Jackie M. BELYEU, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
COOSA COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION; Larry K. Hardman,
individually and in his official capacity as Superintendent
of Education; Robert S. Smith; Claude Bain Culver; Louis
B. Childs; James C. Newberry and Charles F. Ward,
individually and in their official capacities as members of
the Coosa County Board of Education, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 92-6229.
United States Court of Appeals,
Eleventh Circuit.
Aug. 25, 1993.
Theron Stokes, Alabama Educ. Ass'n, Kenneth L. Thomas, Cynthia W. Clinton, Thomas, Means & Gillis, Montgomery, AL, Michael D. Simpson, Nat. Educ. Ass'n, Washington, DC, for plaintiff-appellant.
Frank S. Teel, Teel & Teel, Rockford, AL, for defendants-appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Middle District of Alabama.
Before BIRCH, Circuit Judge, CLARK, Senior Circuit Judge, and HOEVELER*, Senior District Judge.
BIRCH, Circuit Judge:
In Pickering v. Board of Education,
Jackie M. Belyeu, a black woman, was employed by the Coosa County School System ("School System") as a special education teacher's aide from 1988-1990. During this period Belyeu was involved in several disputes with School System personnel. In November 1989, contending that her child's English teacher awarded grades based on a student's race, Belyeu engaged in several emotional conferences with the teacher and Roy Green, her daughter's principal. She ultimately complained to Larry Hardman, the system superintendent. Belyeu complained to Hardman that she should be paid as a bus driver for the time she spent transporting special education students in her personal vehicle. Belyeu was also involved in a protracted dispute concerning overtime work. An investigation by the Department of Labor determined that eight School System employees, including Belyeu, had not been compensated for work beyond their regular 40 hour week. The school board opted to remunerate these employees with compensatory time credit. Belyeu instead insisted on receiving backpay, and Hardman eventually decided to settle the dispute by accepting her demand.
At a February 1990 meeting of the Coosa County Central High School Parent-Teacher Association, Belyeu questioned David Touart, the principal of Central High School, about the school's failure to have some program or other commemoration for Black History Month. At the time, Belyeu's daughter attended Central High School and Belyeu was employed as a teacher's aide at an elementary school in the same system. Belyeu expressed her concern that all students, black and white, should be informed of the contributions of black Americans to the development of the United States and of the State of Alabama. While the high school provided two buses to take interested students to a program at an area community college, Belyeu explained that due to limited space on the buses, only juniors and seniors were allowed to attend. Further, she felt that the optional nature of the program was inappropriate because white students should be compelled to learn about black historical figures just as black students are required to learn about white historical figures. Touart apologized for not recognizing these concerns earlier. Both Touart and Belyeu were polite at the meeting. Belyeu secretly tape recorded her remarks.
Immediately after the meeting, Touart asked Belyeu to speak privately in his office. He told her that he was disappointed that she felt that she had to raise this issue in a public forum and that he would prefer that she discussed such matters privately with him. He expressed his concern that debating the matter publicly could exacerbate racial tensions.
At the end of each school year, all teacher's aides are expected to tender their resignations because funding for these positions varies from year to year. At the conclusion of the 1989-1990 school year, Belyeu offered her resignation, but sought re-employment as a teacher's aide for the following year. With the exception of Belyeu, every teacher's aide who sought re-employment with the School System was hired for the 1990-1991 school year. In addition, the School System employed eight or nine new teacher's aides.
Belyeu filed an action against the Coosa County Board of Education, the members of the board in their official and individual capacities, and superintendent Hardman, alleging that, in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and 42 U.S.C. § 2000e, et seq. (Title VII), the School System refused to rehire her because of her speech at the February PTA meeting and based on her gender. After a nonjury trial, the district court rendered final judgment in favor of the School System on both claims.1 With regard to Belyeu's first amendment claim, the court concluded that her speech at the PTA meeting addressed a matter of public concern and that the decision not to rehire Belyeu was based in part on her speech. Applying the balancing test prescribed by Pickering, however, the court held that the School System's interest in reducing racial tension outweighed Belyeu's first amendment rights. Concluding that the School System properly could have declined to rehire Belyeu based on her speech, the court did not reach the issue of whether the School System would have otherwise made the same employment decision. Belyeu appeals.
