Former Milwaukee Police Department officer James E. Miller, Jr., claims that he was transferred to a less desirable position because of his speech in opposition to actions taken by then Chief of Police Arthur *931 L. Jones. Miller brought this civil rights action against Jones and the City, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, seeking relief in the form of a declaratory judgment and compensatory and punitive damages. At the close of discovery, defendants moved for summary judgment on the ground that no material facts were in dispute and that they were entitled to judgment as a matter of law. The district court denied this motion, but dismissed any claim made against Jones in his official capacity only. Jones appeals the district court’s refusal to grant him qualified immunity arguing that Miller’s speech was not protected because it did not address a matter of public concern. For the following reasons, we affirm.
i. Background
The facts of this case are not in dispute, and due to the limited nature of the appeal we focus on the events surrounding the plaintiffs speech. James Miller is a former officer with the Milwaukee Police Department (MPD) who was transferred from the Community Services Division (CSD) to patrol duty on May 27, 2003. Miller was assigned to the Community Services Division in 1992 and spent eleven years working with the Police Athletic League (PAL). PAL provides educational and recreational activities for young people between the ages of five and eighteen. These activities are staffed by Milwaukee police officers, such as Miller, who provide their services free of charge. Other than this in-kind labor, PAL receives no funding from the Police Department and is organized as a non-profit corporation under Wisconsin state law. The MPD benefits from the opportunity to interact with community youths in an indirect law enforcement capacity. PAL’s Board of Directors is staffed by both private citizens and members of the MPD, including the Chief of Police.
While working with PAL, Miller served in a number of different roles. Following a formal selection process in 1992, he was chosen by the Board to serve as the Executive Director. The Executive Director is the chief operating officer of the organization and, subject to the control of the Board, is responsible for supervising, controlling, and directing the programming, workforce, and finances. By 1997, Miller also assumed the duties of Treasurer. In both positions, he was responsible for reporting to the Board on areas under his control.
Due to scheduling difficulties with MPD facilities, PAL decided to construct their own athletic center sometime in 1997. Between . 1997 and 2002, PAL raised funds, established a building committee, and developed plans with architects and builders. Miller oversaw each step of development and was, effectively, the project manager.
In early March 2002, the future use of the facility came into question. Through his chain of command, Miller received instructions from Chief Jones to give a tour of the PAL facility to the executive board of the Milwaukee area Boys and Girls Club. While giving the tour, Miller learned that Chief Jones had been discussing a possible facilities merger between PAL and the Boys and Girls Club. When Miller responded that this was the first he had heard of the issue, he was told that “... if the Chief wants it, he gets it.” Tr. Rec. R.50, Dep. Ex. 24, p. 3. Within days of the tour, Miller learned that a local Boys and Girls Club was closing, and that it was considering the PAL facility as its new home. On March 21, Jeff Snell of the Boys and Girls Club of Greater Milwaukee wrote to Chief Jones outlining the next steps to be taken in the merger.
On March 22, 2002, PAL Chairman Harris informed the Board of the proposed merger. He also informed them that the *932 Boys and Girls Club was willing to pay for the costs of the facility’s staffing and operation, but had not addressed the outstanding expense of the building itself. At that meeting, Captain Haynes, Miller’s commanding officer in the CSD, and Miller provided Chairman Harris with a copy of the letter from Snell.
Miller worked with Chairman Harris and other members of the Board to review and respond to the proposed merger. After reviewing PAL’s national bylaws, Miller and Captain Haynes concluded that the proposal was contrary to the organization’s mission. Miller openly opposed the merger, reasoning that if the Boys and Girls Club operated the facility there would be no role for MPD officer interaction with the community, thus defeating the purpose of PAL and the MPD’s policing benefit. Furthermore, he was concerned that the Club offered no money to help cover the facility’s construction debt and that any violation of PAL’s national bylaws excluded the chapter from receiving funding from the parent organization.
