Plaintiff-appellee George C. Schad, a police officer with the Milwaukee Police Department (“MPD”), filed suit pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that the City of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and, Arthur L. Jones, former Chief of Police for Milwaukee, violated the First Amendment to the United States Constitution by transferring Schad in retaliation for his statements to a fellow officer. The district court denied defendants’ motion for summary judgment, holding that Schad’s speeсh was constitutionally protected and that Chief Jones was not entitled to qualified immunity. Chief Jones appeals and, for the reasons stated herein, we reverse.
I. Background
From November 1999 through February 2001, Officer Schad served as a member of the Warrant Squad of the MPD. The Warrant Squad, which is responsible for locating and arresting people wanted on outstanding warrants, is a desirable assignment within the MPD for which officers are specially selected.
In late January or early February 2001, the MPD’s Tactical Enforcement Unit was in a 24-hour standoff with a suspect named Lesmes Rivera. Members of the Unit succeeded in arresting Rivera only after using teargas to draw him out of the house in which he had barricaded himself. On February 14, 2001, Rivera posted bail and was released. 1 The same day, Chief Jones transmitted Rivera’s name to all MPD district stationhouses, stating that Rivera wаs wanted on three felony warrants.
At the February 14, 2001 Warrant Squad roll call, Schad and the other squad members on duty were instructed to locate and arrest Rivera. They were given Rivera’s photograph and possible addresses where he might be found. Following roll call, the acting Criminal Investigation Bureau shift commander, Lieutenant William Jessup, called Schad and told him that he had received an anonymous tip about Riverа’s location. When Lieutenant Jessup asked him to check the address located in Milwaukee’s district no. 2, Schad responded that neither he, nor any of the other Warrant Squad officers on duty, were available to follow up on the tip at that time. The call ended with Lieutenant Jessup saying “we have to get somebody out there,” or something to that effect.
Following Lieutenant Jessup’s call, another Warrant Squad officer suggested that Schad call Officer Matthew Knight who was assigned to district no. 2 and who was familiar with the Rivera ease. Rather than relaying this suggestion to Lieutenant Jessup, Schad called Knight directly. Knight agreed to follow up on the tip and, after receiving permission from his sergeant, went with his partner to the address provided by Schad. Upon entering the building at that address, Knight found Rivera in the hallway and told him that he was under arrest. When Rivera reached for a pistol in his waistband, Knight knocked it away and a “major struggle” ensued. Rivera eventually was subdued and taken into custody.
Soon after Rivera’s . arrest, Schad learned that Chief Jones was angry that he had disclosed the Rivera tip to Knight. The earlier standoff with Rivera made Chief Jones concerned about officer safety and he wanted the specially trained Tactical Enforcement Unit to make the arrest. Lieutenant Jessup had in fact contacted *673 the Tactical Enforcement Unit after his call to Schad, but Knight and his partner arrested Rivera before officers from the Unit could arrive on the scene. Schad later heard rumors that the real reason Chief Jones had wanted the Tactical Enforcement Unit to make the arrest was that he hoped it would make up for the Unit’s earlier standоff with Rivera that had made the chief look bad.
Two days after Rivera’s arrest, Chief Jones transferred Schad from the Warrant Squad to patrol duty, a much less desirable assignment. Chief Jones stated that he transferred Schad because he had breached the MPD’s confidentiality rule by disclosing Rivera’s whereabouts to someone outside of the Warrant Squad. He said that he believed that Schad “placed officers’ lives in dаnger by releasing information to those officers [to whom] he was not authorized to release [it].”
On June 4, 2002, Schad filed a First Amendment retaliation suit in federal court against Chief Jones and the City of Milwaukee. Defendants moved for summary judgment, arguing that Schad’s speech was not protected by the First Amendment because it was not on a matter of public concern, and asserting Chief Jones’s entitlement to qualified immunity. The district cоurt held that Schad’s speech was protected and denied Chief Jones’s claim of qualified immunity.
II. Discussion
Although the denial of summary judgment did not end this case in the district court, we have jurisdiction to review whether the district court properly denied defendant-appellant Jones’s claim of qualified immunity.
See Kiddy-Brown v. Blagojevich,
Government officials enjoy qualified immunity аnd are shielded from civil liability, “as long as their actions could reasonably have been thought consistent with the rights they are alleged to have violated.”
Anderson v. Creighton,
Schad contends that Chief Jones violated his First Amendment right to freedom of speech by retaliating against him for disclosing the Rivera tip to Knight.
*674
“A government employee does not relinquish all First Amendment rights otherwise enjoyed by citizens just by reason of his or her employment.”
