OPINION
Plaintiff-AppellanVCross-Appellee Denise Hughes (“Hughes”) appeals the dis *172 missal of her lawsuit against Defendants-Appellees/Cross-Appellants Region VII Area Agency on Aging (“Region VII”), Region VII Executive Director Bruce King (“King”), and Region VII Assistant Director Drew Orvosh (“Orvosh”). Hughes claims that Region VII, King, and Orvosh (collectively, “Defendants”) retaliated against her exercise of First Amendment rights when she received a two-day suspension in July 2004 after a conversation with a co-worker and when she was terminated on August 6, 2004, from her position as a Program Coordinator at Region VII allegedly due to her discussions with a local newspaper reporter. Hughes later amended her complaint to include allegations that Defendants violated the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”).
In March 2006, the district court denied Defendants’ motion for summary judgment, ruling that Region VII is subject to suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
Hughes v. Region VII Area Agency on Aging,
Hughes now appeals as to both her First Amendment and FLSA claims, and Defendants cross-appeal the district court’s ruling that Region VII is a state actor and subject to suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. For the reasons discussed below, we AFFIRM the district court’s ruling that Region VII is subject to suit under § 1983. Because we conclude that Hughes’s speech did relate to a matter of public concern and that Hughes’s FLSA claims were timely, we REVERSE the district court’s grant of summary judgment as to her First Amendment claim and the district court’s dismissal with prejudice of her FLSA claims, and we REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I. BACKGROUND
Hughes worked as a Program Coordinator at Region VII beginning in January 2002 until her termination on August 6, 2004.
Hughes v. Region VII Area Agency on Aging,
Region VII designated Hughes as an exempt administrative employee under FLSA. J.A. at 863 (King Aff. ¶7). Hughes’s “primary responsibility was to assess and audit service providers to determine their compliance with the service agreements and the regulations connected to State and federal funding.” J.A. at 863 (King Aff. ¶ 8). Hughes earned a yearly salary of approximately $38,000, and she “had no direct, daily supervision” and received “broad discretion on how to accomplish her duties.” J.A. at 864, 863 (King Aff. ¶¶ 16,15,13).
In early 2004, Steve Neavling (“Neavl-ing”), a reporter for the Bay City Times newspaper, began covering Region VII as part of his beat covering Bay County. J.A. at 2067 (Neavling Dep. at 10). In May 2004, Neavling asked Diane Brady (“Brady”), an employee at Region VII, to inquire whether Hughes would speak to him regarding a sexual harassment lawsuit that had been filed against King, the Executive Director of Region VII, by Shelly Mott (“Mott”), a Region VII employee and registered nurse. J.A. at 751 (Hughes Dep. at 41^42). Neavling and Hughes had several conversations on the telephone and met twice in person to discuss events at Region VII. J.A. at 751-54 (Hughes Dep. at 41-56). At her deposition, Hughes stated that her conversations with Neavling concerned a number of incidents relating to King, including observing King miss a meeting after receiving a call from Mott and observing King and Mott leave together from an evening event. J.A. at 751-52 (Hughes Dep. at 41-48). Hughes stated that she told Neavling that Mott eventually became concerned and asked other employees to walk her to her car when she left the building. J.A. at 752 (Hughes Dep. at 46). Hughes also stated that she had discussion with Neavling regarding King’s sons’ involvement. J.A. at 753 (Hughes Dep. at 51).
Hughes stated in her deposition that, in late June 2004, Hughes talked with Kerry Williams, a fellow Region VII employee, after Hughes attended a public meeting, and that their conversation related to possible future cuts to the Region VII budget. J.A. at 761-62 (Hughes Dep. at 84-85). Hughes believed that the possible cuts would affect jobs in the program on which Kerry Williams worked, and Hughes stated that she “was looking for input on how we were going to try to look at promotions again, and if there was, you know, any state push that was being formed again because, you know, previously there was a whole big campaign that was put out to keep that funding in place.” J.A. at 762 (Hughes Dep. at 85). Hughes also stated that she spoke to a Region VII employee about a recent project RFP, or request for proposal, telling the employee that “it was out for rebidding again” because Hughes believed “that was public information at that point” because Hughes had sent an “announcement ... back out to the newspapers to be published.” J.A. at 761 (Hughes Dep. at 84, 83).