Chairman Harris wrote to Chief Jones, informing him that no single member of the Board could unilaterally bind the organization, and that the proposed merger likely violated PAL national bylaws. Chief Jones was not pleased with Harris’s letter. Shortly after they traded correspondence, Chairman Harris and Director Zigman met with Chief Jones in person and told him that they and Miller opposed the merger.
On March 25 and 26, 2002, Chief Jones confronted his staff regarding the PAL Board opposition to the merger. He yelled at Captain Haynes for passing Snell’s letter on to Chairman Harris and told both of them that he put them on the PAL Board and could transfer them off just as easily. Chief Jones then called a meeting with every officer on the PAL Board to discuss the matter. During the meeting he publicly reprimanded Haynes and Miller. Two days later, Haynes was transferred to a position in the Criminal Investigation Bureau; she had no prior experience with the group.
Chief Jones attended the next three straight PAL Board meetings, a first in his tenure with the organization. At the April 9, meeting, Jones was described as being angry with Chairman Harris’s letter and publicly doubted that PAL had the capacity to manage the new facility. On April 19, Jones informed the Board that he would not allocate MPD officers to staff the new facility and instructed them to write the Boys and Girls Club to request a plan for merger. He also told the Board that Miller would be demoted from Executive Director. He explained that having an MPD employee in charge of PAL’s finances and employment decisions was an unwanted liability for the City. Members of the Board testified that this reversal came as a surprise given that Miller had been in charge of PAL’s management and finances for nearly eleven years and he had overseen the new facility’s construction. At the third meeting, on May 3, PAL acquiesced to Jones’s demands and created a committee to explore the merger.
By May 24, it was clear that the Boys and Girls Club merger would not satisfy the entire PAL Board. Financially, the Club’s proposal did not contribute to the costs of the building debt. Furthermore, other members of the Board greatly valued Miller’s opinion, given his involvement with the project, and agreed that the merger would effectively end PAL. That day, Miller and Director Zigman voted against any continued dialogue with the Club. During subsequent meetings in the summer of 2002, the Board turned to Mil *933 ler for advice, and he continued to oppose the merger.
On July 8, Chief Jones implicitly threatened Miller. At Jones’s direction, Deputy Chief Schunk reminded Miller that the Chief was responsible for setting MPD policy and how MPD officers interacted with PAL. Jones also reassigned numerous MPD officers that worked with PAL to the Police Training Academy, effectively cutting them off from serving or communicating with the program. On August 30, Miller was notified by the MPD Internal Affairs Division that he was being investigated for “[flailing to treat as confidential the business of the departmentf; sjpeaking on behalf of the department without authorization from the Chief ... [i]n reference to a conversation you allegedly had with Bob Harris concerning the PAL program.” Tr. Rec. 50, Dep. Ex. 7.-
On September 27, 2002, Chief Jones informed the Board that Miller was to be removed as Executive Director, and demoted to Program Director. At the October 25 meeting, Jones reemphasized his demand and told the Board that no MPD officers would work with PAL until Miller’s job was redefined. This withholding of services effectively brought PAL’s operations to a halt. Some of the Board members testified that they believed the demotion was in retaliation for Miller’s opposition to the merger.
On November 4, the Board and Chief Jones were able to agree on a job description for Miller’s new position. Following this agreement, Jones wrote to Chairman Harris on November 15 and informed .him that while Miller would fulfill his new duties, he would be unable to do anything beyond these requirements. This secondary limitation meant that Miller could no longer serve as a voting member of the Board.
On January 6, 2003, Miller filed a citizen complaint against Chief Jones with the City of Milwaukee Fire and Police Commission, a civilian oversight body. In the complaint, Miller alleged that Chief Jones, inter alia, coerced the PAL Board, engaged in retaliatory acts, and unlawfully interfered with the private business of another. Miller’s complaint included the relevant Milwaukee Police Department Rule and Regulation for each alleged violation. Tr. Rec. 50, Dep. Ex. 24. Shortly thereafter, Miller also raised questions about certain financial transactions implicating PAL’s attorney, their construction contractor, and State Senator George. Miller brought these matters to the attention of Chairman Harris, who then raised them with the Board.
