordinance 01-00 nor Ordinance 01-22
    explicitly refer to the relevant prior ordinances. But since each of
    these ordinances includes the word “amending” in its title, we are
    left to presume that, to the extent that the later ordinances
    conflict with prior ordinances, the prior ordinances no longer have
    effect. In addition, Ordinance 01-22 almost entirely subsumes the
    original ordinance, No. 069-99. However, because Ordinance 01-22
    refers repeatedly to “adult entertainment,” but nowhere defines
    it, we also presume that the definition of “adult entertainment”
    proffered in Ordinance 069-99 still has effect.
    4                                                  No. 03-2669
    “[a]ny business with adult entertainment which includes live
    persons performing adult entertainment and which includes
    nudity.” The annual licensing fees were altered as well:
    $10,000 for an adult bookstore, and $30,000 for a cabaret
    ($30,000 was the annual fee for either type of adult business
    under Ordinance 01-00). A permissible quarterly fee payment
    schedule was established in section 4, and the following pro-
    visions from Ordinance 069-99 were preserved in their en-
    tirety, although renumbered: the numerical “[l]imitation and
    [p]urpose” (now as section 5), the license transfer prohibition
    (section 6), hours of operation (section 7), and the severability
    provision (section 8).
    C. Joelner’s Clashes With the Village
    In January of 2003, the first in a series of disagreements
    over these ordinances began between Joelner and the Village.
    Joelner objected to the “increase” in annual licensing fees to
    $10,000, established in November of 2002 through Ordinance
    01-22, for his existing bookstore at 2226 Kingshighway. Ap-
    parently, notwithstanding both Ordinances 069-99 and 01-00
    which had, prior to Ordinance 01-22, set license fees for adult
    bookstores at $3000 and $30,000 respectively, Joelner had
    only been paying $100 per year to operate his business, with-
    out any documented objection. But in a letter dated December
    23, 2002, the Village informed him of the “new” annual adult
    bookstore fee and requested that he make a first-quarter
    payment of $2500. On or around January 24, 2003 Joelner did
    so, but also remitted in the same check an additional $7500
    first-quarter payment for an adult cabaret license.
    The Village returned the $10,000 check to Joelner on
    February 20, informed him that his existing business was
    licensed only as a bookstore, not as a cabaret, and requested
    that Joelner forward his first-quarter bookstore fee as soon
    as possible. However, he made no further payment.
    Notwithstanding this dispute with the Village over the fee
    for his bookstore’s annual license, Joelner, through various
    No. 03-2669                                                       5
    corporate entities, attempted to obtain three new adult
    entertainment licenses for properties located at 2226
    Kingshighway, 2215-2221 Kingshighway, and 5900-6000
    Bunkum Road.4 At the April 15, 2003 Village Board of
    Trustees meeting, Joelner, as Fish, Inc., sought a license to
    expand his current bookstore business at 2226 Kingshighway
    to include cabaret entertainment, and, as First Amendment,
    Inc., sought a license to open a new combination cabaret
    and bookstore at 2215-2221 Kingshighway. As Joelner’s
    requests were the final item on the Board’s agenda, before
    any discussion or mention of his license applications,
    Ordinance 01-27 was adopted, increasing the number of
    adult businesses allowed in Washington Park from four to
    six.5
    After the Board approved the ordinance, it then immedi-
    ately granted the two newly available licenses—but not to
    Joelner. One license was awarded to a former village police
    chief’s son, a convicted felon, whose application did not ap-
    4
    We cannot discern whether Joelner, personally or through his
    various corporate entities, had an ownership interest in the prop-
    erties located at 2226 Kingshighway, 2215-2221 Kingshighway,
    and 5900-6000 Bunkum Road sufficient to meet the standing
    requirement. See also R. 2, Ex. 10, pp. 16-17 (transcript of Village
    Board meeting on April 15, 2003 where questions of ownership
    were raised). It appears likely that Joelner at least has standing
    with respect to the 2226 Kingshighway location as he has been
    doing business there since 1995, but given that the resolution of
    this question is not central to the outcome here, we cannot and do
    not now make even a preliminary determination regarding
    standing.
    5
    Ordinance 01-27 specifically states in its title that it “Amend[s]
    the Village of Washington Park, Illinois Ordinance No. 01-22,
    Section 5.” Hence, we presume that the other sections of Ordi-
    nance 01-22 (and, by implication, section 3 of Ordinance 069-99,
    see supra note 3) remain in full effect. Ordinance 01-27 can be
    found in the appendix.
    6                                                No. 03-2669
    pear to be on the agenda, and the other to the owner of a
    trucking firm in the Village, whose application was on the
    agenda, immediately preceding Joelner’s.
    The Board then temporarily denied Joelner’s two applica-
    tions, accused Joelner of having past-due license fees for his
    currently operating bookstore (whether the Board was
    concerned with only the November 2002 fee increase or other
    arrearages is unclear), discussed revocation of Joelner’s
    bookstore license, and finally voted to hold a hearing at a
    later time about the 2226 Kingshighway business.
    Before the Village Board next convened, Joelner reached
    an informal agreement with the Village whereby he agreed
    to postpone the filing of any lawsuit against the Village
    until after June 1, in exchange for the Village’s assurances
    that they would not seek to terminate his bookstore license
    during that same time. The Village continued to urge
    Joelner to “pay his delinquent adult bookstore fees.”
    Then at the next meeting on May 6, the Board briefly
    discussed the status of Joelner’s 2226 Kingshighway busi-
    ness, and was informed by its attorney that negotiations
    were proceeding between Joelner and the Village regarding
    the disputed arrearages. The Board took no further action
    regarding the 2226 Kingshighway business, and then later,
    during that same meeting, considered Joelner’s third li-
    cense application seeking to open a combination adult
    cabaret and bookstore at 5900-6000 Bunkum Road, as Free
    Speech, Inc. Based upon the alleged arrearages and the
    Board’s claimed desire to avoid an over-saturation of adult
    businesses at that particular location (another adult enter-
    tainment outlet was licensed for a property immediately
    adjacent to that proposed by Joelner), the Board denied this
    third and final application.
    After negotiations regarding the 2226 Kingshighway
    business apparently failed, Joelner filed suit against the
    No. 03-2669                                                7
    Village on May 23, 2003 in the Southern District of Illinois
    and asserted that the ordinances at issue were unconstitu-
    tional restrictions of protected speech both on their face
    and, with respect to the numerical restriction, as applied.
    Joelner also filed a preliminary injunction motion to pre-
    vent enforcement of the ordinances, and to force the Village
    to grant the three requested licenses. Again Joelner and the
    Village reached an informal agreement, whereby Joelner
    was allowed to continue to operate his existing bookstore
    pending a ruling on the preliminary injunction.
