OPINION
Defendants-Appellants appeal the order of the district court denying their motion for summary judgment on immunity grounds on plaintiff-appellee Sharon Gragg’s claims of retaliatory discharge in violation of the First Amendment and the Kentucky Constitution. Because we conclude that the undisputed facts clearly demonstrate that the speech to which Gragg points as the reason for her discharge did not involve matters of public concern, we hold that the district court erred in denying the motion for summary judgment.
I.
In 1996, when the events leading to this lawsuit occurred, the Kentucky Department of Technical Education (“DTE”) operated Kentucky’s post-secondary vocational colleges. The DTE was governed by the State Board for Adult and Technical Education, which in turn was governed by the Kentucky Cabinet for Workforce Development (“Cabinet”). Early in 1996, the Kentucky General Assembly reduced the authorized full-time workforce for the DTE, necessitating the elimination of more than forty-five positions. Sharon Gragg was at that time employed by the DTE as a regional
Huston circulated memoranda to the administrators whose assistance he would need in determining what positions could be eliminated in order to comply with the mandated workforce reduction; he provided criteria to be considered in making the determinations; and he held a meeting with those administrators. One of the positions ultimately selected for elimination was Sharon Gragg’s; according to the correspondence from Gragg’s immediate supervisor, VanHook, and VanHook’s supervisor, Cline, Gragg’s position was selected because it was inconsistent with DTE statewide staffing patterns, and elimination of that position would cause the least disruption to the services provided to the students at Somerset.
Gragg participated in an informal pre-termination hearing, after which her attorney sent a letter to the Cabinet’s general counsel contesting the decision to eliminate Gragg’s position, criticizing the criteria used in selecting the positions to eliminate, and questioning the hiring of a young man as the Dean of Instruction at Somerset immediately prior to the budget constraint imposed by the General Assembly and so close in time to the elimination of Gragg’s position. The DTE’s general counsel did not respond to the letter.
Gragg was laid off in October of 1996. She filed a state administrative appeal—
The district court dismissed most of Gragg’s claims several months after the suit was filed, and those claims are not before us in this appeal. We will confine our review of the facts to those that underlie the First Amendment and Kentucky Constitution retaliation claims, which are the subject of this interlocutory appeal.
Germane to this appeal are Gragg’s claims that the defendants eliminated her position because, during the course of her employment at Somerset, she had “pointed out areas of deficiency and of concern,” and had been “critical of the Defendants and their administration, acts and omissions.” Gragg points to several instances in which she claims that she engaged in conduct protected by the First Amendment, and for which she claims the defendants retaliated against her by eliminating her position.
Gragg’s position with the DTE was that of a liaison between Somerset and its accrediting body, and much of her time was devoted to the school’s accreditation self-study, which Gragg was required to perform every five years. Gragg claims that she “brought to the attention of the Defendant Cline her questions and concerns regarding the Defendant VanHook’s failure to follow proper policies and procedures relevant to the accreditation process.” According to Gragg, members of the committee responsible for the 1995 study made errors in their reports that VanHook required Gragg to correct; Gragg believed that this was not the proper procedure to be followed in the accreditation process, and informed Cline of her concern. Gragg also claimed that she brought to Van-Hook’s attention her concerns that some of the data upon which the accreditation was to be based was not correct. VanHook again insisted that Gragg correct the errors when, in Gragg’s view, her job was not to correct such errors but to bring them to the attention of her supervisor. Gragg further claims that she suggested that the coordinator of Somerset’s licensed practical nursing program pursue “up the chain of command” concerns that VanHook was misusing federal funds by assigning a secretary paid out of those funds to a program not covered by the federal mp-nies. And finally, after Gragg’s preter-mination hearing, her counsel sent a letter to the Cabinet’s general counsel, criticizing every aspect of the process and criteria used in determining which positions to eliminate.