In May 2003, Miller received conflicting instructions regarding his CSD reporting duties from his supervisor, Captain Debra Davidoski. (Davidoski had replaced Haynes in April 2002, when Haynes was transferred to Criminal Investigations.) On May 16, Davidoski complained to Deputy Chief Schunk about Miller’s performance, and within two weeks Miller was transferred to patrol duty. At the time, Chief Jones explained the transfer to Miller’s new commanding officer, stating he had overstepped his duties with PAL. In the months following the transfer, however, internal performance evaluations were submitted that brought this comment, and thus the motivation for his transfer, into serious doubt.
After Miller’s transfer, Sergeant Banks assumed the Program Director’s role and did everything Miller had previously done as Executive Director. This included hiring and firing civilian employees, directing officers, handling PAL finances, and attending and voting at Board meetings. The curtailment of Miller’s involvement in PAL also affected community interaction *934 with the organization. As Miller’s role was reduced, community and officer involvement dropped off, and when he was transferred, key financial backers stopped donating.
At the close of discovery, Chief Jones moved for summary judgment. He argued there were no material facts in dispute and that he was entitled to qualified immunity as a matter of law. Judge Curran denied summary judgment on the question of law and Jones now appeals pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
ii. Discussion
Summary judgment is appropriate only where the moving party demonstrates “there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that [they are] entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). When determining whether a genuine issue of material fact exists, this Court considers evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party.
See Matsushita Elec. Ind. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp.,
Government officials enjoy qualified immunity, and are thus shielded from civil liability, “ ‘as long as their actions could reasonably have been thought consistent with the rights they are alleged to have violated.’ ”
Schad v. Jones,
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,
The district court’s denial of defendant’s motion for summary judgment on qualified immunity is immediately appealable under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
See Delgado v. Jones,
A. Protected Speech.
Regarding the first prong of our qualified immunity analysis, Miller claims that Jones transferred him from the Community Services Division to patrol duty in retaliation for speech that was protected by the First Amendment pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Government employees do
*935
not lose the right to comment as citizens on matters of public concern as an incidence of their employment.
City of San Diego v. Roe,
To be protected, employee speech must relate to a matter of “political, social, or other concern to the community. ...”
Connick v. Myers,
Taking the facts in a light most favorable to the plaintiffs, as we must, the content of the speech at issue covers more than a dispute over internal office affairs, and would be of legitimate news interest. Matters of police protection and public safety are generally topics of public concern.
Schad,
In this case, Miller opposed the proposed merger because it left the MPD officers without a facility to host PAL activities, thus reducing the quality of community interaction and opportunity to interact with city youth in an indirect law enforcement capacity. Further, the Boys and Girls Club offered only enough funding to cover their own operating costs, but nothing to offset the debt incurred in construction. This outcome likely violated PAL’s national bylaws, cutting them off from receiving national funding, and implicated the integrity of the fund-raising and construction process that Miller had overseen in PAL’s name. Chief Jones argues that there was nothing wrong in his proposal of this merger. While this may be true, the proposal is not the sole issue under discussion. There is also the matter of the pressure Chief Jones brought to bear on the PAL Board to ensure that the proposal was accepted. Despite open concerns, Chief Jones pushed the merger forward, leveraging his control over MPD personnel through the threat and implementation of job transfers. By January 2003, Miller’s speech had expanded to include concerns about Jones’s coercive behavior, and the effect it had on PAL.
Miller also raised questions about the quality of work being done on the new facility and certain financial transactions that implicated PAL’s attorney and Wisconsin State ' Senator George. These statements touch on the propriety of fiscal management by government officials of a financially independent community organization, and were not limited, like
Schad,
to ordinary matters of purely internal operation. These were no mere hypothetical concerns; Senator George was later indicted on numerous counts, including charges on this matter, and pleaded guilty to receiving kickbacks (18 U.S.C. § 371, conspiracy to defraud the United States) in another scheme involving PAL’s attorney.