    After a hearing on June 12, 2003, the district court
    granted in part and denied in part Joelner’s request for a
    preliminary injunction. The court found the ordinances
    constitutional and refused to prohibit the Village from
    enforcing the ordinances with respect to both the numerical
    limitations and licensing fees imposed on adult entertain-
    ment outlets. It also refused to require the Village to issue
    any cabaret licenses to Joelner for the new locations.
    However, the court did order the Village to allow Joelner to
    continue to operate his current bookstore business at 2226
    Kingshighway, and also to consider in a new hearing
    Joelner’s application for a cabaret license for that same
    location, so long as he paid any arrearages and the newly
    approved November 2002 fees. This appeal followed.
    II. Analysis
    For the reasons set forth below, we find that the district
    court correctly refused to preliminarily enjoin the Village
    from enforcing the two ordinances, and we further find that
    the court appropriately granted the preliminary injunction
    requiring the Village to allow Joelner to continue to operate
    his bookstore business at 2226 Kingshighway. However, we
    also determine that the district court erred in granting the
    injunction requiring Joelner to pay the disputed fees and/or
    arrearages in order to continue operating his bookstore and
    8                                                   No. 03-2669
    requiring the Village to conduct a new hearing to consider
    Joelner’s cabaret license application for the 2226
    Kingshighway location.
    Under the First Amendment, “Congress shall make no
    law . . . abridging the freedom of speech . . . .” U.S. Const.
    amend. I. The Free Speech Clause applies to the states by
    operation of the Fourteenth Amendment’s due process clause.
    E.g., Ben’s Bar, Inc. v. Vill. of Somerset, 
    316 F.3d 702
    , 707 (7th
    Cir. 2003) (citations omitted).
    In order to obtain a preliminary injunction, the moving
    party must show that: (1) they are reasonably likely to suc-
    ceed on the merits; (2) no adequate remedy at law exists; (3)
    they will suffer irreparable harm which, absent injunctive
    relief, outweighs the irreparable harm the respondent will
    suffer if the injunction is granted; and (4) the injunction will
    not harm the public interest. See Erickson v. Trinity Theatre,
    Inc., 
    13 F.3d 1061
    , 1067 (7th Cir. 1994). If the movant can
    meet this threshold burden, then the inquiry becomes a “slid-
    ing scale” analysis where these factors are weighed against
    one another. See AM General Corp. v. DaimlerChrysler Corp.,
    
    311 F.3d 796
    , 804 (7th Cir. 2002); Connection Distrib. Co. v.
    Reno, 
    154 F.3d 281
    , 288 (6th Cir. 1998); 
    Erickson, 13 F.3d at 1067
    ; see also Nat’l People’s Action v. Vill. of Wilmette, 
    914 F.2d 1008
    , 1110-11 (7th Cir. 1990). In reviewing a district
    court’s denial or grant of a preliminary injunction, we examine
    legal conclusions de novo, findings of fact for clear error, and
    the balancing of the previously noted factors for abuse of
    discretion. Anderson v. U.S.F. Logistics (IMC), Inc., 
    274 F.3d 470
    , 474 (7th Cir. 2001).
    When a party seeks a preliminary injunction on the basis
    of a potential First Amendment violation, the likelihood of
    success on the merits will often be the determinative factor.
    Connection Distrib. 
    Co., 154 F.3d at 288
    , cited in ACLU of
    Ken. v. McCreary, 
    354 F.3d 438
    , 445 (6th Cir. 2003); see,
    e.g., Brownsburg Area Patrons Affecting Change v. Baldwin,
    No. 03-2669                                                   9
    
    137 F.3d 503
    , 507 (7th Cir. 1998). “The loss of First Amend-
    ment freedoms, for even minimal periods of time, unques-
    tionably constitutes irreparable injury,” Elrod v. Burns, 
    427 U.S. 347
    , 373 (1976), and money damages are therefore
    inadequate, Nat’l People’s 
    Action, 914 F.2d at 1013
    . Con-
    comitantly, there can be no irreparable harm to a munici-
    pality when it is prevented from enforcing an unconstitu-
    tional statute because “ ‘it is always in the public interest to
    protect First Amendment liberties.’ ” Connection Distrib.
    
    Co., 154 F.3d at 288
    (citing G & V Lounge, Inc. v. Mich.
    Liquor Control Comm’n, 
    23 F.3d 1071
    , 1079 (6th Cir.
    1994)); cf. Homans v. Albuquerque, 
    264 F.3d 1240
    , 1244
    (10th Cir. 2001) (“[W]e believe that the public interest is
    better served by . . . protecting [ ] core First Amendment
    right[s]”), cited in Newsom v. Albemarle County Sch. Bd.,
    
    354 F.3d 249
    , 261 (4th Cir. 2003) (“Surely, upholding
    constitutional rights serves the public interest.”).
    However, it is sometimes necessary to inquire beyond the
    merits, see MacDonald v. Chicago Park Dist., 
    132 F.3d 355
    ,
    358 (7th Cir. 1997) (per curiam), particularly when the
    challenged statute regulates the adult entertainment
    industry. “[E]ven though we recognize that the First
    Amendment will not tolerate the total suppression of erotic
    materials that have some arguably artistic value, it is
    manifest that society’s interest in protecting this type of
    expression is of a wholly different, and lesser, magnitude
    than the interest in untrammeled political debate . . . .” City
    of Erie v. Pap’s A.M., 
    529 U.S. 277
    , 294 (2000) (emphasis
    added) (internal quotations omitted). Furthermore, the
    purpose of adult entertainment regulations often is to
    minimize the deleterious secondary effects that may ac-
    company adult entertainment businesses (e.g., increased
    crime rates, decreased property values). See City of Renton
    v. Playtime Theatres, Inc., 
    475 U.S. 41
    , 47 (1986). Indeed,
    Washington Park proffers that very rationale here. There-
    fore, Joelner’s request for a preliminary injunction based
    10                                               No. 03-2669
    upon his claim that the Village’s adult entertainment ordi-
    nances are unconstitutional implicates two conflicting
    public interests—protecting First Amendment liberties and
    minimizing any harmful secondary effects of such busi-
    nesses. Cf. Pap’s 
    A.M., 529 U.S. at 294
    .