On June 29, 2004, Kerry Williams wrote a note to Orvosh in which Williams stated that “[o]n Friday June 25, 2004, Denise [Hughes] informed me that [she heard information at] the Advisory Council that (due to the budget) R7 may be consolidating jobs.” J.A. at 137 (Williams Note); *174 J.A. at 1804 (Orvosh Dep. at 126). Williams’s note to Orvosh also included the claim that Williams “was ... approached this day by Kara Perez [another Region VII employee] regarding the VNSS contracted services. She was told by Denise [Hughes] that VNSS didn’t bid on the services because that wasn’t the direction they wanted to go. I advised her at that time that I wasn’t at liberty to discuss that with her.” J.A. at 137; J.A. at 1805 (Or-vosh Dep. at 127).
At his deposition, Orvosh discussed meeting with Kerry Williams about her note. J.A. at 1793-1816 (Orvosh Dep. at 115-38). Orvosh stated that Williams informed him that Kara Perez was “upset” about comments that Hughes made to Perez regarding the possible consolidation of jobs. J.A. at 1793 (Orvosh Dep. at 115). On June 30, 2004, the day after receiving Williams’s note, Orvosh, Region VII’s assistant director, reprimanded Hughes for her conversations with her co-workers.
Hughes,
In her deposition, Hughes described seeing a list on King’s desk that had six names written on it underneath the words “Bay City Times.” J.A. at 755 (Hughes Dep. at 58-60). Hughes could not remember exactly when she saw the list on King’s desk. J.A. at 755 (Hughes Dep. at 59). Hughes believed that the list was of persons whom King suspected of talking to the Bay City Times about events at Region VII. Id. Hughes recalled that her name, as well as Mott’s and Brady’s names, appeared on the list. Id. Hughes described a conversation on July 1, 2004, that she had at work at Region VII with Brady, after a discussion at a board meeting about the Michigan Freedom of Information Act and Region VII’s policy for responding to media requests. J.A. at 754-55 (Hughes Dep. at 55-58). Hughes stated that she and Brady joked about how “someone must be asking questions or they wouldn’t have to be drafting a policy.” Id. Although neither she nor Brady said that they had talked to Bay City Times, Hughes stated that others might have overhead their conversation and suspected them of talking to the Bay City Times. Id.
On July 1, 2004, Region VII fired Brady, who had earlier requested that the Region VII board of directors investigate King due to Mott’s sexual-harassment allegations. J.A. at 2105-06 (Sept. 7, 2004 Bay City Times article). By this time, Region VII had agreed to a confidential settlement with Mott regarding her sexual-harassment lawsuit against King and had recently paid Mott the amount of her settlement. Id. At her deposition, Hughes stated that she spoke to Neavling about Brady’s termination, giving her opinion that Brady’s termination “was related to the fact that she had wanted Shelly Mott’s case to be investigated” and that Hughes did not think “there was any basis for [Brady’s] termination.” J.A. at 753 (Hughes Dep. at 50).
*175 Neavling stated at his deposition that he recalled telling King that he had been speaking to Hughes about Region VII. J.A. at 2082-85 (Neavling Dep. at 25-28). He remembered King asking “who my sources were and then saying — and then he said, we know it’s Denise Hughes or something like that and I said well, she’s not the only person talking to me.” J.A. at 2084-85 (Neavling Dep. at 27-28). Neavling could not recall exactly when this conversation took place, but he was certain that Hughes was still employed by Region VII when he confirmed to King that Hughes was one of his sources. J.A. at 2082-83 (Neavling Dep. at 25-26).
Hughes’s employment at Region VII ended on August 6, 2004, when Orvosh notified Hughes during a telephone conversation that she was fired.
Hughes,
Hughes filed this lawsuit on December 16, 2004, and filed an amended complaint in March 2005.
Hughes,
On July 17, 2006, Hughes filed a motion for leave to file a second amended complaint, which included for the first time a claim under the FLSA. J.A. at 644r-77. On July 27, 2006, the district court issued an order denying Hughes’s motion for leave to file a second amended complaint on the *176 ground that Hughes failed to comply with a local court rule requiring “a movant to seek concurrence in the relief requested before filing a motion with this Court.” J.A. at 719-20 (Order). Hughes eventually complied with the local rule, and her second amended complaint was formally filed on September 19, 2006. J.A. at 954-78 (Second Am. Compl.).