II. DISCUSSION
A public employee's right to speak is limited by the government's interest in preserving the efficiency of the public services that it performs through its employees. In order to determine whether the government has violated the first amendment by basing an employment decision on the speech of its employees, we apply the Pickering balancing test. First, the court must determine whether the expression addressed a matter of public concern. Martinez v. City of Opa-Locka,
The district court considered Belyeu's speech concerning her compensation and her child's English grade to address matters of private interest, but held that her speech at the PTA meeting implicated public concerns. Neither party contests this disposition. Belyeu directed her PTA speech to the emphasis that a newly integrated public school should place on the historical contributions of black Americans. Reviewing the district court's holding de novo,2 we agree that Belyeu spoke to a matter of public concern at the PTA meeting. The district court also concluded that Belyeu's speech affected the School System's decision not to rehire her.3
Applying the Pickering balancing test, the court concluded that the School System's interest in avoiding racially divisive public criticism outweighed Belyeu's interests in free speech. The court found that Belyeu's speech at the PTA meeting "had the potential to undermine the delicately balanced racial[ ] atmosphere that existed at Central High." R1-35-32. Moreover, the court noted that Belyeu chose "to raise publicly a potentially divisive issue ... rather than first seeking a satisfactory resolution privately. Expecting Belyeu to first address privately with the principal her concerns about the lack of a Black History Month program at Central is not unreasonable or burdensome." Id. at 31.
We must consider several factors in balancing the State's interest in efficient provision of public services against [an employee's] speech interest, including: (1) whether the speech at issue impedes the government's ability to perform its duties efficiently, (2) the manner, time and place of the speech, and (3) the context within which the speech was made.
Morales v. Stierheim,
The other factors set out in Morales, the manner, time, place and context of the speech, also favor Belyeu.
We determine de novo whether the district court correctly weighed the competing interests of a public employee and her government employer. Connick,
In concluding that the Pickering balance did not favor Belyeu's speech, the district court held that the School System could require Belyeu to present her thoughts on Black History Month privately, and not at a public meeting. The uncontradicted testimony shows that there was no formal policy or general requirement that concerns of this nature be submitted privately to the School System prior to public discussion. Belyeu was never informed that, by speaking at the PTA meeting, she was in violation of any rule or policy. This issue, therefore, merely restates the matter of whether, under Pickering, the School System's interest in prohibiting public discussion of Black History Month outweighs Belyeu's interest in free speech. As set out above, the evidence does not show that the public nature of Belyeu's speech jeopardized any legitimate interest of the School System to the extent necessary to outweigh Belyeu's first amendment interest. Further, we note that government employers relying on policies forbidding open discussion of matters of public concern have fared poorly under the Pickering analysis. See, e.g., Moore v. City of Kilgore,
III. CONCLUSION
The district court correctly concluded that Belyeu's PTA speech addressed a subject of public concern. After de novo review, however, we conclude that the court erred in determining that the School System's interest in confining public discussion of racially divisive issues outweighs Belyeu's interest in free speech. We therefore REVERSE and REMAND for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
Honorable William M. Hoeveler, Senior U.S. District Judge for the Southern District of Florida, sitting by designation
Belyeu has not appealed the judgment on her Title VII, gender claim
Bryson,
The district court in its order, stated:
Based on the evidence presented at trial, it is evident to the court that Belyeu's speech on these issues, in addition to her request for a change in her agreed upon compensation for transporting students, affected defendants' decision not to reemploy her.
R1-35-24. We are uncertain if this statement was meant to resolve whether Belyeu's speech was a substantial or motivating factor in the decision to not rehire her. On remand, the district court should explicitly address this issue.
Touart testified that he felt that there was "a possibility that [Belyeu's public comments] could alienate black against white." R3-22. Similarly, he later stated that "possibly a meeting like [the February PTA meeting] would cause blacks to be alienated against whites and whites against blacks." R3-25
Accord Luethje v. Peavine School Dist.,
