Charles Daniel Lindsey sued the City of Orriek, Missouri (the City) and its mayor, Shirley Taylor, under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging an unlawful dismissal of him for accusing the City Council (Council) of violating Missouri’s open meetings law, accusations he claims were constitutionally protected speech. Taylor and the City moved for summary judgment which was denied. Taylor appeals arguing the district court 1 erred in finding she was not entitled to qualified immunity. We affirm.
I
The facts viewed most favorably to Lindsey are as follows. The City employed Lindsey as its public works director from October 2001 to April 2005. His duties included maintaining the City’s parks, water systems, streets, and sewers. As part of his position he was required to attend Council meetings to report about public works issues. While Lindsey did not actually live in or vote in the City, he worked for it and owned land there. Taylor was Lindsey’s supervisor. The City is governed by both the mayor and a three- *896 member, elected city council. In 2003, the City sent Lindsey to a day-long training session, part of which included a two-hour seminar on Missouri’s open meetings or “sunshine” law. After the seminar, Lindsey became convinced the City was violating the open meetings law by improperly entering into non-public executive sessions and passing city ordinances without public discussion. According to Council meeting minutes, Lindsey raised the open meetings issue at four different public meetings.
At a February 6, 2003, City Council meeting, Lindsey reported to the Council about his attendance at the seminar and suggested the municipality improve its sunshine law compliance by making a written policy available to the public and creating a compliance committee. At the meeting, City Attorney John Newberry told Lindsey he believed none of the closed meetings he had attended violated the sunshine law. After the meeting, Lindsey contends he met with then-Council member Tom Shrier who warned Lindsey the other Council members were mad at him for raising the sunshine law issue and told him “the best thing you could do is shut up.” At an April 22, 2004, Council meeting, Lindsey questioned whether the Council had properly followed the sunshine law in its 2001 consideration of a retirement benefit ordinance which occurred prior to Lindsey’s employment. His contention was the meeting where this ordinance was discussed should have been open to the public. According to Lindsey, several days later Taylor approached him behind city hall and told him the sunshine laws were none of his business and to think about what he was doing before he embarrassed the City.
At an October 20, 2004, meeting, Lindsey, believing the Council was violating the sunshine law by improperly going into executive session, read the sunshine law aloud and asked the Council not to “do an illegal meeting.” Taylor and the Council subsequently did go into closed session “to have the mayor bring them up to date on a personnel issue from last month’s meeting.” The minutes reflect, after the meeting was reopened, there was a discussion as to the sunshine law. Finally, at a January 6, 2005, Council meeting, Lindsey addressed the Council again on the sunshine law. He asked the Council to evaluate their sunshine law compliance on February 6, 2003, with no response. He made another request again in April 2004 and since then had identified fifteen violations of the sunshine law. He described these perceived violations and told the Council they were “bypassing any open discussion” regarding new ordinances. Taylor stated the subject was “closed” as it had not been placed on the agenda prior to the meeting. Lindsey again asked the Council to review its procedures. At this point, at Taylor’s direction, the Council entered a closed session purportedly to discuss personnel matters.
Lindsey testified, in 2004, he made an audiotape of one public Council meeting and made a videotape of another. During the third week of March 2005, Lindsey met with Taylor at her home. He told her he was going to schedule a meeting with an assistant attorney general to address the City’s failure to comply with the sunshine law. He explained he had already called the state’s attorney several times to discuss the issue. Less than a month later, on April 12, 2005, Lindsey was fired. Prior to being fired, Taylor provided Lindsey with two handwritten critiques of his work. Lindsey contended none of the job deficiencies listed in these critiques had been brought to his attention previously. Taylor gave Lindsey the second critique on April 11, 2005, which listed as a specific complaint: “Several times [Lindsey] has basically attacked the Council at the meet *897 ings and told them they were not handling city business or ordinances properly.” Lindsey attempted to discuss the critique at a Council meeting that evening but was told the Council did not need to check the critique’s accuracy. The next day, Taylor gave Lindsey a letter informing him he had been fired.
