                  United States Court of Appeals
                          FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT

                                   ___________

                                   No. 95-2891
                                   ___________

Families Achieving Independence    *
and Respect; Sheryl Walker;        *
Vicki Stippel,                     *
                                   *
           Appellants,             *
                                   * Appeal from the United States
      v.                           * District Court for the
                                   * District of Nebraska.
Nebraska Department of Social      *
Services; Mary Dean Harvey;        *
Ann Hogan; Daryl Wusk; Suzy        *
Skinner,                           *
                                   *
           Appellees.              *
                              ___________

                   Submitted:      January 14, 1997

                         Filed:     May 2, 1997
                                   ___________

Before RICHARD S. ARNOLD, Chief Judge, HEANEY, McMILLIAN, FAGG, BOWMAN,
     WOLLMAN, MAGILL, BEAM, LOKEN, HANSEN, MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, and
     MURPHY, Circuit Judges, en banc.
                              ___________

MAGILL, Circuit Judge.


     Members of Families Achieving Independence and Respect (FAIR),            a
grassroots   welfare   rights     organization,   sought   to   post   materials,
distribute materials, and speak with welfare recipients in the lobby of the
Nebraska Department of Social Services' (NDSS) Lancaster County local
office in Lincoln, Nebraska (Local Office).       FAIR was denied access to the
Local Office, and FAIR sought injunctive relief under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983 and
1988 in the district
court.1    The district court denied relief, concluding that FAIR's First and
Fourteenth Amendment rights were not violated because: (1) the Local
Office's policy was not vague; (2) the Local Office was not a public forum;
(3) the Local Office's regulation of expressive conduct was reasonable; and
(4) the Local Office's prohibition on FAIR's efforts to advocate its
position to a captive audience was not motivated by opposition to its
viewpoint.    See Families Achieving Independence & Respect v. Nebraska Dep't
of Social Servs., 890 F. Supp. 860 (D. Neb. 1995) (FAIR).    A panel of this
Court reversed in a subsequently vacated opinion, see Families Achieving
Independence & Respect v. Nebraska Dep't of Social Servs., 91 F.3d 1076
(8th Cir. 1996), and we now affirm.


                                      I.


       Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a), this Court typically
reviews a district court's findings of fact for clear error.     In New York
Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964), however, the Supreme Court held
that, in cases involving the First Amendment, appellate courts must "make
an   independent examination of the whole record" to ensure that its
"judgment does not constitute a forbidden intrusion on the field of free
expression."    Id. at 285.


       In Bose Corp. v. Consumers Union of United States, Inc., 466 U.S. 485
(1984), the Supreme Court explained that the appellate standard of review
in a First Amendment case "must be faithful to both Rule 52(a) and the rule
of independent review applied in New York Times Co. v. Sullivan."     Id. at
499.   Our review of First Amendment claims therefore




       1
      The Honorable Robert G. Kopf, United States District Judge
for the District of Nebraska.

                                      -2-
      carries with it a constitutional duty to conduct an independent
      examination of the record as a whole, without deference to the
      trial court. The requirement of independent appellate review
      is a rule of federal constitutional law, which does not limit
      our deference to a trial court on matters of witness
      credibility . . . . Even where a speech case has originally
      been tried in a federal court, subject to the provision of
      Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a) that findings of fact
      shall not be set aside unless clearly erroneous, we are obliged
      to make a fresh examination of crucial facts.


Hurley v. Irish-American Gay, Lesbian, & Bisexual Group of Boston, 115 S.
Ct. 2338, 2344 (1995) (quotations and alterations omitted) (emphasis
added).


      This Court's "independent review function is not equivalent to a 'de
novo' review of the ultimate judgment itself, in which a reviewing court
makes an original appraisal of all the evidence to decide whether or not
it believes that judgment should be entered for plaintiff."            Bose, 466 U.S.
at 514 n.31.    Instead, we review findings of noncritical facts for clear
error.     See id. ("There are, of course, many findings of fact in a
defamation case that are irrelevant to the constitutional standard of New
York Times Co. v. Sullivan and to which the clearly-erroneous standard of
Rule 52(a) is fully applicable.").         We independently review the evidentiary
basis of critical facts, giving due regard to the trial court's opportunity
to observe the demeanor of witnesses.            Hurley, 115 S. Ct. at 2344.     Based
on   our   independent   review   of   the   record,    we   present   the   following
                                       2
recitation of facts in this case.




      2
      We note that few of the facts in this case were in dispute;
the parties made extensive factual stipulations, see Def. Ex. 101,
Pl. Exs. 1 & 2, and much of the testimony at trial was
uncontroverted.

                                           -3-
                                            II.


        NDSS is an agency of the State of Nebraska which provides assistance
to low-income individuals and families.             In addition to supervising and
distributing financial assistance programs such as food stamps, Aid to
Dependent Children (ADC), and Medicaid, NDSS provides child welfare and
adult protective services.            NDSS maintains both the Local Office and a
central office in Lincoln, Nebraska.          The Local Office does not formulate
or debate public policy, but rather is concerned solely with the delivery
of social services to Nebraska's most impoverished citizens.


        The Local Office is housed on the second floor of a privately-owned
commercial building.       Within the Local Office is a lobby or reception area
where NDSS clients can wait before picking up food stamps, applying for
assistance, or speaking with caseworkers (Lobby).             The Lobby contains two
small       bulletin   boards   and   a   table   with   several   chairs.3   Because


        3
         The district court described the Lobby area at length:

        The enclosed waiting/reception area of the local NDSS
        office is one large rectangular room comprised of (a) a
        reception area on the east side of the room, with space
        on the north side for a receptionist and bathrooms; (b)
        a food-stamp-issuance counter with approximately three
        "teller" stations located on the south side of the
        reception area; and (c) a waiting area on the west side
        of the room, with client interview rooms surrounding most
        of the waiting area of the room. One enters and exits
        the local NDSS office and the waiting/reception area from
        the east by passing through a small lobby and closed
        doors. The waiting area is roughly twice the size of the
        reception area.     While the reception area does not
        contain seating, the waiting area does have seats.
        Located in the reception area adjacent to, and not far
        from, the food-stamp-issuance counter are two small
        bulletin boards with a table positioned in front of them.
        The evidence establishes that the bulletin boards are
        devoted almost exclusively to social-service notices
        regarding jobs and related information.         A client
        desiring an interview in the privacy of a client
        interview room would walk directly from the waiting room
        into an interview room without traversing any barrier
        save for the door to the interview room.      There is a

                                            -4-
altercations between clients have




     table in the waiting area.

FAIR, 890 F. Supp. at 863-64 (citations to record omitted).

                                    -5-
occurred in the past, a uniformed guard is posted in the Lobby and provides
security during working hours.


     The Lobby is particularly busy during the first several days of each
month when approximately one-third of the 5600 families receiving food
stamps from the Local Office come in to pick up their monthly food stamps.4
To limit congestion in such a high-traffic area and to ensure the dignified
treatment of NDSS clients,5 Daryl Wusk, the Administrator of the Local
Office, created a general policy of keeping the Local Office closed to




     4
      As Daryl Wusk, the Administrator of the Local Office,
explained, "[t]he first five working days are usually very hectic.
In the first three working days, for instance, in March [1995], we
over-the-counter issued [food stamps] to about 1,920 households.
That's for sure at least one individual, but many people don't come
just by [them]selves. They come with children, they may come with
a significant other, they may come with a grandparent and so the
1,920 [households are] really magnified by many other people."
Trial Tr. at 120.
     5
      Administrator Wusk explained that "we need to treat [NDSS
clients] with dignity and treat them with respect, and I can
require, within my office, my staff to do that, and, in fact, I
make it mandatory." Trial Tr. at 120.    NDSS clients, who have no
choice but to come to the Local Office for the basic necessities of
life, "have expectations that they should not have to go through a
large group of people s[i]tting wanting to give them information
because they usually come with very specific reasons in mind. I
need food, I need shelter, I need clothing, I need medical, and
when we start to put large groups or other groups in there offering
literature and those kinds of things, it's easy to infringe on
[NDSS] customers' rights." Trial Tr. at 119-20.