    We note that this interlocutory appeal of a preliminary
    injunction (granted in part and denied in part) cannot
    result in a conclusive determination of the constitutional
    merits of Joelner’s claims. See, e.g., 
    MacDonald, 132 F.3d at 357-58
    (citing Ayres v. City of Chicago, 
    125 F.3d 1010
    , 1013
    (7th Cir. 1997)). The appellate record contains only three or
    four items that contribute substantially to the factual
    background of this case: Joelner’s complaint and request for
    a preliminary injunction, the Village’s motion in opposition
    to the preliminary injunction, and the preliminary injunc-
    tion hearing transcript and evidence. As a result, numerous
    critical factual ambiguities plague the record, including, but
    not limited to: what inquiries were conducted by the Village
    and what findings were made to support its adult entertain-
    ment ordinances; exactly how many adult establishments
    are currently operating—with or without licenses—in
    Washington Park; whether subsequent ordinances abro-
    gated prior ordinances; the total amount of licensing fee
    arrearages allegedly owed by Joelner and the basis for that
    number; which license applications were and were not on
    the April 15 agenda; why applications were considered in a
    particular order by the Board on April 15; and the justifica-
    tion(s) for the denial of Joelner’s applications, other than
    the alleged arrearages. Moreover, the question of standing
    remains, see supra note 4. All of these issues may be more
    fully explored when the district court, upon remand, takes
    up Joelner’s request for a permanent injunction and
    declaratory relief.
    Because a definitive determination on the merits is not
    now possible, we will consider the relative strength of
    Joelner’s constitutional claims based on the skimpy appel-
    No. 03-2669                                                  11
    late record and then balance the possible negative impacts
    of the grant or denial of a preliminary injunction on (1)
    Joelner’s business(es), (2) the Village, and (3) the aforemen-
    tioned two-fold public interest.
    A. Reasonable Likelihood of Success on the Merits
    Here we must decide, in the context of a preliminary in-
    junction, whether a municipality can constitutionally limit
    the number of adult entertainment venues and impose
    annual licensing fees for such businesses. Specifically, Joelner
    posits that both the numerical restriction and licensing fees
    are facially unconstitutional, and that the numerical
    restriction was unconstitutionally applied. With respect to
    the facial challenges, it is an uphill battle because, absent
    overbreadth and/or vagueness challenges, he can only pre-
    vail if he demonstrates “ ‘that no set of circumstances exist
    under which the [regulation] would be valid.’ ” Ben’s 
    Bar, 316 F.3d at 708
    n.11 (quoting United States v. Salerno, 
    481 U.S. 739
    , 745 (1987) (brackets in original) and citing Horton
    v. City of St. Augustine, 
    272 F.3d 1318
    , 1331 (11th Cir.
    2001)). See also Thomas v. Chicago Park Dist., 
    227 F.3d 921
    , 923 (7th Cir. 2000), aff’d on other grounds, 
    534 U.S. 316
    (2002). We recently conducted an exhaustive review of
    First Amendment Supreme Court jurisprudence in Ben’s
    Bar, Inc. v. Village of Somerset, 
    316 F.3d 702
    , 708-722 (7th
    Cir. 2003), and need not repeat that analysis here.
    1. The Numerical Restriction
    a. Facial Challenge
    The primary thrust of Joelner’s facial challenge to the
    numerical restriction is his assertion that because the
    ordinance applies only to “adult entertainment” outlets, it
    is a content-based restriction of erotic expression, subject to
    strict scrutiny, and cannot pass constitutional muster. But
    12                                               No. 03-2669
    “content-neutrality” is a concept easily and oft confused. Cf.
    City of Los Angeles v. Alameda Books, Inc., 
    535 U.S. 444-48
    (2002) (Kennedy, J. concurring) (discussing the difficulties
    of the “content-neutrality” inquiry); Schultz v. City of
    Cumberland, 
    228 F.3d 831
    , 845 (7th Cir. 2000) (“[T]he fact
    that the Ordinance definition is content-based on its face
    does not necessarily dictate that the Ordinance is analyzed
    as content-based and subject to strict scrutiny.”).
    Ordinance 01-27 is clearly directed only at “adult enter-
    tainment.” Regulations which directly circumscribe a cer-
    tain category of speech are subject to strict scrutiny and are
    likely to be constitutionally impermissible. See, e.g., R.A.V.
    v. City of St. Paul, 
    505 U.S. 377
    , 382 (1992); 
    Renton, 475 U.S. at 47
    ; Stromberg v. California, 
    283 U.S. 359
    , 368-69
    (1931). But the First Amendment tolerates governmental
    interference with general categories of expressive conduct,
    as opposed to actual speech. 
    Schultz, 228 F.3d at 841
    . Very
    generally, whether conduct regulations will be subject to
    intermediate or strict scrutiny most often actually hinges
    upon the regulation’s intended purpose, rather than some
    strained interpretation of content-neutrality. See Ben’s 
    Bar, 316 F.3d at 723
    ; 
    Schultz, 228 F.3d at 845
    (“[C]ourts often
    called [regulations] content-neutral without explaining that
    [they] are in fact content-based and only analyzed as
    content-neutral when certain preconditions are met.”).
    There are two distinct, yet overlapping, lines of Supreme
    Court jurisprudence addressing the degree of First
    Amendment protection afforded to adult entertainment, a
    particular type of expressive conduct. Ben’s 
    Bar, 316 F.3d at 712-13
    . One group of cases addresses public indecency
    regulations. See Barnes v. Glen Theatre, Inc., 
    501 U.S. 560
    (1991); City of Erie v. Pap’s A.M., 
    529 U.S. 277
    (2000). The
    other considers adult entertainment zoning ordinances. See
    Young v. Am. Mini Theatres, Inc., 
    427 U.S. 50
    (1976) (“AMT”);
    City of Renton v. Playtime Theatres, Inc., 
    475 U.S. 41
    (1986); City of Los Angeles v. Alameda Books, Inc., 535 U.S.
    No. 03-2669                                               13
    425 (2002). However, the analytical framework under-
    pinning both strains of jurisprudence is rooted in United
    States v. O’Brien, 
    391 U.S. 367
    , 376-82 (1968). Ben’s 
    Bar, 316 F.3d at 714
    . Consequently, the Supreme Court has held
    that the distinctions between the test used to assess the
    constitutionality of public indecency statutes, see Pap’s
    
    A.M., 529 U.S. at 289
    , and that used to evaluate adult en-
    tertainment zoning ordinances, see 
    Renton, 475 U.S. at 46
    -
    47, are 
    irrelevant. 316 F.3d at 714
    .
