|
Ronni J. KOTWICA and Roland Kotwica, Husband and Wife, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
CITY OF TUCSON, Daul Valenzuela, Germaine Caine, James E.
Ronstadt, and Charles
Davis, Defendants-Appellants.
801 F.2d 1182
No. 85-2111.
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted March 14, 1986.
Decided Oct. 9, 1986.
KENNEDY, Circuit Judge:
We address the question whether the first amendment provides
absolute protection to a government employee who uses an official
interview to contradict agency policy, in violation of express
directions from a superior. The district court found the speech
protected. We reverse.
Ronni J. Kotwica challenges a one day suspension from her
duties as a recreation supervisor in the Parks and Recreation
Department for the City of Tucson. Kotwica was directed by the
department to study the feasibility of adding a competitive gymnastics
team to the city's recreation program. In June 1983, Kotwica's
immediate supervisor informed her that the proposal had been
put on hold and would not be implemented for the summer. The
supervisor did ask Kotwica to continue consideration of the proposal
for adoption at some later time.
There was a noncompetitive gymnastics program in operation,
and Kotwica sent a letter to parents of the children enrolled
in it. The letter mentioned the "soon to be formed team,"
i.e. the competitive team then under study. Her supervisors admonished
Kotwica to make no further reference to a competitive team until
the department made a final decision on the matter.
In the summer of 1983, the department sponsored a gymnastics
exhibition at a local high school. One hundred and forty-five
gymnasts participated and seven hundred others were spectators.
At the exhibition a photographer from the local newspaper, the
Arizona Daily Star, took pictures and requested an interview
with Kotwica. Kotwica obtained permission from her department
supervisor to speak with the reporter. There is some dispute
over precisely what the supervisor told Kotwica. However, the
parties agreed for summary judgment purposes that Kotwica was
instructed not to discuss the development of a competitive gymnastics
team in Tucson because the outline of such a program had yet
to be decided and its direction was a sensitive matter.
Kotwica spoke to the reporter at a city facility while she
was working. The article that appeared in the newspaper quoted
her in part as follows: A major concern for Kotwica is a goal
for her students.
"You work and you work, but what for?" she said.
"We'd like to get to the point where we compete against
other schools and clubs. "In Illinois, different city teams
are co-sponsored by parks and recreation departments and boosters,
and they compete against each other." Kotwica said a similar
situation is at least a year away in Tucson.
"My ultimate goal is to get a first-class team going
and be working toward a gym. Right now we've got levels III and
IV. We're looking at two years down the road as far as having
top-level competitors in Classes III and IV. "It can be
a very self-satisfying program, not only for me but for all the
parents that spend the time and money and are involved in this
endeavor, also." (Emphasis added).
As a result of the article, Kotwica was suspended from her
job for one day without pay for disobeying the directions of
her *1184 supervisor, the city claiming that the interview was
a repeated incident of insubordination. After serving her suspension,
Kotwica filed suit against the city of Tucson and her supervisors,
claiming violations of 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and the first and
fourteenth amendments. The district court granted summary judgment
in her favor.
Analytic imprecisions underlie the arguments of both the city
and its suspended employee. At oral argument the city's wooden
insistence was that Kotwica's statements were not speech at all,
but were instead within some amorphous metaphysical category
beyond the ambit of the first amendment. The law does not rest
on propositions so artificial. Comments made to a newspaper reporter
and intended for publication are speech, pure and simple. The
question is whether the speech has absolute protection when the
speaker uses an official interview to misstate the official policy
of the government employer he or she purports to represent.
The employee's argument is fallacious as well. Egocentric
in design, Kotwica's contention is that her speech alone, not
the official policy of the agency, has value for the public.
That is not the case. The government's stake in the accurate
announcement of its own policy is more than legitimate, it is
vital to constitutional rule. Whether wise or foolish, the policy
of the government must be known and understood if the public
is to hold its authors to account. The personal views of individual
employees do not take necessary precedence over this vital speech
interest of the government itself when the employee uses an official
interview to misrepresent government policy.
The Supreme Court's decisions in Connick v. Myers, 461 U.S.
138, 144-46, 103 S.Ct. 1684, 1688-90, 75 L.Ed.2d 708 (1983),
and Pickering v. Board of Education, 391 U.S. 563, 568, 88 S.Ct.
1731, 1734, 20 L.Ed.2d 811 (1968), instruct us that public employees
retain first amendment rights to comment on matters of public
concern but that there is a balance between that privilege and
the state's interest in a responsible and efficient governmental
system. See also Nicholson v. Board of Education, 682 F.2d 858,
865 (9th Cir.1982). The subjects on which the employee spoke
were matters of public concern, and as a private citizen, the
employee could comment whether or not her opinion would sit well
with the employer. See Anderson v. Central Point School District
No. 6, 746 F.2d 505, 507 (9th Cir.1984) (per curiam). The problem,
then, is not that the comments were an indirect or implied criticism
of the employer or its policy, for even direct and explicit criticism
by an employee has constitutional protection when spoken in the
appropriate forum. Pickering, 391 U.S. at 570, 88 S.Ct. at 1735.
The point here is that the employee appropriated an official
interview for her own purposes and misrepresented the department's
position in material respects, contrary to its orders. Neither
Pickering nor its progeny contemplate that a public employee
has the unfettered right to speak as the employee pleases, while
purporting to explain official policy. The government's interest
is in direct proportion to the potential for interference with
its ability to function, and in judging the level of interference,
the government has broad discretion. Connick, 461 U.S. at 152,
103 S.Ct. at 1692. "The Pickering balance requires full
consideration of the government's interest in the effective and
efficient fulfillment of its responsibilities to the public."
Id. at 150, 103 S.Ct. at 1692. Interference with the government's
ability to function in a responsible way may result from speech
that takes the form of official misrepresentation, and in consequence
the government has an important interest in preventing such distortion.
Here, Kotwica was interviewed not because of her stature but
because she represented the department. Her own actions *1185
so confirm. She sought authorization from the department and
spoke on its time. The Constitution does not prevent the government
from disciplining an employee when he or she uses an official
interview in a manner inconsistent with the employer's directions
and misstates the employer's policy. Kotwica could be disciplined
not only because she was insubordinate but also because her speech
disserved the first amendment interests of others, though she
would arrogate its protection for her exclusive benefit.
The government's interest in the accurate announcement of
its policy is sufficient to sustain the discipline here imposed.
We find no first amendment protection for the employee's speech
in all the circumstances of the case. REVERSED.
|