Based on evidence concerning the adverse secondary
effects of adult uses on the community presented in hearings and in
reports made available to the Board of Supervisors, and on findings
incorporated in the cases of City of Renton v. Playtime Theatres,
Inc., 475 U.S. 41 (1986), Young v. American Mini Theatres, 426 U.S.
50 (1976), and Northend Cinema, Inc. v. Seattle, 585 P.2d 1153 (Wash.
1978), and on studies in other communities, including but not limited
to Phoenix, Arizona; Minneapolis, Minnesota; Saint Paul, Minnesota;
Manatee County, Florida; Houston, Texas; Indianapolis, Indiana; Amarillo,
Texas; Los Angeles, California; Austin, Texas; Seattle, Washington;
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma; and Beaumont, Texas, and also on findings
found in the Report of Attorney General's Working Group on the Regulation
of Sexually Oriented Businesses (June 6, 1989, State of Minnesota),
the Board of Supervisors finds that:
[1]
Sexually oriented businesses lend themselves
to ancillary unlawful and unhealthy activities that may go uncontrolled
by the operators of the establishments. Further, there is presently
no mechanism to make the owners of these establishments responsible
for the activities that occur on their premises.
[2]
Certain employees of sexually oriented businesses
defined in this chapter as adult theaters and cabarets engage in higher
incidence of certain types of sexually oriented behavior at these
businesses than employees of other establishments.
[3]
Sexual acts, including masturbation, oral and
anal sex, occur at sexually oriented businesses, especially those
which provide private or semiprivate booths or cubicles for viewing
films, videos or live sex shows, as defined under this chapter as
adult bookstores, adult novelty shops, adult video stores, adult motion-picture
theaters or adult arcades.
[4]
Offering and providing such space encourages
such activities, which create unhealthy conditions.
[5]
Persons frequent certain adult theaters, adult
arcades and other sexually oriented businesses for the purpose of
engaging in sex within the premises of such sexually oriented businesses.
[6]
At least 50 communicable diseases may be spread
by activities occurring in sexually oriented businesses, including,
but not limited to, syphilis, gonorrhea, human immunodeficiency virus
infection (AIDS), genital herpes, hepatitis B, Non B amebiasis, salmonella
infections and shigella infections.
[7]
Since 1981 and to the present, there has been
an increasing cumulative number of reported cases of AIDS caused by
the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in the United States: 600 in
1982, 2,200 in 1983, 4,600 in 1984, 8,555 in 1985 and 253,448 through
December 31, 1992.
[8]
As of May 1, 1995, there have been 13,559 reported
cases of AIDS in the State of Pennsylvania.
[9]
Since 1981 and to the present, there have been
an increasing cumulative number of persons testing positive for the
HIV antibody test in Delaware County, Pennsylvania.
[10] The number of cases of early (less
than one year) syphilis in the United States reported annually has
risen, with 33,613 cases reported in 1982 and 45,200 through November
of 1990.
[11] The number of cases of gonorrhea
in the United States reported annually remains at a high level, with
over one-half million cases being reported in 1990.
[12] The surgeon general of the United
States, in his report of October 22, 1986, has advised the American
public that AIDS and HIV infection may be transmitted through sexual
contact, intravenous drug abuse, exposure to infected blood and blood
components and from an infected mother to her newborn.
[13] According to the best scientific
evidence, AIDS and HIV infection, as well as syphilis and gonorrhea,
are principally transmitted by sexual acts.
[14] Sanitary conditions in some sexually
oriented businesses are unhealthy, in part, because the activities
conducted there are unhealthy and, in part, because of the unregulated
nature of the activities and the failure of the owners and the operators
of the facilities to self-regulate those activities and maintain those
facilities.
[15] Numerous studies and reports have
determined that semen is found in the areas of sexually oriented businesses
where persons view adult oriented films.
[16] The findings noted in Subsection
E(1)(c)[1] through
[15] raise substantial governmental concerns.