The district court dismissed or granted summary judgment to the defendants on all of Gragg’s claims except those for termination of employment in retaliation for Gragg’s exercising her rights under the First Amendment and the Kentucky Constitution.
II.
We turn first to the defendants’ claim of Eleventh Amendment immunity. Although the defendants raised this defense in their answer to Gragg’s amended complaint, they did not identify the claims to which it applied, nor did they argue this immunity defense before the district court. In their brief on appeal, the defendants devote one page to a perfunctory statement that because the Eleventh Amendment provides immunity to the state and its agencies, Gragg’s state constitutional claims against the defendants are barred.
Ordinarily, we will not consider issues that have not been fully developed by the briefs or in the record. See McPherson v. Kelsey,
Gragg did not bring this action against the State of Kentucky. Rather, she sued the Kentucky Cabinet for Workforce Development, Somerset Technical College, the Kentucky Community and Technical College System, and various officials. These defendants have pointed to nothing in the record, and we have been unable to find anything in the record, that would establish that they are arms of the state entitled to the protections of the Eleventh Amendment. For example, there is nothing in the record to show: “how state law defines the entity, what degree of control the state maintains over the entity, where the funds for the entity are derived, and who is responsible for judgment against the entity.” Brotherton v. Cleveland,
We review de novo an interlocutory appeal of a denial of summary judgment predicated on a claim of qualified immunity. Mattox v. City of Forest Park,
Qualified immunity is a defense that can be invoked under Kentucky law. “[Government officials are not subject to damages liability for the performance of their discretionary functions when their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known,”
Morris v. Oldham County Fiscal Court,
To prevail against a defense of qualified immunity a plaintiff must first establish the constitutional right that she claims was violated by the defendants. Wilson v. Layne,
The contours of the right [are] sufficiently clear that a reasonable official would understand that what he is doing violates that right. This is not to say that an official action is protected by qualified immunity unless the very action in question has previously been held unlawful; but it is to say that in the light of pre-existing law the unlawfulness must be apparent.
Anderson v. Creighton,
IV.
Gragg claims that the defendants terminated her employment because she exercised her First Amendment right to free speech.
(1) that [s]he was engaged in a constitutionally protected activity; (2) that the defendant^’] adverse action caused [her] to suffer an injury that would hkely chill a person of ordinary firmness from continuing to engage in that activity; and (3) that the adverse action was motivated at least in part as a response to the exercise of [her] constitutional rights.
Vaughn v. Lawrenceburg Power Sys.,
It is at the first step of this analysis that Gragg’s claims fail.
Speech is protected when it addresses a matter of public concern, and the employee’s interest in making such statements outweighs the “interest of the State, as an employer, in promoting the efficiency of the public services it performs through its employees.”
Bailey v. Floyd County Bd. of Educ.,
In Connick, the plaintiff, an assistant district attorney, prepared and distributed to her colleagues, a questionnaire concerning a number of office policy issues such as morale and confidence in supervisors. Id. at 141,
*966 [W]e do not believe these questions are of public import in evaluating the performance of the District Attorney as an elected official. 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 Connick and others.