Defendants filed a motion for summary judgment in December 2006, J.A. at 997-1015, and in January 2007 Hughes filed a response, J.A. at 1077-99. In February 2007, the district court entered an order that requested supplemental briefing regarding evidence in the record “identifying the content of [Hughes’s] purportedly First Amendment-protected speech” as well as briefing relating to Hughes’s FLSA claim. J.A. at 1152-59, 1157. Defendants filed a supplemental brief in March 2007, J.A. at 1163-69, and Hughes filed a supplemental brief on April 4, 2007, J.A. at 1227-46. Defendants filed a reply brief on April 11, 2007, J.A. at 1353-58, and Hughes also filed a reply brief on April 11, 2007, J.A. at 1359-64.
On April 27, 2007, the district court entered an order granting Defendants’ motion for summary judgment, stating that “the Court remains uncertain of the precise content of [Hughes’s] alleged speech” and “concluding], as a matter of law, that [Hughes’s] speech, to the extent shown in this record, did not address a matter of public concern.” J.A. at 1377, 1379 (Op. at 13, 15). The district court did, however, conclude that “[g]enuine issues of material fact remain regarding the element of causation” and regarding “whether her employer would have terminated her employment regardless of her speech.” J.A. at 1376-77 (Op. at 12-13). The district court also concluded that Hughes’s FLSA claim was untimely and dismissed that claim with prejudice. J.A. at 1369 (Op. at 5).
Hughes filed a notice of appeal on May 9, 2007, J.A. at 1383-84, and Defendants filed a notice of cross-appeal on May 29, 2007, J.A. at 1386-87.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Whether Region VII Is Subject to Suit Under § 1983
1. Legal Standards
“Section 1983 makes liable only those who, while acting under color of state law, deprive another of a right secured by the Constitution or federal law.”
Romanski v. Detroit Entm’t, L.L.C.,
*177 2. Analysis
Defendants appeal the district court’s March 2006 ruling, in which the district court held that Region VII is subject to suit under § 1983 because, under Brentwood, Region VII acts under color of state law due to the pervasive entwinement of governmental entities in the management and control of Region VII. We conclude that Defendants’ arguments lack merit.
We begin by providing an overview of the extensive statutory and regulatory framework that governs Area Agencies on Aging such as Region VII. In 1965, Congress passed the Older Americans Act, which “established an Administration on Aging to carry out the mandate of the Act” and which “require[d] each State to create a state agency” to be responsible for determining the intrastate distribution of funds given to the State by the federal government.
Hughes,
The OMA also created the office of services to the aging (“OSA”) in the department of management and budget, and the OMA provided that “[t]he governor shall appoint a director of the office by and with the advice and consent of the senate” and that “[t]he director shall receive compensation as provided by the legislature.” Mich. Comp. Laws § 400.585. The OSA must “[supervise, monitor, assess, evaluate, and provide technical assistance to area agencies on aging,” such as Region VII. Mich. Comp. Laws § 400.586(k).
The OMA authorized the OSA and the Commission to promulgate rules to implement the OMA. Mich. Comp. Laws § 400.591. As the district court noted, the OSA’s “rules are very specific about what AAAs may and may not do.”
Hughes,
The regulations further provide that “[a]rea agencies [such as Region VII] shall develop a comprehensive and coordinated area plan for the delivery of nutrition and supportive services to older persons for their respective” regions and that AAAs must “have written procedures for the conduct of public hearings” regarding the adoption of “[t]he area plan.” Mich. Admin. Code r. 400.20402(2); r. 400.20406(3). The regulations require that “[a]rea agencies, as part of the area plan, shall describe the rationale for allocating funds made available through grants within” their respective regions and also require that “[a]rea agencies shall adopt written procedures ... to govern” the AAA’s “board of directors,” their “handling of administrative complaints generated by service providers,” and their “[assessment of contractors.” Mioh. Admin. Code r. 400.20405(5); r. 400.20406(2). Finally, the regulations state that such written procedures “shall be officially adopted by action of the entity’s governing body” and that before adopting the procedures there must be “an opportunity for comment on the proposed operating procedures by local governments, contractors, and affected agencies” and that “[n]otice of opportunity for comment shall be published in a newspaper” at least fourteen days prior to the AAA’s adoption of the procedures. Mioh. Admin. Code r. 400.20106(2).