This litigation followed. The City and Taylor each moved for summary judgment. The district court denied the motion, finding Lindsey had engaged in protected speech, and his First Amendment right was clearly established such that a reasonable official in Taylor’s position would have known it was illegal to fire Lindsey for his speech. The district court held Taylor was not entitled to qualified immunity and found there was an issue of fact as to whether Taylor fired Lindsey. Taylor appeals both the denial of qualified immunity and the district court’s conclusion there was a disputed issue regarding whether she fired Lindsey.
II
A defendant can appeal a district court’s denial of qualified immunity pursuant to the collateral order doctrine.
Beck v. Wilson,
A
Our first inquiry is whether Lindsey has asserted a First Amendment violation. In
Garcetti v. Ceballos,
— U.S. -,
Taylor first argues Lindsey’s statements regarding sunshine law compliance are not protected speech under the First Amendment because Lindsey was not speaking as a citizen and further was not speaking on a matter of public concern. Although Taylor conflates these separate inquiries, we consider each of them in turn.
The
Garcetti
Court clarified the “citizen” prong of the analysis, defining when a public employee speaks as a citizen rather than as an employee. In
Garcetti,
a deputy district attorney alleged he was transferred and demoted because he wrote a memorandum urging the dismissal of a case because of perceived misrepresentations in a search warrant affidavit. The
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Court held: “when public employees make statements pursuant to their official duties, the employees are not speaking as citizens for First Amendment purposes, and the Constitution does not insulate their communications from employer discipline.”
Id.
at 1960. The Court noted it was not dispositive that the deputy district attorney “expressed his views inside his office, rather than publicly” and the memorandum in question “concerned the subject matter of his employment.”
Id.
at 1959. The controlling factor was that “his expressions were made pursuant to his duties as a calendar deputy.”
Id.
at 1959-GO. The Court ultimately found the deputy district attorney “did not speak as a citizen by writing a memo that addressed the proper disposition of a pending criminal case” as this was one of his calender manager duties.
Id.
at 1960. After
Garcetti
a public employee does not speak as a citizen if he speaks pursuant to his job duties.
See McGee v. Pub. Water Supply, Dist.
#
2,
Taylor argues Lindsey’s speech was not as a citizen as he was speaking at Council meetings which he was required to attend as part of his job. In addition, he learned about the sunshine law at a seminar paid for by the City. We disagree. Here Lindsey complained about sunshine law compliance at both Council meetings and during a private meeting with Taylor. It is undisputed Lindsey was required to attend and to present a water, sewer and street report at these meetings. His job duties included park, water, sewer, and street maintenance, as well as supervising the employees who assisted with these duties. Unlike in Garcetti and McGee, there is no evidence Lindsey’s job duties even arguably included sunshine law compliance. Although Lindsey attended a training seminar which included a session on the sunshine law, there is nothing in the record to suggest the City sent him to the seminar to learn about the law or that he was subsequently charged with ensuring its compliance. Thus, we hold his speech regarding compliance was as a citizen.
Taylor next argues Lindsey’s speech was not on a matter of public concern. She argues his complaints were self interested as they involved the Council’s procedure for passing ordinances governing retirement and other municipal employee benefits. We disagree. “When a public employee’s speech is purely job related, [his] speech will not be deemed a matter of public concern.”
Buazard v. Meridith,
In
Casey v. City of Cabool,
a police and fire dispatcher frequently expressed his disapproval of certain fire department policies and was fired after he threatened to contact the Missouri state auditor with his concerns.
Casey,
Taylor attempts to characterize Lindsey’s speech at Taylor’s home as a threat which is unprotected by the First Amendment. She cites
United States v. Koski,
Taylor also emphasizes she was not technically Lindsey’s mayor as he does not live in the City. Taylor cites no authority, and we could find none, for the proposition that Lindsey must be a “citizen” of the City in order to engage in protected speech at Council meetings or with the City’s mayor. It is Lindsey’s United States citizenship which triggers First Amendment protection. Whether or not he is a City resident is irrelevant to such
*900
inquiry. Taylor further argues the private forum of her home prevents Lindsey’s speech from being on a matter of public concern. We have held, however, speech need not be in a public forum to be protected, especially when the speech is made to a public official about her conduct.