    Ordinance 01-27 cannot neatly be categorized as either an
    indecency regulation or zoning ordinance, similar to the
    statute at issue in Ben’s 
    Bar, 316 F.3d at 722-28
    . Thus, we
    will analyze Ordinance 01-27 just as we analyzed the Ben’s
    Bar statute—by using the “road map” provided in 44
    Liquormart, Inc. v. Rhode Island, 
    517 U.S. 484
    (1996). 316
    F.3d at 722
    . A restriction placed upon the number of adult
    entertainment outlets is constitutional if:
    (1) the State is regulating pursuant to a legitimate
    governmental power; (2) the regulation does not com-
    pletely prohibit adult entertainment; (3) the regulation
    is aimed not at the suppression of expression, but rather
    at combating the negative secondary effects caused by
    adult entertainment establishments; and (4) the regu-
    lation is designed to serve a substantial government
    interest, [is] narrowly tailored, and reasonable alter-
    native avenues of communication remain available . . . .
    
    Id. at 722
    (citations omitted). Step four encapsulates the
    intermediate standard of scrutiny applicable in First
    Amendment challenges to adult entertainment regulations.
    See, e.g., 
    Renton, 475 U.S. at 47
    ; 
    AMT, 427 U.S. at 61
    .
    However, if a regulation fails to satisfy either steps two or
    three, strict scrutiny applies and, in order to be constitu-
    tional, the statute must be “necessary to serve a compelling
    state interest and be narrowly drawn to achieve that end.”
    14                                               No. 03-2669
    
    Schultz, 228 F.3d at 848
    (citing Simon & Schuster, Inc. v.
    Members of the N.Y. State Crime Victims Bd., 
    502 U.S. 105
    (1991)).
    First, Ordinance 01-27 is an exercise of the Village’s
    general police power because it is purportedly justified as
    an effort to protect the public’s health, welfare, and safety.
    See, e.g., Ben’s 
    Bar, 316 F.3d at 722-23
    . Therefore, the
    Village is regulating pursuant to a legitimate government
    power and prong one is met.
    Second, Ordinance 01-27 is plainly not a complete
    prohibition of adult entertainment. It explicitly allows six
    venues for such expression. Because no additional adult
    cabarets or bookstores can be licensed after the maximum
    number of licenses are issued, Joelner asserts that the
    Ordinance therefore operates as a “complete ban.” See, e.g.,
    Alameda 
    Books, 535 U.S. at 443
    (mentioning that the Ninth
    Circuit had rejected a similar argument advanced below by
    the adult bookstore/arcade owner, but not reaching the is-
    sue). We find this characterization unpersuasive. Because
    adult entertainment venues are not prohibited entirely in
    Washington Park, it is more appropriate to view the ordi-
    nance as a limitation, rather than a ban. Joelner is unable
    to point us to any case which says otherwise. Thus, as
    Ordinance 01-27 does not eliminate erotic expression in
    Washington Park, prong two is met.
    The third prong of the analysis, which considers whether
    the regulation is aimed at reducing the negative effects of
    adult speech and not the suppression of speech, when
    coupled with the second, concerns the level of scrutiny that
    must be applied to Ordinance 01-27. Ben’s 
    Bar, 316 F.3d at 723
    . In Ben’s Bar, although we concluded that the statute
    was “content-based,” we nonetheless applied intermediate
    scrutiny. 
    Id. at 724.
    The focus was solely upon the municipal-
    ity’s purpose in enacting the statute.
    If an ordinance was enacted to restrict certain viewpoints or
    modes of expression, see 
    Schultz, 228 F.3d at 844-47
    , it is
    No. 03-2669                                                      15
    subject to strict scrutiny and is presumptively invalid. But
    if an ordinance is a “time, place, and manner” restriction,
    enacted “predominant[ly]” to address the negative second-
    ary effects caused by such expression and not to suppress
    the content of erotic speech, it is subject to intermediate
    scrutiny.6 
    Id. at 841-42.
      The “content-neutrality” inquiry is therefore subsumed by
    the inquiry into a municipality’s purpose in enacting the
    regulation. 
    See 316 F.3d at 724
    (citing Alameda 
    Books, 535 U.S. at 432-39
    (plurality opinion); 
    id. at 448-49
    (Kennedy,
    J. concurring); Pap’s 
    A.M., 529 U.S. at 294
    -96 (plurality
    opinion); and 
    id. at 310
    (Souter, J., concurring in part and
    dissenting in part)). In evaluating a municipality’s underly-
    ing regulatory motivations, we may consider a “ ‘wide
    variety of materials including, but not limited to, the text of
    the regulation or ordinance, any preamble or express
    legislative findings associated with it, and studies and
    information of which legislators were clearly aware.’ 
    316 F.3d at 723
    n.28 (quoting Ranch House, Inc. v. Amerson, 
    238 F.3d 1273
    , 1280 (11th Cir. 2001)). And while a municipality
    need not conduct new studies or produce evidence independ-
    6
    “[An ordinance restricting factories to areas far from residential
    neighborhoods] might, like a speech restriction, be ‘content based.’
    It might, for example, single out slaughterhouses for specific
    zoning treatment . . . . Without knowing more, however, one would
    hardly presume that because the ordinance is specific to that
    business, the city seeks to discriminate against it . . . . One would
    presume, rather, that the ordinance targets not the business but
    its particular noxious side effects. The business might well be the
    city’s most valued enterprise; nevertheless, because of the [negative
    side effects] it causes, it may warrant special zoning treatment.
    This sort of singling out is not impermissible content discrimina-
    tion; it is sensible urban planning.” Alameda 
    Books, 535 U.S. at 446
    (emphasis added) (citation omitted).
    16                                                  No. 03-2669
    ent of that already generated by other cities, 
    id. at 716-17
    (citing 
    Renton, 475 U.S. at 51-52
    ), there still must be some
    reasonably relevant evidentiary basis for a municipality’s
    action.7
    In the instant case, Ordinance 01-27 limits the number of
    “places” providing adult entertainment at any one “time” to
    six, but includes no guidelines to restrict the mode by which
    erotic messages are conveyed. See, e.g., 
    Schultz, 228 F.3d at 847
    (holding unconstitutional a statute which “restrict[ed]
    the particular movements and gestures of the erotic dancer”
    and thereby “depriv[ed] the performer of a repertoire of
    expressive elements with which to craft an erotic, sensual
    performance.”) Hence, Ordinance 01-27 is a type of time,
    place, and manner restriction.
    The preamble to Ordinance 01-27 states that it was enacted
    “[i]n order to promote the public interest in the preservation
    of public health, safety and welfare . . . .” In addition, the
    ordinances which were adopted prior to No. 01-27, Nos. 069-
    99 and 01-22, both cite “public health, safety, and welfare”
    7
    In Ben’s Bar, we discussed the slight variations between the
    views of Justice Kennedy and the plurality in Alameda Books re-
    garding the correct evidentiary burden which must be met by a
    municipality in the third prong of the 
    analysis. 316 F.3d at 720
    -
    22. As Justice Kennedy’s concurrence is the narrowest opinion
    joining the judgment of the Court in Alameda Books, it controls.