See United States v. George,
We find it hard to imagine that the Milwaukee public would not be concerned with the Chief of Police using his official position to coerce a financially independent organization into a potentially ruinous merger. This concern seems particularly acute when the Chief served on the Board of Directors of both organizations. Or that the public would not take an interest in their elected representatives’ misappropriation of monies intended for their benefit. Indeed, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel eventually covered portions of the scheme. Tr. Rec. 50, Ex. E.
*937
The form of Miller’s speech also indicates that the matter was one of public concern. After raising his concerns with the PAL Board and MPD, he filed a citizen’s complaint with the Fire and Police Commission. Short of racing to the nearest television or radio station, we are hard-pressed to find a more public form of speech than his reporting to this civilian staffed body. This form of communication stands in marked contrast to the internal memos circulated in
Connick
or
Gonzalez,
or the procedural officer-to-officer call placed in
Schad.
Miller’s actions explicitly and formally sought to alert a greater audience of the possible harm at issue. Regarding his statements on the financial irregularities and construction problems, this matter again mirrors
Spiegla.
While Miller may not have been as public with these concerns, he raised the issues on his own volition in multiple venues, first with Chairman Harris and then again with Deputy Chief Schunk. These attempts, when matched with the inherent value of the content, are sufficient to raise the underlying speech to the level of a public concern.
See Spiegla,
Finally, we consider the context of the speech at issue, evaluating Miller’s motive and circumstances.
See Schad,
Regarding the circumstances of his speech, Jones claims that Miller’s statements were not protected because they were within the scope of his regular job duties. As initially noted in
Gonzalez,
and clarified in
Delgado,
statements made in the course of the “routine discharge of assigned functions, where there is
no suggestion of public motivation”
do not indicate that the employee set out to speak as a citizen on matters of public concern.
See Spiegla,
Additionally, Miller’s January 2003 statements on the financial irregularities and contractor performance put both the MPD and the PAL Board on notice regarding missing funds and possible breach of contract. While monitoring these issues was part of his prior duties as Executive Director and Treasurer, he had been demoted to Program Director and restricted from holding “any other positions” per Chief Jones’s November 15, 2002, letter to the Board. Tr. Rec. 50, Dep. Ex. 17. Managing construction and auditing PAL’s finances are not listed in the Program Director’s job description.
Id.
At most, Miller was responsible for preparing and monitoring the budget with the Managing Director and reporting to the Board Finance Committee. Given this precise and newly limited job description, we cannot find that Miller’s subsequent and consistent reporting on these issues was wholly within the scope of his duties. The present scenario is similar to that of
Spiegla,
where the plaintiff was responsible for implementing prison security policies, but took it upon herself to question her superiors’ policy change that may have decreased security.
See Spiegla,
Lastly, Jones argues that Miller’s speech did not touch on matters of public concern because PAL was not part of the core duties of the Milwaukee Police Department. In support of this argument he cites
Gardetto v. Mason,
B. Prior Decisions on Matters of Public Concern.
While we find that Miller’s speech rises to the level of public concern, Chief Jones’s actions would still be protected were this constitutional violation not “clearly established” at the time of the alleged conduct.
Finsel,
Defendant argues that rights in this area áre not clearly established, and that the Supreme Court’s decision in
City of San Diego v. Roe
proclaims as much. In
San Diego,
the Supreme Court wrote that “[although the boundaries of the public concern test are not well-defined,
Connick
provides some guidance ... [i]t directs courts to examine the ‘content, form, and context of a given statement, as revealed by the whole record....’”
Nor did
San Diego
strike down
Delgado,
where we held that employee speech on a matter of public concern was protected under the First Amendment, and therefore protected against retaliatory transfers, when it grew out of some discretionary act.
See
*940 in. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons we Affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. Defendant directs our attention to Judge O'Scannlain's concurrence in
Ceballos v. Garcetti,
. The conviction is a matter of public record. See United States v. George, No. 03-CR-259 (E.D.Wis. Aug. 11, 2004) (judgment).
