dissenting.
I respectfully disagree with the majority’s determination that the City of Atlanta’s ordinance regulating employment at adult entertainment establishments serving alcohol is an unauthorized, unconstitutional, duplicate regulatory system that is preempted by general law pursuant to Art. Ill, Section VI, Paragraph IV (a) of the Georgia Constitution. Instead, I see the City’s ordinance as an exercise of the authority constitutionally delegated by the State of Georgia to its counties and municipalities in Article III, Section VI, Paragraph VII of the 1983 Georgia Constitution. That constitutional provision, enacted in 1994, specifically authorizes local regulation of activities involving alcoholic beverages and the exhibition of nudity, and requires a local ordinance to be in direct conflict with general law in order for the general law to pre-empt the local ordinance. Since there is no evidence that the City’s ordinance at issue directly conflicts with the general law enacted by the General Assembly regulating private security businesses (OCGA § 43-38-1 et seq.), the City’s ordinance is not preempted by the general law. Therefore, I conclude that the trial court erred in using the standard of review that has developed under the Georgia Constitution’s more general preemption clause and erred in ruling that the ordinance was unconstitutional because it was preempted by the statute. Cf. R. Perry Sentell, Jr., The Georgia Supreme Court and Local Government Law: Two Sheets to the Wind, 16 Ga. St. U. L. Rev. 361 (1999).
Article III, Section VI, Paragraph VII gives the State “full and complete authority to regulate alcoholic beverages and to regulate . . . activities involving alcoholic beverages.” Id. It specifically delegates the State’s regulatory authority to counties and municipalities “for the purpose of regulating . . . the exhibition of nudity, partial nudity, or depictions of nudity in connection with the sale or con*281sumption of alcoholic beverages. . . .” The constitutional provision expressly states that the “delegated regulatory authority may be exercised by the adoption and enforcement of regulatory ordinances by the counties and municipalities of this state [,]” and concludes with the statement that “[a] general law exercising such regulatory authority shall control over conflicting provisions of any local ordinance but shall not preempt any local ordinance provisions not in direct conflict with general law.” Thus, Georgia counties and municipalities are constitutionally authorized to regulate activities involving nudity and the sale and consumption of alcohol, and the provisions of any such regulating local ordinance not in direct conflict with a general law exercising such regulatory authority are not preempted by general law.
The City’s ordinance falls within the constitutionally-delegated power to regulate nudity and the sale and consumption of alcohol since it applies to persons who perform work at an establishment which has nude or semi-nude dancing or striptease performances and which has a license to sell alcoholic beverages for on-premises consumption. Sections 10-89 (a) and 10-206 (a) of the City of Atlanta Ordinances. Those employees of S.W.A.N. Consulting who provide security at such establishments are performing job duties/functions at the establishment and fall within the ambit of the City’s ordinance. Because S.W.A.N. Consulting, as a private security business operating in Georgia, had to secure a state license under OCGA § 43-38-6 to operate, it contended that the requirements of the City’s ordinance were preempted by the state law. In order to determine whether S.W.A.N. Consulting’s assertion has merit, this Court should apply the standard of review provided by Article III, Section VI, Paragraph VII, the specific constitutional provision authorizing the City to enact an ordinance regulating activities involving nudity and the sale and consumption of alcohol, rather than the general preemption provision of the state constitution. Under the former, the question then becomes whether any provision of the City’s ordinance directly conflicts with the statute so as to be preempted by the statute. Art. Ill, Sec. VI, Par. VIL A comparison of the provisions of the statute and the local ordinance establishes that they are not in direct conflict. Therefore, the City’s ordinance is not preempted by the statute.
The statute requires those who wish to carry on a private security business to obtain a state-issued license to do so. OCGA § 43-38-6. The ordinance does not require the private security business to have a city-issued license. Rather, the ordinance requires that any individual who wishes to work at an adult entertainment establishment that serves alcohol must obtain a city-issued permit. The statute requires the licensed business to apply to register only those employees who will be armed, and gives the employer 30 days from the date *282of the armed employee’s employment to file the application to register. OCGA § 43-38-7 (b) (1). Unarmed employees of a private security business need not be registered. OCGA § 43-38-7.1 (a). The ordinance requires all people working at the adult entertainment establishments that serve alcohol to get a work permit, and requires that all persons have the permit before they begin their employment. Under the statutory scheme, the licensed security business submits fingerprints of its prospective registrants (i.e. its armed employees) to the Georgia Crime Information Center at the Georgia Bureau of Investigation (OCGA § 43-38-7.1), and the licensed business must retain the information sent to it by the GBI. OCGA § 43-38-7.1 (c). In contrast, the City’s ordinance provides that before any person may work at an adult entertainment establishment serving alcohol, that person must be fingerprinted by the Atlanta police, undergo a “police record search” by the police, and be issued a permit by the police. Under the City’s ordinance, S.W.A.N.’s employees assigned to adult entertainment establishments serving alcohol, regardless of whether they are to be armed or not, must be fingerprinted, checked and permitted before they begin working at the establishments; under the statute, only S.W.A.N. employees who are going to be armed must be fingerprinted for a criminal background check, the results of which are given to the employer rather than the licensing body; and there is no prohibition against the armed employee working while his/her application to register is being investigated.
Decided October 1, 2001. Susan P. Langford, Lisa S. Morchower, Chagay Weiss, Rajan Bhandari, for appellant. Peevy & Lancaster, Gregory W. Lancaster, for appellee.The only direct conflict I perceive between the statute and the ordinance is one which would arise if the S.W.A.N. security personnel assigned to adult entertainment establishments serving alcohol were to be armed personnel who had state-issued permits and the City refused to honor the state-issued permit presented by such an employee the day he/she reported to work. As there is no evidence in the record that such a direct conflict exists, it is inappropriate to declare the City’s ordinance unconstitutional and I respectfully dissent from the majority’s contrary conclusion.