    Marks v. United States, 
    430 U.S. 188
    , 193 (1977). Hence, although
    “very little evidence is required,” Alameda 
    Books, 535 U.S. at 451
    (Kennedy, J. concurring), the municipality’s inference that the
    ordinance “may reduce the costs of secondary effects without
    substantially reducing speech,” 
    id. at 450,
    must appear reason-
    able. Given the particular nature of this appeal, the distinction
    here is inconsequential, but we note that it may not be upon
    remand for a full adjudication.
    No. 03-2669                                                    17
    as the basis for the restriction.8 But it is not enough for the
    Village to indicate that the secondary effects of adult
    entertainment were one concern underlying its enactment
    of Ordinance 01-27, such effects must be the “predominant
    concerns.” Ben’s 
    Bar, 316 F.3d at 723
    .
    The record does not contain any legislative findings or
    any indication that the Board considered studies or other
    information before enacting Ordinance 01-27, or its precursor
    ordinances. Without this information, we cannot now de-
    termine if intermediate scrutiny applies. But we also note
    that when the matter is fully considered upon remand, if
    the Village is unable to point to any legislative findings,
    other than the preamble noted above, or some outside infor-
    mation upon which the Board relied, the evidence indicates
    that the Village’s decision to increase the limitation from
    four to six seemed to be motivated predominantly by concerns
    about revenue and/or political patronage, not secondary
    effects and hence, strict scrutiny would apply. And if so, the
    Ordinance would likely be unconstitutional because the
    Village’s general statements about public welfare would be
    insufficient to demonstrate that the ordinance was neces-
    sary to serve a compelling state interest and narrowly
    drawn to that end.
    Moreover, even if the Village can point to other legislative
    findings or outside information relied upon by the Board,
    such that Ordinance 01-27 is subject to the less demanding
    intermediate level of scrutiny, the Village still must satisfy
    the fourth prong of the analysis—the regulation must serve
    a substantial governmental interest, be narrowly tailored,
    8
    Although the Village nowhere expressly references secondary
    effects, for the sake of argument, we presume that its interest in
    the “public health, safety, and welfare” is spurred by a concern
    over the negative effects which may accompany adult entertain-
    ment businesses.
    18                                                   No. 03-2669
    and cannot unreasonably limit alternative avenues of
    communication. 
    Id. at 724.
    And since a municipality “ ‘may
    not assert that it will reduce secondary effects by reducing
    speech in the same proportion,’ ” 
    id. at 725
    (quoting
    Alameda 
    Books, 122 S. Ct. at 1741
    (Kennedy, J. concur-
    ring)), it is doubtful whether Washington Park will be able
    to meet this final prong of the analysis, absent some
    showing that there was no other regulatory means available
    (aside from the numerical restriction) which would have
    effectively curbed any deleterious secondary effects of adult
    entertainment outlets.
    In sum, we agree with the district court that based on the
    limited appellate record, Joelner has a strong likelihood of
    success on the merits of his permanent injunction and
    declaratory judgment action as to the facial constitutional-
    ity of the numerical restriction. However, our inquiry
    cannot end here as we must proceed to the balancing of the
    harms, see infra Part II.B., after a brief review of Joelner’s
    other constitutional challenges.9
    b. As Applied
    Joelner argues that the Village’s application of the nu-
    merical restriction was unfounded, arbitrary, and capricious
    and thus, unconstitutional. As a preliminary matter, we
    point out that the Board based its rejections of his licenses,
    at least in part, upon his alleged failure to pay applicable
    licensing fees. This can hardly be considered an “arbitrary
    9
    Joelner also asserts that the ordinance is unconstitutional on its
    face because it provides no guidelines for the allocation of the
    limited number of licenses allowed. See, e.g., City of Lakewood v.
    Plain Dealer Publ’g Co., 
    486 U.S. 750
    , 757-58 (1988), cited in
    
    MacDonald, 132 F.3d at 361
    n.6. However, we do not address this
    issue here because we are fairly convinced that the numerical
    restriction is otherwise constitutionally flawed.
    No. 03-2669                                                  19
    and capricious” reason for denying Joelner the requested
    licenses. However, because the record does not reveal what
    the Board based these allegations upon, how the license
    applications came to be ordered as they were on the April
    15 agenda, or how an application not on the April 15
    agenda was considered at all, and particularly how it was
    considered before Joelner’s, we refrain from making any
    determination with respect to this assertion and leave the
    issue for a more full examination upon remand.
    2. Facial Challenge to the Licensing Fees
    The main focus of Joelner’s facial challenge to the licensing
    fees is his argument that Ordinance 01-22 is content-based
    and therefore unconstitutional. But a statute imposing licens-
    ing fees is not “content-based” simply because it is directed at
    a certain category of activities, such as regulations of parades,
    rallies, assemblies, and other demonstrations held on city
    streets or city property. 
    MacDonald, 132 F.3d at 361
    ;
    Alameda 
    Books, 535 U.S. at 446
    . See, e.g., Church of the
    Am. Knights of the Klu Klux Klan v. City of Gary, 
    334 F.3d 676
    , 680-81 (7th Cir. 2003) (“KKK”) (treating regulation
    affecting only parade and demonstration activities as “con-
    tent-neutral”); Forsyth County v. Nationality Movement, 
    505 U.S. 123
    , 130-132 (1992) (same). Rather, an inquiry into the
    constitutionality of a fee ordinance is two-fold: (1) does the
    regulation in question vest the public officials in charge of
    enforcing or applying the ordinance with a constitutionally
    impermissible amount of discretion, see, e.g., 
    Forsyth, 505 U.S. at 130-32
    ; and (2) is the fee amount based upon the
    costs of administering the ordinance, maintaining public
    order, and relieving the other burdens on public services
    stemming from the matter licensed, see Cox v. New Hamp-
    shire, 
    312 U.S. 569
    , 576-77 (1941); Murdock v. Pennsylva-
    nia, 
    319 U.S. 105
    , 116 (1943); 
    KKK, 334 F.3d at 682
    (cita-
    tions omitted); 
    Thomas, 227 F.3d at 925
    ; 
    MacDonald, 132 F.3d at 362-63
    .
    20                                               No. 03-2669
    Turning to the first issue, Washington Park vests its
    public officials with no discretion at all regarding the ap-
    plication of the licensing fee. Every “adult entertainment”
    venue or proposed venue is subject to Ordinance 01-22, and
    the license applicant himself, rather than public officials,
    determines which fee will apply, either by applying for a
    “bookstore” or a “cabaret” license. 