                                   -6-
outside groups (Policy).   The Policy, which was unwritten, provided that


     (a) "advocacy groups," regardless of whether Wusk agreed or
     disagreed with the group's message, were never allowed access
     to the waiting/reception area for advocacy purposes; and (b)
     only groups that provided a "direct benefit" associated with
     the "basic needs of [NDSS's] customers" were allowed access to
     the waiting/reception area.


FAIR, 890 F. Supp. at 865-66 (citations to record omitted; note omitted).
This same Policy applied to the bulletin boards located in the Lobby.   See
id. at 866-67.


     Because "[m]ost groups self-identify as advocacy groups," Trial Tr.
at 137 (testimony of Administrator Wusk), Administrator Wusk explained that
he would examine the materials submitted by an outside group to determine
if the Policy allowed an organization's access to the Lobby.    See id. at
137, 143.   Pursuant to the Policy, only four groups have been allowed to
access NDSS clients in the Lobby.6    The Volunteer Income Tax Assistance
(VITA) organization




     6
      Vicki Stippel, FAIR's project assistant and an NDSS client,
testified at trial that several years before, when the Local Office
was housed in a different building, she had observed a fifth group
in the Lobby "signing people up for Girl Scouts." Trial Tr. at 82.
Ms. Stippel stated that she did not know if the Girl Scout group
was passing out pamphlets or brochures because "I usually don't
stop at the table to find out what's going on." Id. Administrator
Wusk refuted this testimony, stating that "[w]e have had probably
Girl Scouts on the premises, but I don't believe that they--that I
recall [that they] ever set up a table to sign up and do those
kinds of things." Id. at 124. The district court found that "Wusk
specifically denied allowing the Girl Scouts access to the
waiting/reception area to hand out materials," FAIR, 890 F. Supp.
at 866 n.4, and "credit[ed] Wusk's testimony on this point." Id.
Reviewing this finding for clear error--as there is no apparent
reason why the presence of Girl Scouts in the Lobby should be
considered a "crucial fact"--we conclude that Wusk's testimony is
sufficient to support the district court's factual finding. See
Ricks v. Riverwood Int'l Corp., 38 F.3d 1016, 1018 (8th Cir. 1994)
("[A] factual finding that is supported by substantial evidence on
the record cannot be clearly erroneous.").

                                     -7-
was allowed to provide free assistance to NDSS clients with their state and
federal income tax returns.   The Expanded Food and Nutritional Education
Program (EFNEP) provided nutrition information and recipes.   Head Start was
allowed to register children in pre-kindergarten classes.          Finally,
Southeast Community College was allowed to register NDSS clients in English
as a Second Language (ESL) and General Equivalency Diploma (GED) courses.7
Outside groups which have sought, and been denied, access to the Lobby
pursuant to the Policy include university social work classes, right-to-
life groups, and "Mad Dads," a church-affiliated group which Administrator
Wusk otherwise supported.


     FAIR is a project of the Nebraska Center for Legal Services, which
in turn is a special project of the Legal Aid Society of Omaha.         The
Director of the Nebraska Center for Legal Services, David Mumgaard,
oversees a grant from the Woods Charitable Fund, which funds FAIR's
activities.8   FAIR, which is not incorporated




     7
      The bulletin boards in the Lobby contained information
regarding nutrition, health, housing, Head Start registration,
volunteer tax assistance, a "parent's center" at the YWCA,
employment and employment training opportunities, free stoves from
a rent-to-own company, free admissions or family memberships to the
Lincoln Children's Museum, and enrollment in "Tele-Care," a service
offered by the Lincoln General Hospital to ensure participants'
well-being on a daily basis. See Def. Ex. 1.
     8
      Director Mumgaard testified that FAIR's grant could not "be
used for activities related to partisan politics," Trial Tr. at 42,
nor for "direct lobbying, that is as FAIR, lobbying state senators,
the Governor, and others on these kinds of issues." Id. We note
that the documents FAIR submitted to the district court pertaining
to its grant do not describe these limitations on political
activities. See Pl. Ex. 3.

                                   -8-
and has no membership list, has two staff members, Sheryl Walker and Vicki
Stippel, who receive scholarships in lieu of pay.            Ms. Walker is FAIR's
project facilitator, while Ms. Stippel is FAIR's project assistant.


     FAIR describes itself as an educational support group for low-income
persons.    Among its goals, FAIR seeks to "more fully inform the public
discussion and debate on the 'welfare system' and 'welfare reform.'"               Pl.
Ex. 3 at 1.    "One of FAIR's activities is to represent the interests of its
members, and other welfare recipients, before legislative bodies."              Compl.
at 8, reprinted in J.A. at 8.           FAIR has distributed materials in the
rotunda of the Nebraska State Capitol Building in Lincoln, and Ms. Stippel
testified     that   she   had   presented   information   for   FAIR    to   Nebraska
legislative committees "numerous times."         Trial Tr. at 92.       Although FAIR
registered as a lobbyist with the State of Nebraska in the spring of 1994,
it later withdrew its registration on advice from the Nebraska Center for
Legal Services.9


     Together with the Nebraska Democratic Women, the Nebraska Women's
Political Network, the National Organization of Women, and other groups,
FAIR organized and sponsored a rally at the Nebraska State Capitol Building
to be held February 14, 1995.           The purpose of the rally was to "show
strong, unified, grassroots opposition to the destruction of our nation's
social safety net."        Pl. Ex. 5.   In January 1995, FAIR sought permission
to post materials, distribute materials, and speak with NDSS clients in the
Lobby during the




     9
      Pursuant to Nebraska Revised Statute section 49-1434(3)(d)
(1995), "[a]ny person who limits his or her activities to
appearances before legislative committees . . . [or] to writing
letters or furnishing written material to individual members of the
Legislature or to the committees thereof" is not considered a
lobbyist.

                                         -9-
first three days of February.   FAIR specifically requested the first three
days of the month because, as Ms. Walker explained, "that's normally when
[NDSS clients] will come in to pick up their food stamps for that month."
Trial Tr. at 50.


      The materials FAIR wished to post and distribute in the Lobby
included a flier which, referring to welfare reform, declared: "Stop the
War on Poor Children!"   Pl. Ex. 5.    The flier went on to explain that this


      theme symbolizes the great human devastation which will ensue
      if proposals to eliminate and severely restrict housing
      assistance, child nutrition programs, food stamps, aid to poor
      children, and aid for the disabled (to name a few) are adopted.


Id.   FAIR also wished to distribute a brochure entitled "What About the
Children?" Pl. Ex. 4, which outlined its views on welfare reform.    Finally,
FAIR prepared a postcard, entitled "Our Children's Hearts Are In Your
Hands," Pl. Ex. 6, for NDSS clients to send to Nebraska state legislators
during the legislative session.       The postcard, which portrayed a child's
hand print and had a space to write a child's name and age, included the
following specific requests regarding welfare reform:


      Please--no lifetime limit that will add to homelessness.
      Please--no orphanages just because we are poor. Please--no new
      baby penalties (family caps). Don't punish us because we are
      born and our parents are poor.


Id. (emphasis in original).


      Administrator Wusk denied FAIR access to the Lobby and bulletin
boards because FAIR did not offer a direct benefit to NDSS




                                      -10-
clients.10   FAIR was unable to distribute its materials elsewhere in the
same building which houses the Local Office, but was able to distribute the
materials on the public sidewalk adjacent to the building.11
     FAIR brought this action in the district court seeking to permanently
enjoin the Local Office from enforcing its Policy. Following a hearing, the
district court denied FAIR relief.        The court determined that, under
several alternative Supreme Court tests, the Lobby was not a public forum.
See FAIR, 890 F. Supp. at 871.   Because the Lobby was not a public forum,
the policy limiting expressive conduct in the Lobby could be upheld if it
was "reasonable," see id. at 874, and if the Policy was not an effort to
discriminate on the basis of the speaker's viewpoint.   See id. at 877.   The
district court, finding that "neither the unwritten




     10
      In an affidavit, Mary Dean Harvey, the Director of NDSS and
Administrator Wusk's superior, stated that she and Wusk had
discussed his decision to deny FAIR access to the Lobby "on the
basis that only groups who offer a direct service or benefit to our
clients are allowed on our office premises in order to access our
clients directly," Def. Ex. 3 at 1, and that she "concurred with
that decision as the appropriate statement of our current policy on
this issue . . . ." Id.
     11
      Ms. Stippel testified that she had been unable to set up a
table and chairs while distributing information regarding the rally
on the sidewalk outside of the building housing the Local Office.
See Trial Tr. at 89-90. This contradicted Ms. Walker's testimony
to some extent, who testified that she "thought we did keep our
chairs." Id. at 64. Ms. Stippel also noted that she "did get in
a few heavy discussions" while distributing materials, id. at 89,
and testified that:

     I remember one young man specifically who doesn't pay his
     child support, and, you know, didn't feel he needed to,
     and we got into a discussion about child support issues
     and the fact that, you know, a lot of people are on
     welfare because they don't get their child support.

