Vendors Lose Appeal
by Brian Davis with research by Harold Dopman
On Monday
February 3, the United States Federal Appeals Court reversed a lower court’s
decision regarding the licensing of street newspapers.
The suit was brought against the City of Cleveland on behalf of the
Northeast Ohio Coalition for the Homeless (publisher of the Homeless
Grapevine) and the Nation of Islam (publisher of the Final Call) by
the American Civil Liberties Union to stop a policy involving the ticketing of
the vendors of the two papers.
The City
initiated a policy to license vendors of street newspapers in much the same way
as hot dog vendors are licensed. The
license costs $50 for a stationary license or $100 if the vendor wants to be
mobile. This would effectively regulate the paper out of existence
according to Harold Dopman, Managing Editor of the Grapevine.
The decision
reversed a District Court decision, which found a need to protect the
distribution of a political discussion on the streets of Cleveland.
The District Court decision was based on the freedom of speech and the
press. In the Appeal’s Court decision, the three judges did not
mention the economic impact the fee will place on the homeless and low-income
vendors of the Grapevine. Cleveland Law Director, Sharon Sobol Jordan,
said that they were pleased with the victory, and was especially happy with the
language that the judges used in the decision.
The City had
argued that in much the same way that organizations pay for parade licenses this
was a legitimate form of government intrusion.
The City claimed that this was not a restriction on selling the paper,
but an attempt for the City to regulate or at least have knowledge of those
people who are selling items on the streets to identify those that are
defrauding people. Jordan said that
the City was concerned with fraud by
unlicensed vendors
The ACLU has
asked for a rehearing by all the judges in the Sixth Circuit arguing that this
decision violates Murdock v. Pennsylvania a Supreme Court decision regarding the
distribution of religious material by the Jehovah Witnesses.
If the court does not grant the rehearing, the ACLU will be forced to
appeal to the Supreme Court.
Grapevine
managing editor, Dopman contends that this is just a continuing form of
harassment by the City of Cleveland of homeless people.
“This is a clear violation of our free speech, and another effort to
get rid of this blight on the city known as homeless people.”
The City
contends that they realize the impact a fee has on vendors, and are not as much
concerned with the fee as they are over “protecting” the public.
Jordan emphatically stated that the law department supports the civil
rights and the first amendment, and she said, “I am pretty sure that the Mayor
does too.”
City
attorneys claim that lawsuit and the appeal did not cost the City much money,
and they will defend the lawsuit in the Supreme Court if necessary.