MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
I. INTRODUCTION
Plaintiff Charles D. Foley, Jr., Chief of the Town of Randolph Fire Department (“Plaintiff,” “Foley”), alleges that Defendants, the Town of Randolph, and its five selectmen (Richard W. Wells, Paul J. Connors, William Alexopoulos, Maureen C. Kenny, and James F. Burgess, Jr.), unlawfully retaliated against him in violation of his First Amendment rights when they suspended him for fifteen days because of comments he made at the scene of a fatal fire.
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Plaintiff and Defendants have filed cross-motions for summary judgment pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 56. After hearing and a review of the submissions, this Court
ALLOWS
Defendants’ motion for summary judgment on Plaintiffs claim pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (Count I),
II. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
The following facts are undisputed except where stated. Plaintiff was hired as Chief of the Randolph Fire Department in 2002. In 2003, Foley and the Town entered into a contract which provided for annual renewals through June 2006. In 2006, however, Foley and the Randolph Board of Selectmen were unable to negotiate a new employment contract. Instead, the Selectmen reappointed Foley as Fire Chief on October 31, 2006 under the provisions of the so-called “strong” chief statute, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 48, § 42.
On May 17, 2007, there was a fatal fire in Randolph in which two children, ages seventeen and ten, died. At the scene of the fatal fire, the State Fire Marshal and Plaintiff answered questions from the media. The State Fire Marshal had convened the press conference. 2 Foley was in uniform and fire suppression activities were still ongoing when hе spoke, though Foley states that, by that time, the fire was under control and he had relinquished oversight of the fire to the deputy. Speaking to the media, Foley pointed out what he considered to be inadequate staffing and poor funding of the Randolph Fire Department and stated that the firefighting operation would have gone more professionally and more according to standard if the department had more manpower. However, he also indicated the outcоme might not have been different even without these alleged budgetary shortfalls.
At the scene of the fire, Plaintiff also voiced his frustration with the reduction in the number of firefighters to Defendant James F. Burgess, Jr., a Randolph Selectman. According to Defendants, Foley grabbed a draft of a reporter’s news article and “shoved it forcefully” into Burgess’ chest. (Burgess Aff. ¶ 3.) Plaintiff disputes this allegation, stating that the paper never actually touched Burgess.
Later that day, in a phone call with Foley, Defеndant Maureen Kenny, a Se-lectwoman of Randolph, criticized him for discussing staffing and budget issues at the fire site rather than focusing on the children’s deaths and the firefighters’ heroism.
Subsequent to these events, disciplinary charges were brought against Foley. It was alleged that Foley’s statements to the media at the fire scene “demonstrated a lack of sound judgment and of accuracy” and were “not conducive to the town’s mission of providing effective firefighting services”; that Plaintiff had “initiated inappropriate physical contact” with a Selectman; and that, when interacting with Selectwoman Kenny at the scene, Plaintiff had “displayed a lack of demeanor, ability, and independent judgment required for competent command.” (“Hearing Officer’s Report” at 1) (Burgess Aff., Ex. A.) The Board of Selectmen appointed a hearing officer to evaluate the allegations and to determine whether there was cause to discipline Plaintiff. After a three-day hearing in the summer of 2007, the hearing officer concluded that Plaintiff did “initiate inappropriate and unprovoked physical contact” with Selectman Burgess and that he had made “inappropriate, inaccurate, intemperate, and misleading statements to the news media.”
(Id.
at 10.)
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Charac
On September 10, 2007, the Selectmen voted, three-to-two, to adopt the hearing officer’s recommendation and suspended Plaintiff for fifteen days. The Selectmen notified Plaintiff, in writing, that this fifteen-day suspension would begin on September 17, 2007. (Burgess Aff., Exh. B.) As a result of the suspension, Plaintiff incurred a loss of $6,100 in salary.
Neither the contract which governed Plaintiffs employment from 2003-2006 nor the “strong” chief statute specifically authorizes or requires Plaintiff to make public statements on matters of public safety as part of his official duties as Chief of the Fire Department. At the same time, nothing in the contract or the statute prohibits or restricts Plaintiff from doing so. In 2006, during the failed contract negotiations between Foley and the Board of Selectmen, Foley proposed a provision that specifically granted him, as Fire Chief, the authority to make public statements on matters of public safety. While Plaintiff contends that, during contract negotiations, the Town specifically rejected that provision, Defendants dispute any suggestion that the Board of Selectmen rejected only that language or that their ultimate refusal to enter a new employment contract with Foley was premised on the referenced language.
Prior to the incident in question, Foley had answered media inquiries, conducted press conferences, and made public statements to the media regarding the Fire Department and its activities, events, and incidents. Plaintiff has emphasized that, in his view, all such communications were done entirely on his own volition; he disputes any characterization of these media communications as a required — or implicitly authorized — part of his job.
III. DISCUSSION
A. Standard for Summary Judgment
Summary judgment is appropriate when “the pleadings, the discovery and disclosure materials on file, and any affidavits show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). “To sucсeed [on a motion for summary judgment], the moving party must show that there is an absence of evidence to support the nonmoving party’s position.”
Rogers v. Fair,
“Once the moving party has properly supported [its] motion for summary judgment, the burden shifts to the nonmoving party, with respect to each issue on which [it] has the burden of proof, to demonstrate that a trier of fact reasonably could find in [its] favor.”