Id. at 99.

                                   -11-
nature of the policy nor the substance of the policy itself afforded Wusk
or   anyone   else   overly   broad   discretion   in   violation   of   the    First
Amendment," id. at 875 n.14, held that the plaintiffs' First Amendment
rights had not been violated.     See id. at 877-78.     The district court also
held that FAIR's right to equal protection had not been violated.              Id. at
878.   FAIR now appeals.


       On appeal, FAIR argues that (1) the Policy on access by outside
groups is vague;12 (2) NDSS created a limited public forum by opening the
Lobby to other groups and that FAIR was improperly denied access to that
forum in violation of the First Amendment; and (3) NDSS violated FAIR's
right to equal protection.      We address these issues in turn.


                                       III.
       We first address FAIR's contention that the Policy limiting access
to the Lobby by outside groups is vague.       Initially, we reject the notion
that the Policy is necessarily vague because it is unwritten.            So long as
a policy is made explicit by "'well-established practice,'" Lebron v.
National R.R. Passenger Corp. (AMTRAK), 69 F.3d 650, 658 (2d Cir. 1995)
(quoting City of Lakewood v. Plain Dealer Publ'g Co., 486 U.S. 750, 770
(1988)), opinion amended on denial of reh'g, 89 F.3d 39 (2d Cir. 1995),
cert. denied, 116 S. Ct. 1675 (1996), "[t]he fact that a policy is not
committed to writing does not of itself constitute a First Amendment
violation."    Id.   As noted by the district court,




       12
      Although FAIR's contention that the Policy is vague was not
included in FAIR's original complaint, the district court briefly
considered and rejected FAIR's argument that the Policy was
arbitrary. See FAIR, 890 F. Supp. at 875 n.14 (concluding that the
Policy was "clear and simple," and that it did not "afford[] Wusk
or anyone else overly broad discretion in violation of the First
Amendment").

                                       -12-
     there was little or no practical reason for Wusk (or the other
     defendants) to write a regulation since the regulation was
     clear and simple: the forum was generally closed except to
     welfare recipients. . . . [T]o the extent that the policy
     contained an exception for outside groups, the exception was
     quite limited, and it too was clear and simple: only groups
     that provided a "direct benefit" associated with the "basic
     needs of our customers" were allowed access to the forum.


FAIR, 890 F. Supp. at 875 n.14.


     We have held that, "[t]o 'survive a vagueness challenge, a statute
must give the person of ordinary intelligence a reasonable opportunity to
know what is prohibited and provide explicit standards for those who apply
the statute.'"   United States v. Dinwiddie, 76 F.3d 913, 924 (8th Cir.)
(quoting Video Software Dealers Ass'n v. Webster, 968 F.2d 684, 689 (8th
Cir. 1992)), cert. denied, 117 S. Ct. 613 (1996).   In examining the terms
of a rule for vagueness, the Supreme Court has noted that


     there are limitations in the English language with respect to
     being both specific and manageably brief, and it seems to us
     that although the prohibitions [here] may not satisfy those
     intent on finding fault at any cost, they are set out in terms
     that the ordinary person exercising ordinary common sense can
     sufficiently understand and comply with, without sacrifice to
     the public interest.
CSC v. Letter Carriers, 413 U.S. 548, 578-79 (1973) (upholding restrictions
on federal employees' political activities) (emphasis added); see also
Cornerstone Bible Church v. City of Hastings, 948 F.2d 464, 473-74 (8th
Cir. 1991) (rejecting argument that ordinance was impermissibly vague for
failing to define "church," "private club," and "economic activity"); cf.
Tindle v. Caudell, 56 F.3d 966, 973 (8th Cir. 1995) ("[T]he ability to
conceive of hypothetical problematic applications does not render the rules




                                   -13-
susceptible to an over-breadth challenge.") (noting that rules which did
"not precisely define what would constitute impermissible conduct" were
nevertheless not vague because "they give adequate notice that high
standards of conduct are required").


      Examining the Policy in light of these principles of common sense and
well-established practice, we conclude that the Policy is not vague.               The
Policy has three critical concepts: first, advocacy groups are barred from
accessing NDSS clients in the Lobby for advocacy purposes; second, groups
seeking access to the Lobby must provide a direct benefit to NDSS clients
and their families; and third, the direct benefit must meet an NDSS
client's basic needs.        We examine these concepts in turn.


      We do not believe that the phrase "advocacy group," standing alone,
is vague.13   At trial, Administrator Wusk defined an "advocacy group" as a
group which "promotes an issue," Trial Tr. at 137, a definition which
included "political" groups and groups involved "in promoting and changing
public policy."    Id. at 144.       This definition states the common sense, lay
understanding     of   the   term.     See,   e.g.,   Webster's   II   New   Riverside
University Dictionary 81 (1984) (defining "advocacy" as "[a]ctive support,
as of a cause"); Webster's Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary 59 (1986)




      13
      Indeed, in Cornelius v. NAACP Legal Defense & Educ. Fund, 473
U.S. 788 (1985), the Supreme Court was called upon to interpret
this very phrase. See id. at 811-12 (accepting argument that "a
decision to exclude all advocacy groups, regardless of political or
philosophical orientation, is by definition viewpoint neutral," and
stating that "we accept the validity and reasonableness of the
justifications offered by [the government] for excluding advocacy
groups" (emphasis added)).   In remanding to the district court for
a factual determination of whether viewpoint discrimination had
taken place, the Court never declared the phrase "advocacy group"
to be vague or overbroad.

                                          -14-
(defining "advocacy" as "the act or process of advocating: support").


     Administrator Wusk's definition of "advocacy group" has been applied
consistently in practice; those groups allowed access to the Lobby--VITA,
EFNEP, Head Start, and Southeast Community College--were not engaging in
"promoting and changing public policy."       Trial Tr. at 144.        Indeed, Head
Start programs are prohibited by federal law from engaging in "any partisan
or nonpartisan political activity," 42 U.S.C. § 9851(b)(1), and there is
no evidence in the record to suggest that the provision of tax assistance
by VITA, nutrition information by EFNEP, or GED and ESL classes by
Southeast Community College involved debating or advocating changes in
public policy.


     Similarly, those groups allowed access to the bulletin boards in the
Lobby were not supporting political causes.        We have independently examined
the record, and it is clear that the bulletin boards were used only to
advertise the availability of social services by government agencies and
private   organizations,   the    existence   of    employment   and    educational
opportunities, and the offer of free goods and services to NDSS clients.
There is not a scintilla of evidence in the record to suggest that the
bulletin board was used for "active support, as of a cause."           Webster's II
New Riverside University Dictionary 81.
     FAIR, by contrast, is clearly an advocacy group, and accordingly was
denied access to the Lobby.      The materials that FAIR wished to distribute
in the Lobby represented a platform with specific public policy objectives
and advocated for a specific political agenda.         FAIR wished to distribute
post cards to NDSS clients, which were to be mailed to Nebraska state
senators, asking for specific legislative actions on welfare reform.           See
Pl. Ex. 6




                                      -15-
("no lifetime limit," "no orphanages," "no new baby penalties").       FAIR
wished to distribute brochures which criticized political leaders for
apparently inconsistent approaches to child-support and welfare-reform
issues.   See id. (quoting Nebraska Governor Ben Nelson's support of the
child-support enforcement program, and asking, "Why does this philosophy
not apply to the Welfare Reform proposals that will negatively affect the
children even more?      THINK ABOUT IT!" (emphasis in original, large
lettering omitted)).   FAIR wished to post a flier which advertised FAIR's
alliance with a major political party in staging a rally opposing welfare
reform.   See Pl. Ex. 5 (rally to "Stop the War on Poor Children!" sponsored
by FAIR and Nebraska Democratic Women).14    The exclusion of FAIR is thus
entirely consistent with the common-sense application of the Policy.15


     14
      We must echo the district court's concise rejection of FAIR's
attempt to liken itself to the groups allowed access to the Lobby:

     To the extent that Plaintiffs try to equate . . . their
     expressive activity, which is explicitly intended to urge
     adoption of public policy positions ("Stop the War on
     Poor Children"), with expressive activity intended to
     provide information on meal preparation and the like, I
     reject the comparison as factually unfounded. . . . This
     is true because one type of speech is intended to
     persuade on issues of public policy, while the other is
     intended to convey factual information on basic human
     needs totally unrelated to public policy.