As the Michigan Court of Appeals has observed, these numerous statutory and regulatory provisions “clearly establish[] that the fourteen AAAs are subordinate to, and subject to the supervision of, the commission.”
Detroit Area Agency on Aging v. Office of Services to the Aging,
As stated above, in
Brentwood
the Supreme Court noted that “a challenged activity may be state action ... when it is ‘entwined with governmental policies’ or when government is ‘entwined in [its] management or control.’ ”
*179
In
Brentwood,
the challenged entity, which the Court held was properly subject to suit under § 1983, was the Tennessee Secondary School Athletic Association, “a not-for-profit membership corporation organized to regulate interscholastic sport among the public and private high schools in Tennessee that belong to it.”
Brentwood,
Certainly we recognize that the Supreme Court has stated that “[t]he mere fact that a business is subject to state regulation does not by itself convert its action into that of the State.”
Jackson v. Metro. Edison Co.,
As the Supreme Court concluded in
Brentwood,
we conclude in this case that “[t]he nominally private character of [Region VII] is -overborne by the pervasive entwinement of public institutions and public officials in its composition and workings, and there is no substantial reason to claim unfairness in applying constitutional standards to it.”
B. Hughes’s First Amendment Claim
1. Legal Standards
“We review a district court’s decision granting summary judgment de novo.”
Burchett v. Kiefer,
“[I]n determining whether a public employer has violated the First Amendment by firing a public employee for engaging in speech, the Supreme Court has instructed courts to engage in a three-step inquiry. First, a court must ascertain whether the relevant speech addressed a matter of public concern.”
Rodgers v. Banks,
According to the Supreme Court’s decision in
Garcetti v. Ceballos,
Second, if we conclude that an employee’s speech involved a matter of public concern and was not made pursuant to the employee’s official duties, we then “must balance the interests of the public employee, ‘as a citizen, in commenting upon matters of public concern and the interest of the State, as an employer, in promoting the efficiency of the public services it performs through its employees.’ ”
Rodgers,
Finally, we “must determine whether the employee’s speech was a substantial or motivating factor in the employer’s decision to take the adverse employment action against the employee.”
Rodgers,
2. Analysis
a. Whether Hughes’s Conversations with a Reporter for the Bay City Times Involved a Matter of Public Concern
As an initial matter, we note the district court’s observation that “[t]he parties do not dispute that adverse employment actions did occur, i.e., that Defendant Region VII terminated [Hughes] and suspended her prior to that.” J.A. at 1375 (Op. at 11). The district court also concluded that the evidence in this case presented genuine disputes of material fact regarding the element of causation and whether Region VII might “have terminated [Hughes’s] employment regardless of her speech.” J.A. at 1376-77 (noting Region VII’s contention that Hughes “was tardy in attendance and in completing her work, and devoted substantial time to gossiping” as well as Hughes’s rebuttal argument that “her April 2004 performance evaluation [contained] no negative marks”). On these issues, we agree with the district court.
The crucial issue in this appeal is thus whether Hughes’s speech touched a matter of public concern. At her deposition, Hughes testified about her numerous conversations with a newspaper reporter, in which she primarily discussed allegations of sexual harassment against King, the executive director of Region VII, and Hughes’s opinion that Region VII terminated Brady because Brady recommended that King be investigated in connection with the sexual-harassment allegations. The district court concluded that Hughes failed to show that her speech involved a matter of public concern; we disagree.
The evidence in this case shows that a newspaper reporter specifically sought out Hughes as a source regarding allegations of sexual harassment against the executive director of Region VII, an area agency on aging that is responsible for distributing a substantial amount of funds entrusted to the agency by the State of Michigan and the federal government. Further, the reporter testified in his deposition that, while Hughes was still an employee of Region VII, the reporter confirmed to King, the executive director, that Hughes was serving as a source for the reporter’s critical articles regarding Region VII. In light of this evidence and the case law, we conclude that Hughes, in speaking to a reporter about allegations of sexual harassment against a public official, engaged in a constitutionally protected activity.