Id. at 148,
Where the speech at issue involves mixed questions of private and public concern, that is, where the employee speaks both as an employee and as a citizen, the court must make a factual determination whether the employee’s personal interest predominates over her interest as a citizen. We have held that this is “primarily a content-based inquiry, not an exclusively motive-based inquiry.” Vaughn,
Gragg argues that her speech was a matter of public concern, relying heavily on the assertion that she was criticizing the allegedly improper functioning of her agency employer and the improper allocation of public monies. However, the fact that an issue involves public money is alone not enough to convert expressive activity into commentary on a matter of public concern. Rahn v. Drake Center, Inc.,
The district court characterized Gragg’s complaints to Cline and VanHook with regard to errors made by committee members and data errors in the self-study process as touching on the “proper accreditation of a state educational institution.” The record clearly demonstrates, however, that reality is less grand. Gragg’s protest to Cline that VanHook had improperly told her to correct the work of a committee member and her protest to VanHook that correction of data errors was not her responsibility were objections to being told to do work that Gragg viewed as someone else’s job. Nothing whatsoever in their content, form or context indicates that Gragg was expressing concern about the accreditation of the school, or about the procedures or policies themselves. Worthy of note is the fact that Gragg has provided no substantive content to her criticisms. We do not know, for example, what kind of data errors she noted, or whether they related to an important or a trivial aspect of the accreditation process. And it is undisputed that these complaints were not disseminated to anyone other than Cline and VanHook. Unlike other instances where this court has determined that employee speech referred to a matter of public concern — exposing a public agency’s fraud, for example, see Marohnic v. Walker,
Of potentially more significance is Gragg’s urging the nursing faculty to take to defendant Murrell their grievance over the placement of a secretary hired with federal money into a program not covered by those funds. But here again, the record demonstrates beyond peradventure that Gragg was not attempting to expose fraud and corruption — or even relatively innocuous wrongdoing or error — on the part of the agency; rather Gragg was simply advising the employees who believed they were being denied the services
Finally, there is the letter from Gragg’s attorney to the Cabinet’s general counsel. The district court ruled that the letter criticized the DTE’s decision-making process and that such criticism was a broad public concern rather than merely a narrow claim motivated by Gragg’s own self-interest. We disagree. That letter expresses the view of Gragg’s counsel that the process and criteria used by the DTE could have been different. Looking at the letter in context, as this court is required to do, the fact that it came on the heels of Gragg’s pretermination hearing makes it clear that the letter was not intended as a larger indictment of the DTE selection process, but was instead a last-ditch effort to preserve her position. All of the arguments made in the letter related directly to the preservation of Gragg’s position, and while some of the issues raised in the letter — for example, the process by which Gragg’s position was selected for abolition — may have implications beyond Gragg, that fact alone does not make them issues of public concern. Nothing in the letter raises any issue that can be “fairly considered as relating to any matter of political, social, or other concern to the community.” Connick,
In short, we conclude that all of the speech that Gragg points to as protected falls outside of the public realm. Gragg’s complaints are well within the characterization of Connick that:
[t]o presume that all matters which transpire within a government office are of public concern would mean that virtually every remark — and certainly every criticism directed at a public official — would plant the seed of a constitutional case. While as a matter of good judgment, public officials should be receptive to constructive criticism offered by their employees, the First Amendment does not require a public office to be run as a roundtable for employee complaints over internal office affairs.
Connick,
We therefore hold that the defendants in their individual capacities are entitled to qualified immunity. We further hold that in light of Gragg’s failure to demonstrate that any constitutional right was violated at all, Gragg’s claims that her employment was terminated in retaliation for her exercising her rights to free speech must be dismissed.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we REVERSE the judgment of the district court denying summary judgment to the defendants on the plaintiffs First Amendment and Kentucky law retaliation claims, and
Notes
. There were six regions for the Kentucky Department of Technical Education.
. Gragg’s position was anomalous in that she was a regional coordinator at one of the local schools working primarily on projects for that one school instead of regional issues. Prior to the reduction in positions at issue in this law suit, the number of regional coordinator positions had been reduced from two to one per region. The Southern Region, for reasons not explained in the record, continued to have two regional coordinators.
. The Kentucky Community and Technical College System was eventually substituted for the Cabinet as a defendant.
. The district court dismissed Gragg’s due , process and equal protection claims raised under Section 2 of the Kentucky Constitution. The court then held that this constitutional claim was limited to Gragg's claim that her
. To determine whether the claimed right under the Kentucky Constitution was clearly established, we would, of course, look to the law of Kentucky as well.
. The parties have not pointed us to any authority that would define the contours of a free speech right under Section 2 of the Kentucky Constitution — or any other section of the Kentucky Constitution, for that matter. To the extent that this is a free speech claim at all, we will assume the right has the same contours as a right under the First Amendment.
