Judge: Commercial Filmmakers Don't Need Permits In National Parks

January 25, 2021
A filmmaker shooting in Colonial National Historical Park was practicing his First Amendment rights and didn't need a permit, a judge has ruled.
A filmmaker shooting in Colonial National Historical Park was practicing his First Amendment rights and didn't need a permit, a judge has ruled.

Editor's note: This updates with National Park Service reaction.

A federal judge has struck down as unconstitutional the National Park Service's practice of charging commercial filmmakers who want to shoot in the National Park System, ruling it is a protected activity under the First Amendment.

The ruling (attached below) by U.S. District Judge Colleen Killar-Kotelly stated that the permitting practice, through which the Park Service charged commercial filmmakers for a permit and any costs relating to park personnel assigned to monitor the filming or other cost recovery, "is an unconstitutional restriction on speech protected by the First Amendment."

"The statute imposes a chilling effect on the expressive activities of a wide swath of national park visitors," wrote the judge in her ruling Friday. "Consequently, there is a significant equitable interest in avoiding the unconstitutional application and enforcement of (the requirement) and its implementing regulations."

Congress in 2000 directed the secretaries of Interior and Agriculture "to require a permit and establish a reasonable fee for commercial filming activities or similar projects, as well as certain still photography activities, on federal lands under their respective jurisdictions. The law also directed the Secretaries to recover costs incurred by the agencies as a result of the permitted activity. Fees collected under this authority are to provide a fair return to the United States; be based, at a minimum, on certain listed criteria; and be retained by the Agencies to be available to the Secretary without further appropriation to be used consistent with the formula and purposes established for the Recreational Fee Demonstration Program."

The case was brought by Gordon M. Price, a Yorktown, Virginia, filmmaker who filmed settings in Colonial National Historical Park in Virginia for an independent feature called Crawford Road. The film revolved around "a stretch of road in York County, Virginia, that has long been the subject of rumors of hauntings and was the location of unsolved murders.”

Price, who didn't obtain a permit for filming in the park, debuted the production in October 2018 before an audience of about 250.

"The film garnered some attention in the local press and on social media sites," the judge noted in her ruling. "In December 2018, however, two NPS officers located Mr. Price at work and 'issued him a violation notice for failure to obtain a commercial filming permit.'"

In challenging the permitting requirement, Price pointed out that it does not apply to non-commercial filming, nor does it apply to news organizations. The absurdity of differentiating on the basis of whether a production was commercial didn't escape Judge Killar-Kotelly.

"For example, a 'non-commercial' filming production carried out by a non-profit organization or a news crew would escape the reach of (the) permitting regime, even if those groups used heavy filming equipment that damaged federal land," she wrote.

The permitting language carried no differentiation between large film crews with heavy equipment and small crews with no heavy equipment; Price used a single tripod with a camera and no more than four people.

"Defendants offer no explanation for how the broad sweep of this permitting regime is sufficiently tailored to the government’s goal of protecting federal land," noted the judge.

Judge Killar-Kotelly, in agreeing with Price, pointed out that the U.S. Supreme Court long has recognized film as being protected under the First Amendment, and that the high court "has found that 'the creation and dissemination of information are speech within the meaning of the First Amendment.'"

Taken in total, Price's "filmmaking at these parks constitutes a form of expressive speech protected by the First Amendment," she ruled.

In Washington, National Park Service officials were reviewing the judge's ruling "and determing the next steps," said Jenny Anzelmo-Sarles, the agency's chief of public affairs and chief spokesperson.

“This case started when the Park Service tried to criminally cite Gordon Price for unobtrusively making a film in a public park,” Price's attorney, Robert Corn-Revere, told the National Press Photographers Association. “But Gordon fought for his rights and prevailed. The court’s decision reaffirms that the act of filmmaking is protected by the First Amendment, and that the government cannot condition this right with arbitrary permit and fee requirements.” 

The ruling did not apply to commercial still photography, however, as Price did not challenge that aspect of the Park Service permitting requirements.

In citing the permitting language applying to the Park Service's ability to recoup costs for damages inflicted during filming, the judge pointed out that "(W)hile the government and the public do have an interest in preserving federal lands, such an interest does not justify a widely over-inclusive law that infringes upon free expression. ...

"Moreover, the National Park Service has also shown itself capable of enacting regulations that preserve park resources without overly burdening expressive activity, and may continue to do so in ways that do not run afoul of the First Amendment," she held.

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