“Matters of public concern include speech that ‘relatfes] to any matter of political, social, or other concern to the
*182
community.’ ”
Rodgers,
At her deposition, Hughes testified that, like the plaintiff in Matulin, the reporter solicited her views. J.A. at 751 (Hughes Dep. at 41-42). Hughes also testified that she provided information to Neavling about specific instances of King’s conduct toward Mott, the individual who had filed and settled a sexual-harassment lawsuit against King and Region VIL J.A. at 751-52 (Hughes Dep. at 44^46). For instance, Hughes recounted telling Neavling about King missing a meeting after receiving a call from Mott and about “witnessing Bruce [King] leave with Shelly [Mott]” from an evening event. J.A. at 751-52 (Hughes Dep. at 41-48). Hughes also stated that she told Neavling that Mott eventually became “concerned” and that Mott “asked other staff members to walk her to her car when she left the building.” J.A. at 752 (Hughes Dep. at 46). Further, Hughes informed Neavling that Mott’s lawsuit against King and Region VII had been settled, J.A. at 752-53 (Hughes Dep. at 48^49), which Hughes asserts led to Neavling and the Bay City Times submitting state FOIA requests “to confirm the information that he had received from Hughes.” Appellant/Cross-Appellee Resp. & Reply Br. at 30; see also Appel-lee/Cross-Appellant Br. at 27 (discussing the numerous FOIA requests filed by Neavling). Hughes also recalled that she told Neavling that she “supported Diane Brady’s position that the director [King] should have been investigated” regarding Mott’s claims of sexual harassment, that she “felt that [Brady’s termination] was related to the fact that [Brady] had wanted Shelly Mott’s case [against King] to be investigated,” and that Hughes did not think “that there was any basis for [Brady’s] termination.” J.A. at 752-53 (Hughes Dep. at 46, 50). Under the case law discussed above, such statements clearly address matters of public concern.
The district court, however, concluded that Hughes’s deposition testimony contained only “generalized assertions” that “left the Court to guess at the contours of her speech” and that “[i]n the absence of more concrete content, it borders on impossible to test whether that speech reached a matter of public concern.” J.A. at 1378 (Op. at 14); see also J.A. at 1377- *183 78 (Op. at 13-14) (stating that Hughes has “provided only vacuous and generic claims” about the topics she discussed with Neavling). The quotes above, taken from Hughes’s deposition, refute the district court’s characterization of Hughes’s evidence. Hughes testified that, in her conversations with Neavling, she described specific events that pertained to Mott’s lawsuit against King, informed Neavling that Mott had reached a confidential settlement with Region VII regarding her lawsuit, and informed Neavling of her opinion that Region VII had terminated Brady in retaliation for Brady’s advocacy of an investigation into King’s conduct in light of Mott’s allegations. Such evidence is more than sufficient to ascertain that Hughes’s speech involved a matter of public concern.
In concluding that Hughes’s speech did not touch a matter of public concern, the district court also erred in distinguishing Hughes’s case from
Bonnell,
which the district court recognized as establishing that “claims of sexual harassment are a matter of public concern.” J.A. at 1378 (Op. at 14) (citing
Bonnell,
The district court’s reasoning on this point and its treatment of
Bonnell
is troubling for several reasons. First, in characterizing Hughes’s statements about Mott’s sexual-harassment claim as mere “personal opinions about the prudence of decisions made by her employer and supervisors,” the district court’s reasoning would seemingly apply with equal force to the individual complaining of or exposing sexual or racial discrimination in the first instance, a position clearly contrary to
Bonnell
and the “well-settled” proposition that claims of discrimination by government officials and employers are matters of public concern. Second, the district court’s view that Hughes’s second-in-time observations lack constitutional protection directly conflicts with our opinion in
Chappel v. Montgomery County Fire Protection District No. 1,
Defendants advance several other arguments in support of the district court’s conclusion that Hughes’s speech did not involve a matter of public concern, but their arguments lack support in the record and are unpersuasive. First, Defendants repeatedly argue from the premise that Hughes’s speaking to Neavling was “not published or known until after [Hughes’s] termination.” Appellees/Cross-Appellants Br. at 30; see also id. at 21-22 (“How can an employer punish an employee based *184 upon the content of a statement if the employer does not know what the statement is?”). Defendants’ assertion that they had no knowledge of Hughes speaking to Neavling simply ignores the record. Both Hughes and Neavling testified at their depositions that Neavling had informed King that Hughes, while still a Region VII employee, was a source for the Bay City Times. J.A. at 765 (Hughes Dep. at 97-99); J.A. at 2082-85 (Neavling Dep. at 25-28). Indeed, as the district court recognized, Hughes also “offered evidence to show (1) that a co-worker might have overheard her three-minute conversation with Brady regarding FOIA [and] (2) that Defendant King had a list with six names, including hers, on his desk under a heading like ‘Bay City Times.’ ” J.A. at 1376 (Op. at 12).
