A.
It is the purpose of this chapter to regulate sexually oriented adult entertainment establishment businesses (hereinafter referred to as adult-oriented establishments) to promote the health, safety, morals, and general welfare of the citizens of the Village of Fairwater, to prevent the deleterious location and concentration of sexually oriented businesses within the Village, to aid in the alleviation and prevention of the adverse and deleterious effects of criminal activity and disruption of the public peace associated with such establishments, and to establish reasonable and uniform regulations to prevent the serious health hazards associated with unsafe and unsanitary conditions known to exist in those establishments and to alleviate the spread of sexually transmitted diseases and other contagious diseases in those establishments.
B.
Based on evidence concerning the adverse secondary effects of adult uses on the community presented in hearings and in reports made available to the Village Board, and on findings incorporated in the cases of Village of Renton v. Playtime Theatres, Inc., 475 U.S. 41 (1986), Young v. American Mini Theatres, 426 U.S. 50 (1976), and Barnes v. Glen Theatre, Inc., 501 U.S. 560 (1991), and on studies in other communities, including, but not limited to, Phoenix, Arizona; Minneapolis, Minnesota; Houston, Texas; Indianapolis, Indiana; Amarillo, Texas; Garden Grove, Oklahoma; Cleveland, Ohio; and Beaumont, Texas; and also on findings from the Report of the Attorney General's Working Group on the Regulation of Sexually Oriented Businesses (June 6, 1989, State of Minnesota), the Village Board finds:
(1)
Sexually oriented establishments lend themselves to ancillary unlawful and unhealthy activities. 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 establishments defined in this chapter as adult theatres and cabarets engage in higher incidence of certain types of illicit sexual behavior than employees of other establishments.
(3)
Sexual acts, including masturbation, and oral and anal sex, occur at sexually oriented establishments, especially those which provide private or semiprivate booths or cubicles for viewing films, videos or live sex shows.
(4)
Offering and providing such space encourages such activities, which creates unhealthy conditions.
(5)
Persons frequent certain adult theatres, adult arcades, and other sexually oriented establishments for the purpose of engaging in sex within the premises of such establishments.
(6)
At least 50 communicable diseases may be spread by activities occurring in sexually oriented establishments, including, but not limited to, syphilis, gonorrhea, human immunodeficiency virus infection (HIV-AIDS), genital herpes, hepatitis B, Non A, 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.
(8)
The number of cases of early (less than one year) syphilis in the United States reported annually has risen.
(9)
The number of cases of gonorrhea in the United States reported annually remains at a high level.
(10)
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.
(11)
According to the best scientific evidence, AIDS and HIV infection, as well as syphilis and gonorrhea, are principally transmitted by sexual acts.
(12)
Sanitary conditions in some sexually oriented establishments 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.
(13)
Numerous studies and reports have determined that semen is found in the areas of sexually oriented establishments where persons view adult-oriented films.
(15)
Sexually oriented establishments have operational characteristics which should be reasonably regulated in order to protect those substantial governmental concerns.
(16)
A reasonable licensing procedure is an appropriate mechanism to place the burden of that reasonable regulation on the owners and the operators of the sexually oriented establishments. Further, such a licensing procedure will place a heretofore nonexistent incentive on the operators to see that the sexually oriented establishment is run in a manner consistent with the health, safety and welfare of its patrons and employees, as well as the citizens of the Village of Fairwater. It is appropriate to require reasonable assurances that the licensee is the actual operator of the sexually oriented establishment, fully in possession and control of the premises and activities occurring therein.
(17)
Removal of doors on adult booths and requiring sufficient lighting on premises with adult booths advances a substantial governmental interest in curbing the illegal and unsanitary sexual activity occurring in adult theatres.
(18)
Requiring licenses of sexually oriented establishments to keep information regarding current employees and certain past employees will help reduce the incidence of certain types of criminal behavior by facilitating the identification of potential witnesses or suspects and by preventing minors from working in such establishments.
(19)
The disclosure of certain information by those persons ultimately responsible for the day-to-day operation and maintenance of the sexually oriented establishment, where such information is substantially related to the significant governmental interest in the operation of such uses, will aid in preventing the spread of sexually transmitted diseases.
(20)
It is desirable in the prevention of the spread of communicable diseases to obtain a limited amount of information regarding certain employees who may engage in the conduct which this chapter is designed to prevent or who are likely to be witnesses to such activity.
(21)
The fact that an applicant for an adult use license has been convicted of a sexually related crime leads to the rational assumption that the applicant may engage in that conduct in contravention of this chapter.
(22)
The barring of such individuals from the management of adult uses for a period of years serves as a deterrent to and prevents conduct which leads to the transmission of sexually transmitted diseases.
(23)
The general welfare, health, morals and safety of the citizens of the Village of Fairwater will be promoted by the enactment of this chapter.