Philadelphia Wants To Prohibit Unauthorized Talking
May the city of Philadelphia subject tour guides to hundreds of dollars in fines for engaging in unauthorized talking?
This is the question the Institute for Justice (IJ) seeks to answer in a federal lawsuit filed today, two days before Philadelphia celebrates the signing of the Declaration of Independence, in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.
The suit is brought on behalf of three Philadelphia tour guidesMike Tait, Josh Silver and Ann Boulaisseeking to overturn a law enacted in April that will make it illegal for anyone like them to give a tour of much of the citys downtown area without first passing a test and obtaining a government licensewithout, in essence, getting the governments permission to speak.
Effective in October, unlicensed tour guides can face fines of up to $300 per violation and have their businesses shut down.
The government cannot be in the business of deciding who may speak and who may not, said Robert McNamara, a staff attorney with the Institute for Justice, a national public interest law firm with a history of defending free speech and the rights of entrepreneurs.
The Constitution protects your right to communicate for a living, whether you are a journalist, a musician or a tour guide. It makes no more sense to let city officials decide who is allowed to talk about history than it would to let them decide who is allowed to talk about sports.
The new law makes it illegal to give a tour for compensation of the citys main tourist area without first submitting a written application, paying a fee, providing proof of insurance and passing a written examination in order to be granted a license to tour.
The program will be administered and the test developed by an administrative agency to be named by the mayors office. No test has been made public.
The law is targeted at speech and applies only to someone who guides or directs people within the city or offers to do so while provid[ing] information on the Citys geography, history, historic sites, historic structures, historic objects or other places of interest.
The program also discriminates against small or independent tour operators. The law gives the administrative agency complete discretion to exempt large operatorswho would be better able to cope with the costs of regulationfrom the testing requirements, provided the companies have training programs that are equivalent.
The irony of forbidding people to talk about Philadelphias historyincluding the history of the Framers enshrining fundamental American liberties in the Constitutionis not lost on Mike Tait, Josh Silver and Ann Boulais, three Philadelphians who make their living by telling visitors and natives about the history, culture and architecture of the place they love.
Mike, Josh and Ann are serious about their citys historythey share a deep commitment to accuracy as well as entertainment in their toursand they are also serious about the liberties protected by the Constitution, which is why they joined together with the Institute for Justice to strike down the Philadelphia tour guide licensing scheme as a violation of their freedom of speech and right to earn an honest living.
It is the right of every American to challenge laws that are unfair and wrong, said Mike Tait. As a matter of fact, that was fundamentally what the signing of the Declaration of Independence in Philadelphiaand the birth of our nationwas all about.
Posted by: Anonymoose 2008-07-07 |