DeNovellis v. Shalala,
B. Public Employee’s Speech
Although a public employee “must accept certain limitations on his or her
The key issue in Foley’s First Amendment claim is whether his speech at the press conference falls within the realm of protected public employee speech. Specifically, the question is whether, when speaking at the May 17, 2007 press conference, Foley was speaking “as a citizen” or pursuant to his official job duties. Under
Garcetti v. Ceballos,
1. Garcetti
In
Garcetti,
a deputy district attorney claimed that he suffered a series of retaliatory employment actions, including demotion, after he wrote a memorandum to his supervisors recommending dismissal of a prosecution because of flaws in an affidavit. Rejecting his claim that these actions were in violation of his First Amendment rights, the Supreme Court held that the deputy did not enjоy First Amendment protection for his statements in the memo because he had drafted the document “pursuant to [his] official duties.”
Garcetti
Garcetti
“clarified and expanded on the earlier law,” articulating a two-step initial inquiry for public employee First Amendment claims.
Curran,
2. “As a citizen” or “Pursuant to Official Duties”?
Citing Garcetti, Defendants argue that Plaintiffs First Amendment rights were not violated because, in their view, he made his statements as part of his official duties as Fire Chief. Plaintiff responds that he is entitled to First Amendment protection because he was speaking as a private citizen on a matter of public concern.
The inquiry into whether a public employee spoke as a citizen or pursuant to his or her job duties is “a practical one.”
Garcetti
Defendants emphasize that Foley was “on duty at the fire scene, in full uniform and superintending the activities” of his firefighters when he participated in the press conference. (Defs.’ Mem. 9) (Docket No. 34.) Plaintiff argues that none of these facts, on their own, establish that Foley was speaking pursuant to his duties as Fire Chief.
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Instead, Plaintiff asks this Court to focus on the target of thе speech.
See Modica v. Humphrey,
No. A-02-CA-722,
Plaintiff is correct in his assertion that neither his uniform nor his presence at the fire scene is itself dispositive.
See Garcetti
Foley’s remaining — and most repeated — argument is that because neither his contract nor the “strong” Chief statute explicitly requires him to make public statements or engage with the media, he could not have been acting pursuant to his official duties during his fireside press colloquy. In рarticular, Plaintiff makes much of the Town’s refusal to include a specific provision regarding media relations within Foley’s contract. However, in
Garcetti
the Supreme Court made clear that “the listing of a given task in an employee’s written job description is neither necessary nor sufficient to demonstrate that conducting the task is within the scope of the employee’s professional duties for First Amendment purposes.”
Two Fifth Circuit cases are instructive. First, in
Williams v. Dallas Independent School District,
Next, in a factually similar case to this one, the Fifth Circuit ruled that a public employee’s statеments to the media at the scene of an accident were not protected by the First Amendment.
Nixon v. City of Houston,
As in
Nixon,
Foley was suspended for fifteen days after he spoke to the media at the scene of a public emergency, about the situation and the circumstances surrounding it, while on duty and in uniform. Even if not a required job duty, Foley’s past interactions with the media demonstrate that such activities are at least “arguably one of [his] job responsibilities.”
Nixon,
Moreover, and perhaps most telling, the opportunity fоr Foley to speak at this particular press conference arose because of his official position; this was not a forum at which any citizen could speak.
Cf. Tamayo v. Blagojevich,
This principle also distinguishes the case at hand from two cases on which Plaintiff relies. In
Hailey v. City of Camden,
No. 01-3967,
Had Foley been disciplined for voicing his concerns and frustrations at another forum — whether a town meeting, a letter to the editor, or even a statement to the media made at a different time and/or place — the outcome may have been different. However, under these circumstances, as in
Nixon,
there is “[qjuite simply ‘no relevant analogue to speech by citizens.’ ”
Nixon,
There is no doubt that the issue discussed by Foley was a matter of public concern which may give him some protection under the Massachusetts Whistleblow
IV ORDER
Defendant’s motion for summary judgment [Docket No. 33] is ALLOWED with respect to Count I and DENIED with respect to the other counts. Plaintiffs mоtion for summary judgment [Docket No. 21] is DENIED with respect to all counts. The state law claims are dismissed without prejudice.
Notes
. The Complaint assérts violations of the First and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (Count I); Part I, Declaration of Rights, Article XVI of the Massachusetts Constitution (Count II); and Mass. Gen. Laws. ch. 149 § 185 (“the Massachusetts Whistleblower Statute’’) (Count III). Plaintiff also alleges that Defendants breached Plaintiff’s employment contract and/or violated Mass. Gen. Laws. ch. 48 § 42 (" 'strong' Chief statute”) (Count IV) and that Defendants Burgess and Kenny intentionally interfered with Plaintiff's contractual and/or economically advantageous relationship with the Town of Randolph (Count V).
. Foley emphasizes that he did not convene the press conference and generally resists the "press conference” label. Instead, Foley characterizes his actions as voluntarily answering questions from media members who were present at the scene.
. As to the third allegation, the hearing officer cоncluded that, while Plaintiff was emotional at the scene, his emotions did not impair his ability to be in command.
. At least two circuits have concluded that
Garcetti
demands that the sub-parts be addressed in this particular order.
See, e.g., Mills v. City of Evansville,
. Plaintiff cites
Brasslett v. Cota,