    MacDonald, 132 F.3d at 362
    . This ordinance does not create the “unbridled discre-
    tion” the Supreme Court condemned in 
    Forsyth, 505 U.S. at 135-36
    .
    And as to the second issue, we cannot now make any
    determination regarding the underlying basis for the amount
    of the fee. Permit or license fees which restrict constitution-
    ally protected speech must bear a rational relationship to
    the public services involved with the matter licensed. S.-
    Suburban Housing Ctr. v. Greater S. Suburban Bd. of
    Realtors, 
    935 F.2d 868
    , 898 (7th Cir. 1991). The Village
    generally indicated the basis for the fees in section 1 of
    Ordinance 01-22:
    [I]t is in the best interests of the health, safety, and
    welfare of its citizens to increase the license fees for
    adult entertainment establishments operating within
    the corporate limits of the Village. After careful con-
    sideration of the size of the Village and the number of
    businesses, the expenses involved in maintaining law
    and order, the vehicular and pedestrian traffic in the
    Village, the income and number of problems and diffi-
    culties that arise from the aforesaid businesses, and the
    desire to provide a safer, cleaner, and more aestheti-
    cally pleasing Village for its residents, the Board has
    determined that license fee rates should be increased.
    Standing alone these are valid reasons for the imposition of
    a fee. But the $10,000 and $30,000 fees imposed by Wash-
    ington Park are certainly not nominal. See Forsyth, 
    505 U.S. 138-40
    (dissenting opinion) (discussing whether the
    No. 03-2669                                                21
    Constitution limits a license fee to a nominal amount).
    Furthermore, the Village chose to differentiate between
    “cabarets” and “bookstores.” Without more, the statement
    of purpose included in the statute is insufficient to support
    the fees, particularly considering the differentiation be-
    tween establishments and the large cabaret fee. However,
    the record has not been sufficiently developed for a reliable
    assessment to be made as to this issue, and thus, the Village
    will have the opportunity on remand to more adequately dem-
    onstrate its justification for these fees. S.-Suburban Housing
    
    Ctr., 935 F.2d at 898
    (stating the burden is on the municipal-
    ity to make this “rational relationship” showing).
    B. Balancing of the Harms to the Parties and the
    Public Interest
    Our discussion of Joelner’s likelihood of success on the
    merits generally supports a preliminary injunction to pre-
    vent the Village from enforcing the ordinances. Yet our
    conclusions do not necessitate that outcome. As noted earlier,
    see supra Part II, because this case involves adult enter-
    tainment regulations, which implicate conflicting public
    interests, and because lingering factual questions make a
    definitive resolution on the merits impossible, the relative
    harms to the interested parties stemming from a grant or
    denial of a preliminary injunction must be weighed against
    the merits. Although we are fairly convinced that there are
    serious constitutional problems with both the numerical
    restriction and, to a lesser extent, the licensing fees, a
    preliminary injunction may nonetheless be inappropriate if
    the relative harms strongly disfavor such relief. See, e.g.,
    
    MacDonald, 132 F.3d at 363
    (vacating a preliminary
    injunction where the relative harms mediated against it).
    22                                              No. 03-2669
    1. The $30,000 Cabaret Fee and the Numerical
    Restriction
    Regarding the $30,000 fee portion of the ordinance and
    the numerical restriction, if an injunction were refused,
    there would be no direct harm to Joelner because he does
    not have any currently operating licensed cabaret businesses.
    We also note again our concern about whether Joelner
    actually owns the relevant properties, see supra note 4.
    Generously, we do acknowledge that Joelner would suffer
    some opportunity costs if an injunction were refused and
    these ordinances were later found unconstitutional. But
    such opportunity costs are too speculative for us to consider
    here. For example, if we were to enjoin the enforcement of
    these ordinances, who is to say that Joelner’s proposed
    business would find adequate staff or operate at a profit?
    However, if the Village was forced to hold new hearings
    on Joelner’s applications, the Village would incur costs,
    admittedly nominal. And if the Village was compelled to
    grant Joelner the licenses he requested, as he urges us to
    do, the Village would bear the not insignificant increase in
    police, infrastructural, and other related costs.
    Moreover, if the injunction were refused with respect to
    the $30,000 fee and numerical restriction, Washington Park
    would still have six currently licensed and operating adult
    entertainment outlets, including Joelner’s bookstore at 2226
    Kingshighway. Put differently, there would be no shortage
    of forums for this type of communication. And as mentioned
    previously, the opening of each additional outlet may be
    accompanied by deleterious secondary effects (e.g., in-
    creased crime rates, diminished property values, deteriora-
    tion of neighborhoods, see, e.g., 
    Renton, 475 U.S. at 46
    -47).
    In sum, given that there is an abundance of adult enter-
    tainment venues in Washington Park, that Joelner does not
    currently operate any cabaret, and that the Village and the
    public would bear both direct and indirect costs if even one
    No. 03-2669                                                 23
    additional outlet were opened, despite the constitutional
    hurdles that must be overcome by each ordinance, a
    preliminary injunction requiring either new hearings or the
    issuance of any new licenses to Joelner is on balance
    disfavored. The district court’s order, to the extent it
    required the Village to conduct a new hearing for Joelner,
    must be vacated.
    2. The $10,000 Bookstore Fee
    With respect to the $10,000 portion of the fee ordinance,
    if an injunction were refused and Joelner were forced to pay
    the fee in order to continue to operate his bookstore, Joelner
    could suffer significant irreparable harm. It is true that,
    assuming Joelner ultimately succeeds in establishing the
    invalidity of the fee provisions, his injury could be compen-
    sated through an award of money damages. 
    MacDonald, 132 F.3d at 358
    n.4. However, $10,000 is a relatively onerous
    amount to pay to continue operate a business previously
    licensed for only $100 annually. Second and relatedly, if
    Joelner cannot afford such a hefty fee, he would be forced to
    shut down his bookstore. Hence, there is a threat that these
    allegedly unconstitutionally excessive fees could cause Joelner
    significant irreparable harm. See 
    id. at 363
    n.8.
    In contrast, if the injunction is granted, allowing Joelner
    to continue to operate his bookstore without paying the
    $10,000 fee, the possible harm to the Village is minimal.