FAIR, 890 F. Supp. at 872. How FAIR reconciles its status as an
apolitical grant recipient with its intensely political agenda,
associations, and activities is not an issue before us.
     15
      FAIR's exclusion may also be consistent with other provisions
of Nebraska law. Administrator Wusk testified that he believed that
the Local Office was a voter registration site. See Trial Tr. at
150. Pursuant to Nebraska Revised Statute section 32-307, which
came into effect on January 1, 1995,

     No materials advocating or advertising any political
     issue, candidate, or party shall be displayed or
     distributed within fifty feet of any voter registration
     site.

Neb. Rev. Stat. § 32-307 (1995) (emphasis added).

                                    -16-
     Nor is the concept of a "direct benefit," in the parameters of the
Policy, vague.   Under consistent Local Office practice, the Policy requires
that a concrete good, service, or educational or employment opportunity go
directly to NDSS clients and their families.        See, e.g., Def. Ex. 1
(bulletin board advertisements offering NDSS clients free stoves, volunteer
tax assistance, enrollment in Head Start, and job opportunities with the
Gallup Organization).   Only groups offering such tangible goods, services,
or educational or employment opportunities directly to NDSS clients or
their families have been allowed access to the Lobby.      VITA offered tax
assistance directly to NDSS clients; EFNEP offered nutrition advice
directly to NDSS clients; Head Start offered pre-kindergarten education
directly to NDSS clients' children; and Southeast Community College offered
GED and ESL classes directly to NDSS clients.


     By contrast, FAIR wished to promote a legislative agenda through the
assistance of NDSS clients.    See Pl. Ex. 6 (postcard for NDSS clients to
send to Nebraska state senators).   It offered no goods or services to NDSS
clients, but rather wished to "educate" its desired audience on the dangers
of welfare reform.   See Pl. Ex. 5 (describing "the great human devastation
which will ensue if proposals" for welfare reform are adopted).   An attempt
to proselytize a specific political viewpoint does not offer a "direct
benefit" as defined by the Policy.16




     16
       In NAACP Legal Defense and Educ. Fund v. Campbell, 504 F.
Supp. 1365 (D.D.C. 1981), the NAACP challenged the federal
government's limitation on access to the Combined Federal Campaign
(CFC) to those groups which provided "direct services."         The
district court, although noting that direct services "may appear at
first glance to have a plain, unambiguous meaning sufficient to
guide governmental decisionmaking," found that the phrase was
vague.   See id. at 1367. This decision was not appealed. See
Cornelius, 473 U.S. at 793 (discussing history of litigation). We
have considered the Campbell decision and do not find it persuasive
on the issue before us.

                                    -17-
      Nor do we find the phrase "basic needs" to be vague.            In the context
of the Local Office, an agency working with the most impoverished members
of society, the phrase refers to "food, clothing and shelter," Trial Tr.
at 141 (testimony of Administrator Wusk), and such fundamental requirements
for   functioning   within   our   society    as   employment   and   a   rudimentary
education.   It is apparent that the groups allowed access to the Lobby
provided resources to meet these basic needs.             EFNEP offered information
on nutrition; as Administrator Wusk noted, "[NDSS customers] can't live
very well and healthy without good nutrition."             Id. at 136.    Head Start
offered pre-school education to children and Southeast Community College
offered GED and ESL courses to adults.        Because some NDSS clients found tax
forms "very complicated sometimes, and they don't understand them," Trial
Tr. at 121 (testimony of Administrator Wusk), VITA provided assistance with
state and federal tax returns.17
      These phrases, taken separately, are not vague, and they do not
become vague when considered as a whole, in the context of a welfare office
and in light of the purpose of the Policy.          The




      17
      The materials posted on the Lobby's bulletin boards further
illustrate these basic needs.        These materials advertised
nutritional assistance, health care and housing resources, and
offers of employment and educational opportunities. See Def. Ex.
1.   In addition, the Lincoln Children's Museum "addresse[d] a
psychological need," Trial Tr. at 141 (testimony of Administrator
Wusk), by offering free admission to NDSS clients' children,
allowing "families to deal with some of the stress that is maybe
going on . . . ." Id. at 133.

                                       -18-
Local Office neither "formulates nor debates public policy," FAIR, 890 F.
Supp. at 863, but rather provides "a broad range of services to welfare
recipients."    Id.   The purpose of the Policy was "to minimize the numbers
of groups allowed access to the office area        . . . as much as possible,"
Trial Tr. at 150-51 (question to and response of Administrator Wusk), in
order to limit congestion in the Lobby18 and to ensure the dignified
treatment of NDSS clients by not "forc[ing] NDSS customers to encounter
individuals promoting a particular political point of view in order to
obtain the necessities of life."        Fair, 890 F. Supp. at 866.   That the
Policy is sufficiently well-defined is demonstrated by the rigorous
consistency with which it has been applied.     While the terms of the Policy
"may not satisfy those intent on finding fault at any cost, they are set
out in terms that the ordinary person exercising ordinary common sense can
sufficiently understand and comply with, without sacrifice to the public
interest."     Letter Carriers, 413 U.S. at 579.


                                       IV.


     Because the Policy is not vague, it is necessary to determine
whether, as applied, the Policy is unconstitutional.        It is uncontested
that FAIR wished to engage in expressive conduct generally protected by the
First Amendment.      This determination, however, only begins our analysis of
whether the First Amendment was violated by the Policy.




     18
      As Administrator Wusk explained, "you have [to] manage the
office area, and it would be very difficult to let a horde of folks
come in because how would you do business. Our business is about
serving our Social Service customers, and it would become difficult
to manage that kind of influx of folks." Trial Tr. at 136.

                                      -19-
     It is fundamental that the "existence of a right of access to public
property and the standard by which limitations upon such a right must be
evaluated differ depending on the character of the property at issue."
Perry Educ. Ass'n v. Perry Local Educators' Ass'n, 460 U.S. 37, 44 (1983).
In Perry, the Supreme Court described three categories of public fora: (1)
the traditional public forum; (2) the designated public forum; and (3) the
nonpublic forum.


     In traditional public fora, such as streets and parks, expressive
rights receive the greatest degree of protection:


     In places which by long tradition or by government fiat have
     been devoted to assembly and debate, the rights of the State to
     limit expressive activity are sharply circumscribed. . . . [In]
     public   forums,   the   government   may   not  prohibit   all
     communicative activity. For the State to enforce a content-
     based exclusion it must show that its regulation is necessary
     to serve a compelling state interest and that it is narrowly
     drawn to achieve that end.        The State may also enforce
     regulations of the time, place, and manner of expression which
     are content-neutral, are narrowly tailored to serve a
     significant government interest, and leave open ample
     alternative channels of communication.
Id. at 45 (citations omitted); see also International Soc'y for Krishna
Consciousness, Inc. v. Lee, 505 U.S. 672, 678-79 (1992) (describing
categories of fora); Forbes v. Arkansas Educ. Television Communication
Network Foundation, 22 F.3d 1423, 1429-30 (8th Cir. 1994) (en banc)
(interpreting Perry).   The second category of fora, the designated public
forum, "consists of public property which the State has opened for use by
the public as a place for expressive activity."     Perry, 460 U.S. at 45.
So long as the state maintains a forum that is generally open to the
public, it is "bound by the same standards as apply in a traditional public
forum," id. at 46, and a "content-based prohibition must be




                                   -20-
narrowly drawn to effectuate a compelling state interest."   Id.; see also
Cornelius v. NAACP Legal Defense & Educ. Fund, 473 U.S. 788, 800 (1985)
("[W]hen the Government has intentionally designated a place or means of
communication as a public forum speakers cannot be excluded without a
compelling governmental interest.").