City of San Diego v. Roe,
— U.S.-,-,
In determining whether a government employee’s speech is constitutionally protected, we apply the two-step
Connich-Pickering
test.
Cygan,
We begin our inquiry into whether Schad spoke as a citizen on a matter of public concern by examining the content of his speech. “Speech by a government employee relating to ordinary matters of internal operation and lacking connection to ‘аny matter of political, social, or other concern to the community’ is not entitled to First Amendment protection.”
Spiegla,
While speech addressing matters of police protection and public safety are matters of public concern, we have cautioned that if every facet of internal operations within a governmental agency were of public concern, and therefore any employee complaint or comment upon such matters constitutionally protected, no escape from judicial oversight of every government activity down to the smallest minutia would be possible.
In
Connick,
the Supreme Court considered a retaliation claim by assistant district attorney Sheila Myers, whose employment was terminated after she circulated a questionnaire to coworkers asking about their confidence and trust in various supervisors, the level of office morale, and the need for a grievance committee.
Myers did not seek to inform the public that the District Attorney’s office was not discharging its governmental responsibilities in the investigation and prosecution of criminal cases. Nor did Myers seek to bring to light actual or potential wrongdoing or breach of public trust on the part of [thе District Attorney] and others.... While discipline and morale in the workplace are related to an agency’s efficient performance' of its duties, the focus of Myers’ questions is not to evaluate the performance of the office but rather to gather ammunition for another round of controversy with her superiors.
Id.
Based on this guidance, “our cases have consistently held that speech alleging government corruption and malfeasance is of public concern in its substance.”
Spiegla,
*676 In this case, the content of Schad’s speech was the tip about Rivera’s possible location, the type of information typically transmitted between officers in a police department. As in Connick, Schad did not seek to inform the public that the police department was not discharging its governmental responsibilities in the arrest of wanted individuals. He did not bring to light actual or potential wrongdoing, nor did he set out to remedy the flawed functioning of the department by reporting needed changes to a superior. Nothing in Schad’s speech could have alerted Knight, оr anyone else, that a matter of public concern was being raised.
Although the public is generally concerned with the safe arrest of dangerous suspects, the focus of Schad’s call to Knight was not the evaluation of the MPD’s performance in accomplishing this task. Rather, he agreed with Chief Jones about the importance of arresting Rivera and disclosed the tip to Knight in an effort to accomрlish this goal. That Schad chose a course different from the one preferred by Chief Jones is of no consequence because, unlike Spielga, Schad did not follow his standard transmission of information with a civic-minded critique of Chief Jones’s strategy for arresting Rivera or report that the chief was not acting with the best interest of the community in mind. Schad let the matter rest after his routine call to Knight, suggesting that his speech wаs an ordinary part of the internal operation of the police department, and indicating that he did not speak as a citizen addressing a matter of public concern.
The form of Schad’s speech supports the same conclusion. Although we have held that speech need not be addressed to the general public to be protected,
see Delgado,
Finally, we turn to the context of the speech, considering Schad’s motive for speaking and the circumstances in which he spoke.
See Spiegla,
This distinction has no significance in the context of this case. A police officer’s job entails the use of judgment and discretion in performing his or her duties. Demonstrating initiative in carrying out one’s responsibilities does not transform ordinary employment speech into speech on a matter of public concern. Gonzalez used discretion in completing his reports on police misconduct, but the rеports were not protected because he wrote them “merely as an employee.”
Gonzalez,
Furthermore, Schad and Chief Jones both wanted the safe arrest of Rivera and disagreed, if at all, only as to how this goal should be accomplished. Schad’s speech, however, did not concern this disagreement. He did not comment on the merits of his decision to call Knight directly, nor did he suggest that the chief was wrong to prefer that the Tactical Enforcement Unit make the arrest. Rather, Schad merely made a judgment call in the course of his work, something police officers do daily. Schad’s position, followed to its logical conclusion, would require us to find that almost everything said in the course of police work is constitutionally protected and that a chief of police can never treat adversely an officer he believes used poor judgment. The Constitution does not require this result and it is not the province of federal courts to interfere with a police chiefs everyday tactical decisions in this way.
Cf. Kuchenreuther,
In reaching the opposite conclusion, the district court’s relied on
Delgado v. Jones,
III. Conclusion
The content, form, and context of Schad’s speech indicate that he did not *678 speak as a citizen on a matter of public concern. We hold, therefore, that the speech was not constitutionally protected and that Jones did not violate Schad’s First Amendment rights. Accordingly, we Reverse the district court’s order denying defendants’ motion for summary judgment and Remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. It is not clear from the record whether Rivera was released in error.