    The Village would be deprived of $10,000—and only tem-
    porarily, assuming, arguendo, the fee is later found to be
    constitutional. Even for a small municipality like Washington
    Park, the harm from such a temporary deprivation of capital
    cannot outweigh the possible harm to Joelner. Also, Wash-
    ington Park licensed Joelner’s bookstore for only $100
    annually from at least 1995 until January 2003, despite the
    fact that Ordinance 069-99 (enacted September 1999) and
    Ordinance 01-00 (enacted January 2000) authorized the
    24                                                   No. 03-2669
    Village to impose fees of $3000 and $30,000, respectively.10
    If the Village managed to get along without Joelner’s fees
    for the approximately eight years prior to 2003, surely the
    Village can survive without these fees for a few more
    months, while the merits are fully adjudicated. And, as
    noted earlier, there would be no harm at all to the Village
    if the fee is later found to be unconstitutional. Cf. Connec-
    tion Distrib. 
    Co., 154 F.3d at 288
    (“[T]he government presum-
    ably would be substantially harmed if enforcement of a
    constitutional law . . . were enjoined[.]”).
    Regarding the alleged arrearages owed by Joelner, the
    record does not reveal the Board’s basis for these conten-
    tions, other than statements by the Village Clerk that Joelner
    was “in the red.” But presumably, although there is no doc-
    umentation of any objection by the Village to Joelner’s pay-
    ment of only a nominal $100 annual fee prior to January
    2003, the Board seeks to hold Joelner responsible for the
    adult entertainment fees which ostensibly first became
    applicable in 1999. Given that Joelner’s arrearages could
    possibly total around $56,00011 and that the Village had
    made no objection to his “nonpayment” until January 2003,
    our above analysis with respect to the “new” $10,000 fee
    likewise applies to the alleged arrearages.
    Furthermore, the bookstore is a forum for adult speech
    known and presumably relied upon by the public. Because
    10
    We make no explicit or implicit determination regarding the
    constitutionality of either of these ordinances. The only ordinances
    challenged in this suit are Nos. 01-22 and 01-27.
    11
    Ordinance 069-99, imposing a $3000 annual (or $250/month)
    adult entertainment license fee, was enacted in September 1999.
    Ordinance 01-00, imposing a $30,000 annual (or $2500/month)
    license fee, was enacted in January 2000. Ordinance 01-22, im-
    posing a $10,000 annual adult bookstore fee, was enacted in
    November 2002. Thus, Joelner’s “back-fees” would equal approxi-
    mately $1000 for September-December 1999 and $55,000 for
    January 2000-October 2002, for a total of $56,000.
    No. 03-2669                                                  25
    the Village has licensed this business since at least 1995,
    the Village had, without question, previously determined
    that the secondary effects of this business were acceptable.
    Therefore, consideration of the relative harms weighs in
    favor of granting a preliminary injunction to prevent the
    Village from collecting the alleged arrearages and enforcing
    the $10,000 fee provision with respect to Joelner’s existing
    bookstore business. To the extent that the district court’s
    order required payment of these fees to the Village, it
    should be vacated.
    III. Conclusion
    The district court’s denial of all injunctive relief requested
    by Joelner save its order preventing the Village of Washing-
    ton Park from interfering with the continued operation of
    Joelner’s bookstore located at 2226 Kingshighway was correct
    and appropriate. But it was error for the district court to
    require Joelner to pay either the disputed arrearages or the
    November 2002 fee in order to run this business. In addi-
    tion, with respect to Joelner’s request for new hearings the
    district court also erred—the Village need not hold any
    rehearings on any of Joelner’s applications, nor grant any
    new licenses to Joelner.
    Therefore, although it appears that the numerical
    restriction on its face (and possibly as applied to Joelner) is
    unconstitutional and that the fee requirement on its face
    may be unconstitutional, after weighing the merits against
    the interests of Joelner, the Village, and the public, the
    request to preliminarily enjoin Washington Park from en-
    forcing these ordinances was properly denied, but Joelner
    should be allowed to continue to operate his bookstore without
    the payment of any disputed fees pending final disposition
    of the case. The district court’s order is AFFIRMED in part
    and VACATED in part. The case is REMANDED for further
    proceedings.
    26                                              No. 03-2669
    APPENDIX
    Ordinance 069-99: Ordinance Limiting the Number of Adult
    Entertainment Licenses in the Village of Washington Park,
    St. Clair County, Illinois to the Number of (4) Four.
    Be it ordained by the President and Board of Trustees of
    the Village of Washington Park, Illinois, that there has
    been and shall be a limitation of the number of adult en-
    tertainment licenses to the maximum limit of (4) four as
    follows:
    Section 1. Limitation and Purpose.
    In order to promote a public interest in the preservation
    of public health, safety and welfare, and to accord with the
    historical fact that adult entertainment licenses are and
    were limited to the number of (4) four, there is and shall be
    a limitation on the number of adult entertainment licenses
    and establishments limiting the number of such licenses
    and establishments to a maximum of (4) four in the Village
    of Washington Park. This maximum limitation is a reaffir-
    mation of this Village’s limitation. The maximum limitation
    shall apply retrospectively and prospectively. In the event
    of the cessation of business of any licensed adult entertain-
    ment license, the adult entertainment license conferred to
    the persons or corporation for that establishment shall
    immediately lapse and no future adult entertainment
    license shall be issued by any elected or appointed public
    official, representative, employee, or body of the Village of
    Washington Park to operate an adult entertainment
    establishment on the geographic location of a prior existing
    establishment or any other location within the Village
    limits of Washington Park, Illinois. Thereupon, the maxi-
    mum number of adult entertainment licenses shall be
    immediately lowered to the number of adult entertainment
    licenses remaining in effect.
    No. 03-2669                                                 27
    Section 2. License Requirement for Adult Entertainment.
    All persons or corporations involved in the operation of a
    commercial use featuring [adult entertainment] shall be
    required to have an adult entertainment license the fee for
    which is set at $3000.00 and is limited by the number of
    allowed establishments as set forth herein.
    Section 3. Definition of Adult Entertainment.
    Adult entertainment is the operation of a commercial use
    featuring acts, performances, videos, and/or movies involv-
    ing nudity, or partial nudity, but within the permitted
    community standards of the Village of Washington Park,
    the County of St. Clair and the State of Illinois, available to
    persons over the age of (21) twenty-one years.
    Section 4. Transfers Prohibited.
    No entertainment licenses issued by the Village of
    Washington Park shall be transferable by any means whatso-
    ever, and such authority as an entertainment license confers
    shall be conferred ONLY to the persons or corporation name
    thereon.
    Section 5. Authorized Time of Operation.
    In order to promote the health, safety, and welfare of
    the citizens of Washington Park, Illinois, all adult enter-
    tainment licensed establishments are only authorized to
    conduct adult entertainment on the premises specified, be-
    tween the time of 6:00 a.m. central time and 12:00 a.m.
    central time on Sunday through Thursday; and, on Friday
    through Saturday between 6:00 a.m. central time and 1:00
    a.m. central time. Failure to comply with the authorized
    time of operation shall subject the licensee to immediate re-
    28                                                No. 03-2669
    vocation of the adult entertainment license by the Village
    Board. Upon revoking said license, the Village Board shall
    state the reason(s) in writing to the holder of the revoked
    license.