     In distinguishing between a traditional public and designated public
forum, the Court in Lee explained that a traditional public forum has


     immemorially been held in trust for the use of the public and,
     time out of mind, [has] been used for purposes of assembly,
     communicating thoughts between citizens, and discussing public
     questions. . . . [A] traditional public forum is property that
     has as a principal purpose the free exchange of ideas.


505 U.S. at 679 (quotations, citations, and alteration omitted).        By
contrast, a designated public forum is public property where the government
intentionally allows discourse.   The Lee Court explained that


     consistent with the notion that the government--like other
     property owners--has power to preserve the property under its
     control for the use to which it is lawfully dedicated, the
     government does not create a public forum by inaction. Nor is
     a public forum created whenever members of the public are
     permitted freely to visit a place owned or operated by the
     Government. The decision to create a public forum must instead
     be made by intentionally opening a nontraditional forum for
     public discourse. . . . [T]he location of property also has
     bearing because separation from acknowledged public areas may
     serve to indicate that the separated property is a special
     enclave, subject to greater restriction.




                                   -21-
Id. at 679-80 (citations and quotations omitted).19


     The third category of fora, the nonpublic forum, consists of all
other public property.   See Lee, 505 U.S. at 678-79.   "Public property
which is not by tradition or designation a forum for public communication
is governed by different standards."     Perry,   460 U.S. at 46.     These
standards reflect the recognition that
     the First Amendment does not guarantee access to property
     simply because it is owned or controlled by the government. In
     addition to time, place, and manner regulations, the State may
     reserve the forum for its intended purposes, communicative or
     otherwise, as long as the regulation on speech is reasonable
     and not an effort to suppress expression merely because public
     officials




     19
      In Lee, the Supreme Court held that a public airport was not
a traditional or designated public forum, and upheld a ban on
solicitation. See 505 U.S. at 683, 685. In International Soc'y
for Krishna Consciousness, Inc. v. Lee, 505 U.S. 830 (1992) (per
curiam) (Lee II), a companion case to Lee, the Court held that a
ban on the distribution of literature in the airport was
nevertheless unconstitutional, and relied by reference on various
concurring and dissenting opinions in Lee, which had disagreed with
the majority's forum analysis. See id. at 831.

     In the instant case, the district court undertook an analysis
of the forum under the tests enunciated by the majority in Lee as
well as the principal concurrence, and concluded that the result--
that the Lobby was a nonpublic forum--was the same under both. See
FAIR, 890 F. Supp. at 868-74. We agree with the district court
that either test would achieve the identical result, and we agree
that the Supreme Court could have been clearer in its directives in
this area. See, e.g., AIDS Action Comm. of Mass., Inc. v. MBTA, 42
F.3d 1, 9 (1st Cir. 1994) (describing "the relatively murky status
of the public forum doctrine"); Jacobsen v. United States Postal
Serv., 993 F.2d 649, 655 n.2 (9th Cir. 1992) (noting that, as a
result of Lee, "the jurisprudence in this area is now quite
muddied").    We believe, however, that the district court's
duplication of effort was unnecessary. Chief Justice Rehnquist's
opinion in Lee, which clearly set out the mechanics of forum
analysis, commanded a majority of the Court, and Lee II in no way
overruled its companion case.     Because of this, for our forum
analysis we have only relied on the majority's opinion in Lee.

                                  -22-
      oppose the speaker's view.      As we have stated on several
      occasions, the State, no less than a private owner of property,
      has power to preserve the property under its control for the
      use to which it is lawfully dedicated.


Id. at 46 (quotations and citations omitted); see also Cornelius, 473 U.S.
at 799-800 ("Nothing in the Constitution requires the Government freely to
grant access to all who wish to exercise their right to free speech on
every type of Government property without regard to the nature of the
property or to the disruption that might be caused by the speaker's
activities."); Greer v. Spock, 424 U.S. 828, 836 (1976) ("The guarantees
of   the    First     Amendment     have   never   meant   that    people    who    want   to
propagandize protests or views have a constitutional right to do so
whenever and however and wherever they please.") (quotations and citation
omitted).


      FAIR does not contend that the Lobby is a traditional public forum,
see Appellant's Br. at 31 ("plaintiffs agree that the lobby of the
Lancaster County Office of the Nebraska Department of Public Services is
not a traditional public forum"), and we agree.                   There was no evidence
presented that the Lobby has traditionally been used for public expression
and, rather than having as a principal purpose the free exchange of ideas,
the Lobby is used to distribute "a broad range of services to welfare
recipients."        FAIR, 890 F. Supp. at 863.
      Nor has the Lobby been intentionally opened to public discourse.
There was no evidence presented that the Local Office has a policy of free
access     to   the   Lobby   for    expressive    activities.       To     the    contrary,
Administrator Wusk testified that the Local Office did not wish to "open
[the Lobby] up for the world," Trial Tr. at 120, and intended "to minimize
the numbers of groups allowed access to the office area . . . as much as
possible."      Id. at 150-51 (question to and response of Administrator Wusk).
FAIR contends,




                                            -23-
however, that in allowing groups like Head Start to distribute materials
in the Lobby, the Local Office necessarily created a designated public
forum.   We disagree.


     The Supreme Court has made clear that "a practice of allowing some
speech activities on [government] property do[es] not add up to the
dedication of [government] property to speech activities."     United States
v. Kokinda, 497 U.S. 720, 730 (1990) (plurality opinion).      In Greer, the
Supreme Court held that a military base was not a designated public forum,
and that a prohibition on political campaigning on the base was reasonable.
In reaching this decision, the Court explained:


     The fact that other civilian speakers and entertainers had
     sometimes been invited to appear at Fort Dix did not of itself
     serve to convert Fort Dix into a public forum or to confer upon
     political candidates a First or Fifth Amendment right to
     conduct their campaigns there. The decision of the military
     authorities that a civilian lecture on drug abuse, a religious
     service by a visiting preacher at the base chapel, or a rock
     musical concert would be supportive of the military mission of
     Fort Dix surely did not leave the authorities powerless
     thereafter to prevent any civilian from entering Fort Dix to
     speak on any subject whatever.


424 U.S. at 838 n.10.


     Where "government property is not dedicated to open communication the
government may--without further justification--restrict use to those who
participate in the forum's official business."   Perry, 460 U.S. at 53 (note
omitted).   The only groups allowed access to the Lobby, "[j]ust like NDSS
. . . provided basic social services to welfare recipients."   FAIR, 890 F.
Supp. at 871.   For example, the Local Office had once provided NDSS clients
with nutritional information from the Department of Agriculture.     See




                                    -24-
Trial Tr. at 122 (testimony of Administrator Wusk).               Providing this
information had proven considerably burdensome, see id. ("[w]e could not
handle the volume of folding and stuffing" of the nutritional literature),
and the Local Office made an arrangement with EFNEP "that they would be
able to set up a presence [in the Lobby] periodically to handle, hand out
those kinds of literature things."        Id. at 123.     Administrator Wusk also
explained that NDSS was involved in the Job Training Partnership, and had
identified NDSS clients' lack of English skills and lack of a high school
diplomas as barriers to employment.    See id.    Southeast Community College's
"presence [in the Lobby] has been to remove those barriers for those
customers so that they could obtain their high school diploma which would
better help them in the employment world or help them with learning the
English language."    Id.


     Because the "providers of information on nutrition and the like were
participating with the agreement of welfare officials in the welfare
office's official business--the provision of basic social services to
welfare recipients . . . the use of the property by groups such as the
county   extension   agency   providing     nutritional    information   does   not
transform the property into a public forum."        FAIR, 890 F. Supp. at 872.
We therefore agree with the district court that the Lobby was not a
designated public forum.


                                       V.


