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Permitting requirements in public fora. Permitting schemes requiring speakers to apply for permission ahead of time can be prior restraints but are valid under certain circumstances. Circumstances under which they are not valid :
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Permitting requirements in public fora • Permitting schemes requiring speakers to apply for permission ahead of time can be prior restraints but are valid under certain circumstances. • Circumstances under which they are not valid: • When they vest unlimited discretion in the licensor to permit or deny the speech (Lovell p. 163) • When they expressly allow a city official to discriminate based on content (unless content falls w/in the parameters of low value speech – e.g., obscenity – and even then there are strict procedural protections & rights of appeal). • Circumstances when such schemes are valid: • When they are based on neutral concerns (e.g., traffic safety, keeping public order) and involve only considerations of time, place and manner. (Cox v. New Hampshire p. 163 ) • Cities can charge nominal fees to defray expenses but cannot link those fees/expenses to costs associated with policing particular events due to “security” concerns related to protestors’ message (Forsyth Co. p. 165)
Permitting schemes in application • How neutral are the time/place/manner criteria in the ordinances? Do they control official discretion? Are they unreasonably oppressive on speech? • What issues arise with the Asheville/Augusta/Portland ordinances? • Criteria for when permit can be denied – always neutral? Discretion in officials? • Discrimination re activities to which permit requirement applies? • Fees – how calculated? Other monetary burdens? • Timing of permit application? • Size of group to which permit requirements apply? • Do we like permits at all - what is lost from a free speech perspective with a permit system? Does that argue against them in some situations?