Defendants advance a related argument that Hughes’s conduct in speaking to a reporter about Region VII is unprotected because no published article quoted her prior to her termination. Appellees/Cross-Appellants Br. at 25 (arguing that because the Bay City Times “never attributed information to [Hughes] prior to her termination[ ] Hughes’ conduct is simply not the kind of ‘speech’ or expressive conduct protected by
Pickering”).
This argument lacks any merit as well. Answering a reporter’s questions about a matter of public concern obviously constitutes expressive conduct, and the Supreme Court has explicitly held that an employee’s speech need not be public to receive constitutional protection.
Givhan v. Western Line Consol. Sch. Dist.,
We also note that in this case Defendants do not rely upon the Supreme Court’s holding in
Garcetti
that “the First Amendment does not prohibit managerial discipline based on an employee’s expressions
made 'pursuant to official responsibilities.” Garcetti
b. Whether Hughes’s Alleged Statements to Her Co-Workers in June 2004 Involved a Matter of Public Concern
Having concluded that Hughes’s conversations with Neavling about Region VII touched a matter of public concern, we turn to the matter of Hughes’s alleged statements to her co-workers in late June 2004 following a public meeting. First, we address some confusion regarding whether these alleged statements are the basis of an additional First Amendment retaliation claim separate from Hughes’s claim stemming from her conversations with Neavl-ing, or whether her alleged statements and *185 the disciplinary sanction pertain instead to the causation analysis of a single First Amendment claim arising out of Hughes’s conversations with Neavling.
In her appellate brief, Hughes describes her lawsuit as “claiming that Defendants/Appellees violated her First Amendment right of free speech in two separate incidents.” Appellanl/Cross-Appellee Br. at 15. In opposing summary judgment in the district court, however, Hughes argued that Defendants “fabricated” the nature of her alleged statements to her co-workers. J.A. at 1361 (Pls.’ Reply to Defs.’ Resp. Br. at 3). Hughes noted that “Defendants spoke with neither Kara Perez nor Denise Hughes to substantia[te] the specifics of the conversation between the two before Hughes was reprimanded” for her alleged statements in late June 2004, and Hughes argued that “Defendants’ reprimand of Hughes was unjustified and merely a pretext because of Hughes having provided information to the Bay City Times.” J.A. at 1361-62 (Pls.’ Reply to Defs.’ Resp. Br. at 3-4) (emphasis added). In an earlier brief opposing summary judgment, however, Hughes did contend “that she was reprimanded for protected speech in this instance” of her alleged statements to her co-workers, explaining that her comments involved a matter of public concern because “these proposed funding cuts by the State of Michigan to Region VII would have had a detrimental impact on the programs and services rendered to the senior citizens of the community to whom Region VII provided services.” J.A. at 1081, 1087 (Pl.’s Resp. & Br. in Opp’n to Defs.’ Second Mot. for Summ. J. at 2, 8)
Although her arguments were somewhat muddled and confusing, we conclude that Hughes sufficiently asserted a separate potential claim of First Amendment retaliation stemming from Region VIPs disciplinary measures taken in response to Hughes’s alleged statements in June 2004 to her co-workers. The district court summarily concluded that Hughes’s statements to her co-workers — statements about possible budget cuts and Hughes’s desire to start a public lobbying campaign to keep state funding in place, J.A. at 762 (Hughes Dep. at 85) — did “not rise to a matter of constitutional concern” because “[njothing in her purported conversations ... raise[d] an inference of corruption, illegal activity, or abuse of public funds.” J.A. at 1379 (Op. at 15). We disagree that Hughes’s alleged statements lack constitutional protection. At her deposition, Hughes stated that her comments pertained to “looking for input on how we were going to try to look at promotions again, and if there was, you know, any state push that was being formed again because, you know, previously there was a whole big campaign that was put out to keep that funding in place.” J.A. at 762 (Hughes Dep. at 85). Speech advocating a campaign to affect government policy is the essence of protected, political speech.