     Because the Lobby was neither a traditional public forum nor a
designated public forum, the Policy
     must be analyzed under the standards set forth for nonpublic
     fora: It must be reasonable and not an effort to suppress
     expression merely because public officials oppose the speaker's
     view. Indeed, control over access to a nonpublic forum can be
     based on subject matter and




                                      -25-
       speaker identity so long as the distinctions drawn are
       reasonable in light of the purpose served by the forum and are
       viewpoint neutral.     The Government's decision to restrict
       access to a nonpublic forum need only be reasonable; it need
       not be the most reasonable or the only reasonable limitation.


Kokinda, 497 U.S. at 730 (quotations and citations omitted) (first emphasis
added, second emphasis in original); see also Perry, 460 U.S. at 49
("Implicit in the concept of the nonpublic forum is the right to make
distinctions in access on the basis of subject matter and speaker identity.
These distinctions may be impermissible in a public forum but are inherent
and inescapable in the process of limiting a nonpublic forum to activities
compatible with the intended purpose of the property.             The touchstone for
evaluating these distinctions is whether they are reasonable in light of
the   purpose   which     the    forum   at    issue    serves.").        In   addition,
"[c]onsideration of a forum's special attributes is relevant to the
constitutionality    of    a     regulation     since   the   significance      of   the
governmental interest must be assessed in light of the characteristic
nature and function of the particular forum involved."               Kokinda, 497 U.S.
at    732   (quotations    and    citations     omitted).       In    addressing     the
reasonableness of the Policy, we are not unmindful of the Local Office's
expertise in the management of a welfare office.                 See New York City
Unemployed & Welfare Council v. Brezenoff, 742 F.2d 718, 723 (2d Cir. 1984)
(noting that welfare agency "has much more experience managing welfare
offices     than the courts have and must be given some discretion in
determining what its interests are and how best to further them").


                                          A.


       We conclude that the Local Office's Policy of limiting access to the
Lobby and bulletin boards is clearly reasonable.              The Lobby




                                         -26-
--a workplace where government employees provide financial assistance and
social services to thousands of clients--is a high-traffic area which
requires a uniformed guard to prevent disruption.             Keeping the Lobby
generally closed to outside groups helps prevent additional congestion and
the resultant disruption.      Administrator Wusk testified:


     I actually have a concern about any group, even the four that
     we allow, creates some traffic flow problems because of the
     volume of people that are in the office. Anytime you interject
     another factor into a confined space . . . it creates an issue
     to deal with. Sometimes it may not be very disruptive, but it
     can be if you have something else going on.


Trial Tr. at 128.       Limiting congestion and disruption is, of course, a
legitimate and reasonable goal for NDSS.          See Lee, 505 U.S. at 683-84
(restriction     on   solicitation   reasonable   in   part   because   it   limits
            20
disruption).


     NDSS's specific prohibition on access to the Lobby by advocacy groups
is also reasonable.     It is reasonable for NDSS to shield its clients from
a deluge of political propaganda that they are powerless to avoid.           Clients
receiving assistance from NDSS are a virtually captive audience; as noted
by Administrator Wusk:
     When customers come to the Department of Social Services to
     apply for ADC or food stamps or Medicaid . . . they




     20
      Similarly, the bulletin boards in the Lobby are small and
largely dedicated to social services postings. See FAIR, 890 F.
Supp. at 876 ("The fact is that space on the bulletin boards is
quite limited as they are small. [Trial Tr. at 132.] Indeed, in
the photos introduced into evidence, the bulletin-board space
appears almost entirely devoted to social-service notices. (Ex. 1,
Prelim. Hr'g (photos).)"). Preventing postings by outside groups
is reasonable to allow space for official postings.

                                       -27-
        have no other choice.    We are the only office that offers those
        types of services.


Trial Tr. at 119.        We agree with the district court that:


        In this case, the waiting/reception area is filled with some of
        the most underprivileged in our society seeking benefits from
        the state for the most basic necessities of life. . . . [T]hese
        waiting/reception areas are not public or limited public forums
        but are, indeed, but holding stations for the most pitiful
        captive audiences in our country.

              These individuals--some of whom need protective services
        because of mental impairments, and all of whom need state
        assistance for some or all of the necessities of life--are
        peculiarly susceptible to coercion, whether subtle or overt,
        regarding, among other things, public-policy issues. This is
        true both because of the welfare recipients' unfortunate
        stations in life and because of the captive nature of their
        attendance at the welfare office.


FAIR, 890 F. Supp. at 873-74 (quotations and citation omitted); see also
Brezenoff, 742 F.2d at 722 (noting that welfare recipients "may well be
peculiarly susceptible to verbal misrepresentations, whether because of the
noisy    and   crowded    atmosphere   of    [a    welfare   office]   lobby,   language
barriers, or even a misperceived need to do anything necessary to ensure
the receipt of welfare checks or to lessen the wait in [the welfare
office]").


        Beyond the Local Office's concern that its clients not be coerced by
a barrage of political advertising, the Local Office has a legitimate
interest in not being misapprehended as supporting one advocacy cause or
another.       The Local Office's "position as a government controlled and
financed public facility, used daily by thousands of people, ma[kes] it
highly advisable to avoid the criticism and embarrassments of allowing any
display seeming to




                                            -28-
favor any political view."      Lebron, 69 F.3d at 658 (upholding AMTRAK's
restriction on political advertisements as reasonable).21


     That the Local Office made an exception to its general prohibition
on access by outside groups for organizations such as EFNEP and VITA is
also reasonable.   The official business of the Local Office is to provide
services to NDSS clients.   See FAIR, 890 F. Supp. at 872.   In light of this
official business, it is reasonable for the Local Office to allow access
to the Lobby by groups which provide direct benefits which meet NDSS
clients' basic needs, because this allows the Local Office to fulfill its
mission.   See, e.g., Trial Tr. at 122-23 (describing EFNEP's and Southeast
Community College's direct contribution to NDSS's mission).


     The reasonableness of the Policy is further supported because there
are "substantial alternative channels that remain open" to outside groups
to disseminate their message.    Perry, 460 U.S. at 53.   In this case, FAIR
had access to the public sidewalks outside of the building housing the
Local Office, see FAIR, 890 F. Supp. at 876, as well as other public fora.
Although FAIR would undoubtedly prefer the opportunities presented by a
captive audience in the Lobby, "[t]he First Amendment does not demand
unrestricted access to a nonpublic forum merely because use of that forum
may be the most efficient means of delivering the speaker's message."
Cornelius, 473 U.S. at 809.




     21
      In addition, it is reasonable for the Local Office to wish
to avoid the significant disruption that allowing advocacy groups
to access the Lobby might cause, as disagreements could blossom
between NDSS clients and representatives of the outside groups.
See FAIR, 890 F. Supp. at 872 (recounting Ms. Stippel's testimony
that she "encountered 'problems' when 'we gave the information to
somebody that didn't agree with our side,' which in turn caused
'heavy discussions.'" (citations to record omitted)).

                                    -29-
                                    B.


     We agree with the district court that the Policy "'is not an effort
to suppress the speaker's activity due to disagreement with the speaker's
view.'"   FAIR, 890 F. Supp. at 877 (quoting Lee, 505 U.S. at 679).    While
the Policy's prohibition of access to the Lobby by outside advocacy groups
does distinguish on the basis of message content, this is not synonymous
with viewpoint discrimination.   The Supreme Court has held that


     in determining whether the State is acting to preserve the
     limits of the forum it has created so that the exclusion of a
     class of speech is legitimate, we have observed a distinction
     between, on the one hand, content discrimination, which may be
     permissible if it preserves the purposes of that limited forum,
     and, on the other hand, viewpoint discrimination, which is
     presumed impermissible when directed against speech otherwise
     within the forum's limitations.


Rosenberger v. Rector & Visitors of Univ. of Va., 115 S. Ct. 2510, 2517
(1995).


     FAIR has alleged that it was denied access to the Lobby due to its
opposition to welfare reform.    After FAIR had been denied permission to
distribute and post its materials in the Lobby, Director Mumgaard contacted
Administrator Wusk to discuss the adverse decision.      Director Mumgaard
testified that, during this conversation, Administrator Wusk explained that
FAIR was denied permission because it was an advocacy group that did not
provide a direct benefit to NDSS clients.       See Trial Tr. at 21-22.
Director Mumgaard testified that Administrator Wusk further stated:


     They [FAIR] talk about welfare reform, and they are critical of
     welfare reform, and we are the ones doing welfare reform . . .
     .