    Section 6. Saving Clause.
    Should any court of competent jurisdiction make a judicial
    determination that any section, paragraph, provision or
    sentence of this ordinance is unconstitutional, the validity
    of the remaining sections, paragraphs, provisions or
    sentences shall not be affected and shall remain in full force
    and effect.
    Ordinance 01-00: Ordinance Amending the Fee for Adult
    Entertainment License.
    Whereas, the president and board of Trustees of the
    Village of Washington Park, Illinois believe that the public
    health, safety and welfare of the residents of the Village
    and those persons who enter the territorial jurisdiction of
    the Village would be served by an increase in the annual fee
    for an adult entertainment license within the Village; and,
    Whereas, the cost, including police, fire, and other municipal
    resources to the Village has steadily increased because of the
    location of said adult entertainment establishments within the
    Village;
    Be it ordained by the president and board of trustees of
    the Village of Washington Park, Illinois, that the fee for
    maintaining an adult entertainment license within the
    Village shall be increased to $30,000.00 [ ] annually.
    Ordinance 01-22: Amending the License Fees and Other
    Regulations Regarding Adult Entertainment Licensing.
    No. 03-2669                                                 29
    Be it ordained by the Village of Washington Park as
    follows:
    Section 1. Purpose.
    The Village Board has determined that it is in the best
    interests of the health, safety, and welfare of its citizens to
    increase the license fees for adult entertainment establish-
    ments operating within the corporate limits of the Village.
    After careful consideration of the size of the Village and the
    number of businesses, the expenses involved in maintaining
    law and order, the vehicular and pedestrian traffic in the
    Village, the income and number of problems and difficulties
    that arise from the aforesaid businesses, and the desire to
    provide a safer, cleaner, and more aesthetically pleasing
    Village for its residents, the Board has determined that
    license fee rates should be increased.
    Section 2. Body of Evidence.
    The license fees for engaging in adult entertainment
    establishments within the Village shall be as provided in
    the following schedule:
    Business           Fee/Year         Fee/Year
    2002             2003
    Adult Bookstore       $10,000          $10,000
    Adult Cabaret         $30,000          $30,000
    Section 3.
    The following definitions apply to all Village of
    Washington Park regulations.
    30                                              No. 03-2669
    Business                   Definition
    Adult       Any business which sells what is com-
    Bookstore   monly known as adult entertainment
    books, magazines, other reading materi-
    als, movies, novelties, or paraphernalia.
    Adult       Any business with adult entertainment
    Cabaret     which includes live persons performing
    adult entertainment and which includes
    nudity.
    Section 4.
    The fees contained in Section 2 are annual fees. The bus-
    inesses may pay the fees on a quarterly basis . . . .
    Section 5. Limitation and Purpose.
    In order to promote a public interest in the preservation
    of public health, safety and welfare, and to accord with the
    historical fact that adult entertainment licenses are and
    were limited to the number of (4) four, there is and shall be
    a limitation on the number of adult entertainment licenses
    and establishments limiting the number of such licenses
    and establishments to a maximum of (4) four in the Village
    of Washington Park. This maximum limitation is a reaffir-
    mation of this Village’s limitation. The maximum limitation
    shall apply retrospectively and prospectively. In the event
    of the cessation of business of any licensed adult entertain-
    ment license, the adult entertainment license conferred to
    the persons or corporation for that establishment shall
    immediately lapse and no future adult entertainment
    license shall be issued by any elected or appointed public
    official, representative, employee, or body of the Village of
    Washington Park to operate an adult entertainment
    No. 03-2669                                                31
    establishment on the geographic location of a prior existing
    establishment or any other location within the Village
    limits of Washington Park, Illinois. Thereupon, the maxi-
    mum number of adult entertainment licenses shall be
    immediately lowered to the number of adult entertainment
    licenses remaining in effect.
    Section 6. Transfers Prohibited.
    No entertainment licenses issued by the Village of
    Washington Park shall be transferable by any means what-
    soever, and such authority as an entertainment license con-
    fers shall be conferred ONLY to the persons or corporation
    name thereon.
    Section 7. Authorized Time of Operation.
    In order to promote the health, safety, and welfare of the
    citizens of Washington Park, Illinois, all adult entertain-
    ment licensed establishments are only authorized to conduct
    adult entertainment on the premises specified, between the
    time of 6:00 a.m. central time and 12:00 a.m. central time
    on Sunday through Thursday; and, on Friday through
    Saturday between 6:00 a.m. central time and 1:00 a.m.
    central time. Failure to comply with the authorized time of
    operation shall subject the licensee to immediate revocation
    of the adult entertainment license by the Village Board.
    Upon revoking said license, the Village Board shall state
    the reason(s) in writing to the holder of the revoked license.
    Section 8. Saving Clause.
    Should any court of competent jurisdiction make a judicial
    determination that any section, paragraph, provision or
    sentence of this ordinance is unconstitutional, the validity
    32                                              No. 03-2669
    of the remaining sections, paragraphs, provisions or sen-
    tences shall not be affected and shall remain in full force
    and effect.
    Ordinance 01-27: Amending the Village of Washington
    Park, Illinois Ordinance No. 01-22, Section 5.
    Be it ordained by the Village Board of Trustees of the
    Village of Washington Park, Illinois in regular meeting
    assumed as follows:
    Section 5. Limitation and Purpose.
    In order to promote the public interest in the preservation
    of public health, safety and welfare, there is and shall be a
    limitation on the number of adult entertainment licenses
    and establishments to a maximum of (6) six in the Village
    of Washington Park. This maximum limitation shall apply
    prospectively. In the event of cessation of business of any
    adult entertainment establishment, the adult entertain-
    ment license conferred to the persons or corporation for that
    establishment shall immediately lapse and no future adult
    entertainment license shall be issued by any elected or
    appointed public official, representative, employee, or body
    of the Village of Washington Park to operate an adult
    entertainment establishment on the geographic location of
    a prior existing establishment or any other location within
    the Village limits of Washington Park, Illinois. Thereupon,
    the maximum number of adult entertainment licenses shall
    be immediately lowered to the number of adult entertain-
    ment licenses remaining in effect.
    No. 03-2669                                        33
    A true Copy:
    Teste:
    ________________________________
    Clerk of the United States Court of
    Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
    USCA-02-C-0072—8-4-04
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 03-2669

Judges: Per Curiam

Filed Date: 8/4/2004

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/3/2016

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