See Belk,
In sum, we conclude Lindsey’s speech was both as a citizen and on a matter of public concern. At this juncture, the court generally engages in the
Pickering
balancing test, balancing the public employee’s interest in speaking against his employer’s interest in promoting the efficiency of the public sex-vice it performs through its employees.
Hinshaw v. Smith,
To trigger the
Pickering
balancing test, a public employer must, with specificity, demonstrate the speech at issue created workplace disharmony, impeded the plaintiffs performance or impaired working relationships.
Washington v. Normandy Fire Prot. Dist.,
Here, Taylor points to scant evidence of any disruption of the City’s functions as a result of Lindsey’s speech either at the Council meetings or at her home. She notes Lindsey testified Council members disliked him and further that Lindsey
*901
taped certain Council meetings. As an initial matter, we find Lindsey’s taping of two public Council meetings irrelevant to our inquiry, as this was not his alleged protected speech. Our inquiry is whether his protected speech disrupted City operations. There is some evidence in the record Lindsey argued with both Taylor and the Council. Taylor does not, however, claim this caused a disruption. She states simply “when an employee attacks elected officials it has a direct and adverse effect on that relationship” and “strains in that relationship are apparent.” Taylor also references Lindsey’s testimony he believed the Council members disliked him. Even if the Council members disliked Lindsey, this is not enough to show his speech caused the dislike or such dislike impaired his working relationship with these individuals. Taylor’s claim Lindsey’s speech undermined the Council’s authority in front of citizens is similarly unsupported. She calls his speech “confrontational and disruptive” but does not explain how or if his speech actually disrupted the City’s functions. Under
Sexton■,
such “vague and conclusory statements do not demonstrate with any specificity that the speech created disharmony in the workplace, impeded [Lindsey’s] ability to perform [his] duties, or impaired working relationships with other employees.”
Sexton,
B
Our next inquiry is whether Lindsey’s First Amendment right was clearly established such that a reasonable official would have known firing him was unlawful. Taylor first contends Lindsey has not shown his right was clearly established because the district court employed the Pickering balancing test. Because we hold Taylor did not make a sufficient showing to trigger the Pickering balancing test, this argument has been rendered moot.
Taylor also argues it was reasonable for her to fire Lindsey given his “insubordination.” She claims she gave Lindsey a list of job deficiencies and, rather than correct them, he argued with her about the list. As such, she had “every right” to fire him. Essentially, Taylor argues she had legitimate reasons to fire Lindsey. This exceeds the scope of our review.
See Powell v. Johnson,
In her reply brief, Taylor further argues her mistake as to what the law required was reasonable, and therefore qualified immunity is warranted. She characterizes Lindsey’s repeated complaints regarding the sunshine law as a “closed issue.” She claims it was reasonable for her to rely on the city attorney’s opinion on this subject and consider the issue “concluded.” As such, she reasonably misapprehended the law in this instance. As an initial matter, Taylor did not raise this argument in her opening brief. Absent some justification, we generally will not consider such new arguments.
See Bearden v. Lemon,
This court has “taken a broad view of what constitutes ‘clearly established law’ for the purposes of a qualified immunity inquiry.”
Sexton,
This court has held it clearly established a public employer may not discharge an employee for disclosing the potential illegal conduct of public officials.
Id.
Other circuits have held a public employee establishes a First Amendment violation where it is alleged he was terminated for disclosing violations of state open meetings law.
Dishnow,
III
Finally, Taylor argues she did not fire Lindsey, and is therefore an inappropriate defendant in this action. The district court found there was a disputed issue of fact regarding whether Taylor was a decision maker in the firing decision. We are without jurisdiction to review this finding.
See Hawkins v. Holloway,
IV
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court.
Notes
. The Honorable Dean Whipple, United States District Judge for the Western District of Missouri.