                                   -30-
Id. at 22.     Apparently based on this conversation, FAIR alleged that
Administrator Wusk had denied FAIR access to the Lobby "because the
information that FAIR intended to distribute was interpreted as being
critical of welfare reform."     Compl. at 5, reprinted in J.A. at 5.


     In his trial testimony, Administrator Wusk repeatedly denied that his
decision regarding FAIR had been based on its message.        He stated that:


     It was not ever an issue thing with me. Whether they [FAIR]
     were welfare reform or not was not the issue with me.   The
     issue was that they were an advocacy group.


Trial Tr. at 117; see also id. at 134 (denying that content or message of
proposed postings affected his decision).        Administrator Wusk explained
that Director Mumgaard had "asked me if the reason we were denying access
to FAIR in our reception area was because they had issues with welfare
reform, and my comment was, is that the department--that the welfare reform
legislation was supported by the Department of Social Services."          Id. at
116-17.    Administrator Wusk testified that a group advocating a contrary
position to FAIR would also have been denied access to the Lobby, id. at
117, and that advocacy groups which he personally supported had been denied
permission by him to use the Lobby.       Id. at 126, 140-41 (discussing "Mad
Dads").


     The    district   court   analyzed   Administrator   Wusk's   and   Director
Mumgaard's testimonies, and found that "the only credible evidence was that
Wusk (and the other defendants) enforced the ban [on advocacy groups]
regardless of whether Wusk (or the other defendants) agreed or disagreed
with the message of the speaker."     FAIR, 890 F. Supp. at 866 n.2.       Having
made an independent review




                                     -31-
of the record, and giving due deference to the trial court's opportunity
to observe witness demeanor, we agree that Administrator Wusk's decision
denying access to FAIR was not based on FAIR's viewpoint, but rather upon
the Policy of excluding advocacy groups which did not provide a direct
benefit to NDSS   clients' basic needs.


      The content of FAIR's message was political advocacy--a type of
speech not allowed by the Policy.   Because FAIR's viewpoint was irrelevant
to the decision to disallow its access to the Lobby, there was no viewpoint
discrimination.   Because the Policy is otherwise reasonable, the Policy
does not violate the First Amendment.


                                    VII.


      Because FAIR has no First Amendment right to access the Lobby, its
equal protection argument must fail unless FAIR can show that it is
similarly situated to those groups allowed access.   See Perry, 460 U.S. at
55.   Because FAIR is an advocacy group which does not provide a direct
benefit which meets NDSS clients' basic needs, it is not similarly situated
to those groups allowed access to the Lobby.         NDSS has therefore not
violated FAIR's right to equal protection in this case.


                                    VIII.


      To preserve its clients' dignity and to maintain control over a
hectic work environment, the Local Office created and rigidly enforced an
innocuous Policy limiting access to its Lobby to nonadvocacy groups which
provide direct benefits meeting NDSS clients' basic needs.      Because the
Lobby is a nonpublic forum, and




                                    -32-
because the Policy regulating expressive activities in the Lobby is not
vague, unreasonable, or viewpoint based, we affirm the district court's
judgment for the defendant.


HEANEY, Circuit Judge, with whom McMILLIAN, MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, and
     MURPHY, Circuit Judges, join, dissenting.


     I respectfully dissent.          I do not believe that a state should be
permitted to exclude a grass-roots, welfare-rights organization from
engaging in speech activity in a welfare office lobby because of a low-
level administrator's determination that the group does not provide a
"direct benefit" to the welfare office's clientele.            The constitutionality
of FAIR's exclusion turns not on a labeling of the forum, but rather on the
policy employed to decide which groups will have access to the lobby.                That
policy--as    explained   to   FAIR   at    the   time   of   its    exclusion    and   as
subsequently officially adopted by the NDSS--violates the First and
Fourteenth Amendments under even the least-exacting reasonableness test in
that it permits state officials to apply impermissibly vague criteria to
distinguish between persons seeking to engage in speech activity on state
property.    See NAACP Legal Defense & Educ. Fund v. Campbell, 504 F. Supp.
1365, 1367 (D.D.C. 1981) (policy requiring a charity to provide "direct
services" too vague to distinguish between groups for participation in a
federally-sponsored fund-raising campaign).          Because such a policy violates
the First and Fourteenth amendments on its face, regardless of the forum
to which it is applied, I would reverse the district court and leave the
question of whether the welfare office lobby is a public forum for a
another day.    See Airport Comm'rs v. Jews For Jesus, 482 U.S. at 573-74
(unnecessary    to   reach   the   public    forum   question       because   regulation
prohibiting    all   First   Amendment     activities    in   airport    was     facially
unconstitutional under the overbreadth doctrine); Lebron v. National R.R.
Passenger Corp. (AMTRAK), 74 F.3d 371, 372 (2d Cir.




                                         -33-
1996) (C.J. Newman, dissenting) ("[N]o matter what the scope of the forum,
a governmental entity violates the First Amendment when it bars display of
political messages pursuant to a 'policy' that [is] vague, unwritten,
unclear to those who must administer it, and inconsistently applied."),
denying reh'g and amending, Lebron v. AMTRAK, 69 F.3d 650 (2d Cir. 1995).



     The majority adopts the district court's finding that the policy used
by Wusk to guide his decision to exclude FAIR from the lobby included a per
se ban on admitting advocacy groups.          Majority Op., supra, at 5 (citing
FAIR, 890 F. Supp. at 865-66).     While I have little doubt that a welfare
office could ban advocacy groups using its facilities to advance specific
political agendum without offending the First Amendment, that simply is not
this case.     As stipulated by the parties, the only reason Wusk did not
allow FAIR representatives to be present in the lobby and distribute
pamphlets like other groups had done in the past was because Wusk
determined that FAIR did not provide a "direct benefit" to welfare
recipients.    (Pls.' Ex. 1 ("Stipulation of Uncontroverted Facts") at ¶ 15.)
Similarly, Mary Dean Harvey, Director of NDSS makes no mention of a
departmental    position   regarding   "advocacy    groups"   in   her   subsequent
affirmance of Wusk's actions and adoption of the policy.           (See Defs.' Ex.
3 (Aff. of Mary Dean Harvey.)22    True, Wusk provided


     22
      Harvey, who is ultimately responsible for all internal agency
policies, states:

          [I]n late January 1995, I had communication with .
     . . Daryl Wusk[] regarding a request that he had received
     from a group calling itself "FAIR" to come to the
     District Office proper and distribute literature and
     engage in discussion with our clients[.]

          Mr. Wusk informed me of his tentative decision to
     reject the request on the basis that only groups who
     offer a direct service or benefit to our clients are
     allowed on our office premises . . . and I concurred with
     that decision as the appropriate statement of our current
     policy on this issue[.]

              . . . .


                                       -34-
a more complex rationale for his decision at the time of trial, but this
after-the-fact explanation carries little weight in light of the clear
record that the Department's decision turned entirely on an assessment of
the benefits associated with FAIR's message.


     Thus, the question presented is whether the First and Fourteenth
Amendments permit state officials to distinguish between groups given
access to a welfare office based on whether the group provides a "direct
benefit" to welfare recipients.      If a governmental policy restricts
protected expressive conduct, it will withstand constitutional scrutiny
only if it is clear and consistently applied.   NAACP Legal Defense & Educ.
Fund, 504 F. Supp. 1365, 1367 (D.D.C. 1981).23     Two particular concerns



          [T]he policy of the Department of Social Services is
     that no person or group should be allowed to come into
     our offices proper for the purpose of distributing
     literature, soliciting or otherwise engaging clients in
     discussion unless that person or group is offering a
     direct service or benefit to our clients[.]