See Buckley v. Am. Constitutional Law Found., Inc.,
Determining that Hughes’s comments to her co-workers touched a matter of public concern leaves open several further questions to be resolved upon remand. For instance, Defendants contend that such ad
*186
vocacy-oriented statements were only a small part of what Hughes allegedly said. Orvosh testified that Williams informed him that Kara Perez was “upset” about Hughes’s comments regarding the possible budget cuts and job consolidation. J.A. at 1793 (Orvosh Dep. at 115). Concerns that Hughes had lowered employee morale could furnish a valid basis for disciplining Hughes if Defendants believed that Hughes had scared another employee about losing her job. Indeed, in
Connick
the Supreme Court concluded that, even though the employee’s speech did “touch[ ] upon matters of public concern” to a limited extent, the employee’s discharge “did not offend the First Amendment” because that “limited First Amendment interest ... d[id] not require that [the employer] tolerate action which [it] reasonably believed would disrupt the office ... and destroy close working relationships.”
Connick,
Perhaps the most important factual question to be resolved upon remand — and an issue which may clarify whether Hughes’s June 2004 speech and discipline form a separate First Amendment claim or whether those incidents are better understood as part of the causation or pretext inquiry of Hughes’s sole First Amendment claim relating to her conversations with Neavling — is the chronology (and existence) of the various statements in this case. That is, although Hughes and Neavling assert that King knew about Hughes’s conversations with Neavling, King, at his deposition, denied ever having such a conversation with Neavling regarding Hughes’s participation in interviews with the newspaper. J.A. at 1629 (King Dep. at 112) (“Q: Did Steve Neavling ever tell you that he had spoken with Denise Huges about issues involving — A: Never.”). The factfinder might believe King and conclude that Defendants did not know about Hughes’s conversations with Neavling, in which case Hughes’s retaliation claim would clearly fail. On the other hand, the factfinder might determine that King became aware of Hughes’s conversations with Neavling early in the summer of 2004, perhaps on the basis of Hughes’s testimony about seeing the list on King’s desk or on the basis of Neavling’s testimony. In that case, if the factfinder determines that Defendants became aware of Hughes’s conversations with Neavling pri- or to her statements to her co-workers in June 2004, the focus on Hughes’s statements to her co-workers would seem to be most relevant as to determining whether Defendants possibly had a legitimate reason to discipline and ultimately discharge Hughes (lowering employee morale), or whether Region VII’s disciplinary actions in June and July 2004 were merely a pretext for its retaliation against Hughes for speaking to the Bay City Times. A yet *187 further possibility is that the factfinder might determine that Defendants became aware of Hughes’s conversations with Neavling only after the incidents giving rise to the reprimand and two-day unpaid suspension. In that case, the district court should analyze as a separate retaliation claim whether Hughes’s comments to her co-workers in June 2004 were a substantial or motivating factor in imposing the reprimand and two-day unpaid suspension; the district court should also then determine whether, under Waters, Defendants conducted a reasonable investigation into the nature of Hughes’s alleged statements.
A final issue to be resolved upon remand is the
Pickering
balancing inquiry, in which “the court must balance the interests of the public employee, ‘as a citizen, in commenting upon matters of public concern and the interest of the State, as an employer, in promoting the efficiency of the public services it performs through its employees.’ ”
Rodgers,
In sum, we hold that the district court erred in concluding that Hughes’s speech did not involve matters of public concern. We therefore REVERSE the district court’s judgment in favor of Defendants on Hughes’s First Amendment claims, and REMAND the case for further proceedings in light of the various factual and legal issues discussed above.
C. Hughes’s FLSA Claim
1. Legal Standards
Under the FLSA, a lawsuit to recover unpaid compensation must “be commenced within two years after the cause of action accrued,” unless the cause of action arose “out of a willful violation,” in which case the lawsuit must “be commenced within three years after the cause of action accrued.” 29 U.S.C. § 255(a). “A cause of action is deemed to accrue, as a general rule, ‘at each regular payday immediately following the work period during which the services were rendered for which the wage or overtime compensation is claimed.’ ”
Archer v. Sullivan County,
Nos. 95-5214, 95-5215,
We have “addressed the application
of
equitable tolling in many employment discrimination cases involving both public and private employers,” although we have acknowledged that “[o]ne theme that runs throughout these cases is that equitable tolling is to be carefully applied.”