(Defs.' Ex. 3 (Aff. of Mary Dean Harvey) at ¶¶ 2-3, 5 (emphasis
added).) Although the majority acknowledges both the reason given
by Wusk for FAIR's exclusion and Harvey's subsequent statements,
(Majority Op., supra, at 9-10), it nonetheless adopts the district
court's expansive version of the policy without explanation.
      23
       I recognize that the void-for-vagueness doctrine developed
in relation to criminal laws where the potential chilling effect on
protected activity brought by an under-defined regulation and
loosely-controlled governmental enforcement is most heightened.
See generally Rotunda & Nowak, Treatise on Constitutional Law:
Substance and Procedure § 20.9 (2d ed. 1992). Accordingly, courts
employ a more tolerant vagueness test to purely economic
regulations. Fogie v. Thorn Americas, Inc., 95 F.3d 645, 650 (8th
Cir. 1996) (citing Village of Hoffman Estates v. Flipside, Hoffman
Estates, Inc., 455 U.S. 489, 498-99 (1982)). Although the policy
at issue here did not subject FAIR to criminal sanctions, it
constituted the state's basis for regulating core expressive
conduct and should be judged under a stringent vagueness test. See
Forsyth County, Georgia v. The Nationalist Movement, 505 U.S. 123,
128-29 (1992) (county assembly and parade ordinance that permitted
government administrator to vary the fee for assembling to reflect
the estimated cost of maintaining public order held facially
unconstitutional).

                                   -35-
underlie




           -36-
the vagueness doctrine: (1) the need to give notice of its meaning to those
subject to the policy, and (2) providing officials with explicit guidelines
to avoid arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement.                   Id.      The welfare
office policy fails on both counts.            I agree with the district court that
there is no evidence on this record to suggest that Wusk or anyone at NDSS
intentionally discriminated against FAIR based on the group's message.
FAIR   need not demonstrate actual discrimination, however, where the
potential for discrimination is significant.              See Forsyth County, Georgia
v. The Nationalist Movement, 505 U.S. 123, 128 (1992) ("It is well
established that in the area of freedom of expression an overbroad
regulation may be subject to facial review and invalidation, even though
its application in the case under consideration may be constitutionally
unobjectionable.").      The constitutional infirmity here derives from the
policy's    imprecision:      it     confers    virtually    unrestrained       power    on
authorities    to    define   what    constitutes     a   direct    benefit   to    welfare
recipients.     See Airport Comm'rs v. Jews For Jesus, 482 U.S. 569, 576
(1987) ("The opportunity for abuse, especially where a statute has received
a virtually open-ended interpretation, is self-evident.").
       It   simply   cannot   be     said    that   there   are    any   narrowly   drawn,
reasonable or definite standards guiding Wusk's decisionmaking.                 According
to his testimony at trial, Wusk reviews the literature from a group
requesting access to the lobby and makes a subjective determination about
the nature of the group's work.             (Trial Tr.




                                            -37-
137:1-144:6.)     Despite her best efforts, counsel for FAIR could not pin
Wusk down on clear definitions of either "advocacy group" or a welfare
recipient's "basic needs," the two additional concepts he introduced at
trial to explain his process for deciding who can speak to welfare
recipients.     With respect to the former, Wusk testified that an advocacy
group is one that "promotes an issue."        (Trial Tr. 137:21-24.)    As to
welfare clients' basic needs, Wusk explained that food, clothing, and
shelter certainly qualify; in the same sentence, however, he asserted that
even   the Lincoln Children's Museum "addresses a psychological need"
consistent with his agency's commitment to "deal with child welfare and
trying to promote some healthy families."      (Trial Tr. 141:9-17.)   Moments
before, in the same discussion, however, Wusk explained that he would not
permit the Red Cross to use the lobby to distribute information on CPR
because his "customers can live long and healthy [lives] without CPR
training."    (Trial Tr. 135:22-136:14.)    Wusk's statements demonstrate the
elasticity in the policy which he is left to administer at his whim.
       I disagree with the majority's assertions that Wusk's policy has been
applied consistently in practice.   (Majority Op., supra, at 14, 16.)    I see
no basis for a bright-line distinction between several of the groups
permitted access to the lobby and FAIR.        For example, Wusk allowed in-
person registration for Head Start, a program with broad goals including
"providing family-centered services for low-income families with very young
children designed to promote the development of the children, and to enable
their parents to fulfill their roles as parents and to move toward self-
sufficiency"    42 U.S.C. § 9840a(a)(1) (1994).   Wusk also permitted the YWCA
to post a brochure about parenting classes and the Lincoln Children's
Museum to announce free admission for low-income families.        (Defs.' Ex.
1, Attch. 3.)     These programs, like FAIR, aim to make welfare recipients
more informed citizens, better




                                     -38-
prepared to raise children, and more full participants in society.                    By
mentioning the policy as applied to these other groups, I in no way intend
to suggest that their missions are unworthy or that Wusk erred in giving
any particular group access to his clientele.                Instead, I believe the
comparison    highlights   the     arbitrary      line-drawing     and     inconsistent
application inherent in the "direct benefit" policy.


      The majority accepts that the concept "direct benefit" has concrete
parameters entailing an offer of a tangible good, service, or educational
or employment opportunity to NDSS families.            (Majority Op., supra, at 16.)
But   what   constitutes a service to welfare recipients?                  What is an
educational opportunity?         Would it not be a service and educational
opportunity to obtain information about reforms to the laws governing
economic assistance for the poor?          Wusk's own assistant, who received
FAIR's   request,   believed     FAIR   offered    a    direct   benefit    to   welfare
recipients and told Stippel that she did not believe there would be a
problem with FAIR's request to use the lobby.             (Pls.' Ex. 1 (Stipulation
of Uncontroverted Facts) at ¶ 13.)        It was only after she consulted Wusk
that his assistant understood that FAIR did not qualify for admission under
Wusk's interpretation of the policy.
      The dangers of a vague standard are all the more heightened where,
as here, a group seeks to engage in core expressive conduct protected by
the First Amendment.   The Supreme Court recently observed that "handing out
leaflets in the advocacy of a politically controversial viewpoint [] is the
essence of First Amendment expression."        McIntyre v. Ohio Elections Comm'n,
--- U.S.---, 115 S. Ct. 1511, 1519 (1995); see also Albany Welfare Rights
Org. v. Wyman, 493 F.2d 1319 (2nd Cir.), cert. denied, 419 U.S. 838 (1974)
(a blanket denial to welfare rights organization requesting to hand out
leaflets at welfare office violates the




                                        -39-
First Amendment).      FAIR is a grass-roots organization, established by two
women on welfare, designed to educate welfare recipients and give them a
voice in welfare reform.          FAIR wanted to provide information about the
current welfare-reform debate and about the impact of proposed legislative
changes.      It is well established that:


      [d]iscussion of public issues . . . [is] integral to the
      operation of the system of government established by our
      Constitution.    The First Amendment affords the broadest
      protection to such political expression in order "to assure
      [the] unfettered interchange of ideas for the bringing about of
      political and social changes desired by the people." Roth v.
      United States, 354 U.S. 476, 484 (1957). Although the First
      Amendment protections are not confined to "the exposition of
      ideas," Winters v. New York, 333 U.S. 507, 510 (1948), "there
      is practically universal agreement that a major purpose of the
      Amendment was to protect the free discussion to governmental
      affairs . . . ." Mills v. Alabama, 384 U.S. 214, 218 (1966).
      This no more than reflects our "profound national commitment to
      the principle that debate on public issues should be
      uninhibited, robust, and wide-open."       New York Times v.
      Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964).


McIntyre, 115 S. Ct. at 1518-19.        Although the government need not permit
all   forms    of   speech   on   property   that   it   owns   and   controls,   it   is
nonetheless significant that NDSS's exclusion of FAIR burdened core speech.


      Finally, I note that while I would reject the particular approach
employed by NDSS to control speech activity on its premises, I would in no
way preclude all restrictions on the use of its welfare office lobby.
Certainly the agency has a right--as well as a duty--to protect its clients
from fraud, harassment, and undue annoyance.             Safety, over-crowding, and
other administrative




                                         -40-
constraints24 present legitimate concerns which the state may address with
a reasonable, clear, and consistently-applied policy to control access to
its facilities.      Enforcement of a vague "direct benefit" requirement,
however, in no way addresses those legitimate concerns and constitutes a
practice that should not withstand constitutional scrutiny.


     A true copy.


           Attest:


                  CLERK, U.S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.




      24
       As the majority points out to make a different point, the
local welfare office may face particular constraints because it is
a voter registration site where state law prohibits the display or
distribution of "materials advocating or advertising any political
issue, candidate, or party." (Majority Op., supra, at 15-16 n.15
(quoting Neb. Rev. Stat. § 32-307 (1995).)

                                    -41-