Andrews v. Orr,
2. Analysis
The district court concluded that the FLSA’s two-year statute of limitations barred Hughes’s FLSA claims, and the district court dismissed Hughes’s FLSA claims with prejudice. J.A. at 1369 (Op. at 5). Hughes pleaded her FLSA claims under two alternative theories. First, contending that she was a non-exempt employee, Hughes argued that Region VII “failed to pay her for up to 240 hours of ‘comp’ or ‘flex’ time, earned over the term of her employment, as required under the FLSA for non-exempt employees.” J.A. at 1153 (Order at 2). Second, under the alternative theory that Hughes was a salaried and exempt employee, Hughes alleged “that Defendant Region VII must compensate her for two days lost pay when it suspended her on July 7-8, 2004,” id., given that 29 C.F.R. § 541.602(a) requires that, subject to certain exceptions, “an exempt employee must receive the full salary for any week in which the employee performed any work without regard to the number of days or hours worked.” We conclude that the district court erred in determining that Hughes’s FLSA claims were untimely filed, and, for the reasons explained below, we reverse its judgment dismissing Hughes’s FLSA claims and remand for further proceedings on the merits of her claims.
As an initial matter, we must first determine when Hughes’s FLSA claims accrued. As the district court noted, under Hughes’s first theory, her FLSA claim for unpaid “flex” time “accrued on August 19, 2004, the last date on which Defendant owed her a payment.” J.A. at 1156 (Order at 5). Under her second theory, Hughes’s claim that her two-day unpaid suspension on July 7-8, 2004, violated § 541.602 accrued on July 22, 2004, the “regular payday immediately following the work period during which the services were rendered for which the wage or overtime compensation is claimed.”
Archer,
The district court viewed Hughes’s FLSA action as having been commenced on September 19, 2006, but we conclude that the doctrine of equitable tolling properly applies in this case such that the commencement of Hughes’s FLSA claim instead occurred on July 17, 2006, when Hughes filed a motion for leave to file a second amended complaint. J.A. at 644-77. This filing included for the first time a claim under the FLSA. On July 27, 2006, the district court issued an order denying Hughes’s motion for leave to file a second amended complaint on the ground that Hughes failed to comply with a local court rule requiring “a movant to seek concurrence in the relief requested before filing a motion with this Court.” J.A. at 719-20 (Order). Hughes eventually complied with the local rule and her second amended complaint was formally filed on September 19, 2006. J.A. at 954-78 (Second Am. Compl.).
We conclude that, in light of the five factors outlined above, equitable tolling is appropriate in this case for several reasons. First, Defendants would suffer no prejudice in that the substance of Hughes’s FLSA claims was made known on July 17, 2006, when Hughes’s filed her motion for leave to file a second amended complaint, which included the allegations *189 in support of her FLSA claims. That date was several days prior to the end of the earlier limitations period (July 22, 2006), which corresponded to her theory that she was a salaried, exempt employee, and it was nearly one month prior to end of the later limitations period (August 19, 2006), which corresponded to her theory that she was a non-exempt employee. Second, Hughes displayed reasonable diligence in pursuing her rights, as she attempted to amend her complaint within the limitations period. Further, Hughes argues that neither her “job description nor any ... payroll records indicated that [Defendants] considered [Hughes] an exempt employee” and that she “was unable to ascertain her exempt or non-exempt status until discovery had taken place in the instant matter.” Appellant/Cross-Appellee Br. at 54.
In sum, because we conclude that July 17, 2006, was the date that Hughes commenced her FLSA action, her FLSA claims are timely under both theories that she advanced in the district court. Accordingly, we reverse the district court’s judgment dismissing her FLSA claims and remand for further proceedings.
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons discussed above, we AFFIRM the district court’s ruling that Region VII is subject to suit under § 1983. Because we conclude that Hughes’s speech did relate to a matter of public concern and that Hughes’s FLSA claims were timely, we REVERSE the district court’s grant of summary judgment as to her First Amendment claim and the district court’s dismissal with prejudice of her FLSA claims, and we REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The regulations provide that a " Tglrant’ means an award of funds by the office to an area agency ... under provisions of an approved area plan” and that a " '[glrantee’ means the entity to which a grant is awarded [i.e., an AAA such as Region VII,] and which is accountable to the office for the use of funds provided.” Mich. Admin. Code r. 400.2010 l(i)-(j).
