Aрpellant Donna Kennedy (“Kennedy”) appeals from the district court’s dismissal of her First Amendment cause of action for failure to state a claim, or, in the alternative, for summary judgment. Because we find that Kennedy has stated a claim and created a genuine issue of material fact precluding summary judgment, we reverse and remand.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
Kennedy began working at the Tangipa-hoa Parish Library (“the Library”) on March 21, 1995. By all objective criteria, she performed her job well. Over the course of two years, she received five promotions with commensurate pay raises. At the time the Library terminated her, Kennedy served in two managerial positions, Automation Coordinator and Technical Services Supervisor. In Kennedy’s June 1997 evaluation, her last before being fired, appellee Pat Sledge (“Sledge”), the Library’s director, rated Kennedy’s performance overall as “excellent.”
The events leading to Kennedy’s termination commenced on October 15, 1997. On that day, Virginia Patanella (“Patanel-la”) and her supervisor, branch manager Sannie Bonfiglio (“Bonfiglio”), were working at the Independence branch of the Library. Around 1:00 pm, Bonfiglio called the Library’s administrative offices to ask that a replacement worker be sent to the Independence branch; Bonfiglio was departing work early to prepare for her daughter’s wedding that evening. The person to whom Bonfiglio spoke in the administrative offices apparently told Bon-figlio to stay at work because she only had a few hours left. But at 3:15, Bonfiglio again called the administrative offices and reported that she was going home. No one arrived to replace Bonfiglio, so Pata-nella continued working alone.
At 4:00 pm, Archie Dean Forsythe (“Forsythe”), an apparently homeless man with a criminal record and a history of mental illness, entered the Independence branch. Finding no patrons in the library, Forsythe raped Patanella, threatened to kill her, and severely beat her about her head, fracturing several bones in her face. A patron entering the library during the rape summoned an off-duty police officer, Sergeant R.J. Guarena, Jr. (“Sergeant Guarena”), who was grocery shopping across the street. Sergeant Guarena confronted Forsythe while he was pulling up his pants. A struggle ensued and Guarena succeeded in apprehending Forsythe.
The crime, its brutal nature, the dramatic apprehension of Forsythe, and the lack of security at any of the Library’s branches left the community in an uproar. By the appellee’s own admission, the crime sparked intense media scrutiny and gossip. Responding to these comhiunity pressures, *362 the Tangipahoa Parish Council (“Council”) sent a letter to Sledge on October 16, 1997, the day after the crime; the letter requested that Sledge detail how she рlanned to prevent such occurrences in the future.
On October 17, 1997, Kennedy visited Patanella in the hospital. Having been told that Patanella was fine except for some bruises, Kennedy was unprepared for Patanella’s true condition. 1 Moved, Kennedy spoke to Patanella about the rape, and Patanella confessed that her main concern was that others not suffer the same fate. 2
On her way home from the hospital, Kennedy stopped at the Ponchatoula branch, where, upon her arrival, branch manager Lenore Johnson (“Johnson”) was hanging up the phone after talking with Sledge. Johnson confided to Kennedy that Sledge had requested help with “damage control” regarding Patanella’s rape. As Sledge was ultimately responsible for maintaining the employment of both Bon-figlio, the branch manager who left early in the day with only two hours notice, and the administrative offices’ employee who failed to dispatch a replacement for Bon-figlio, Sledge understandably wanted aid in dealing with the fallout. Moreover, Sledge was hoping that the appellee Tangipahoa Parish Library Board of Control (“the Board of Control” or “the Board”) would soon approve spending for a building to house the Hammond branch of the Library, and the rape obviously had the potential to jeopardize those plans. 3
Kennedy became extremely cоncerned after speaking with Johnson. Kennedy had observed in the past that Sledge had downplayed any events that cast the library in a negative light, and Kennedy feared that de-emphasizing Patanella’s rape could have terrible consequences. On October 18, 1997, Kennedy wrote a letter. She hoped that this letter would prompt Sledge and the Board to confront the risks occasioned by the lack of security at the Library branches. In its salient parts, the letter stated:
I would like to suggest to the Library Board and Administration a much needed change in the Tangipahoa Parish Library policy.
Suggested Policy: There will be at least two library employees present at all times when the Library is open to the public. No library employee (male or female) will be in an unlocked library building alone. Also, two library employees must be present to close the library after it has been open to the public.
I also venture to suggest, that if it is deemed that there is not enough circulation to support two employees at the Clark and Loranger branches, that these branches be closed and the employees transferred to other branches.
Please note that this is not a knee-jerk reaction to this hideous crime. Similar changes have been discussed, that I am aware of, due to the drinking and drug activities on the corner down from the Loranger Branch and the distasteful pranks, suspicious charaсters, *363 and rude and harassing patrons at the Kentwood Branch. 4
It is my humble opinion that what happened at the Independence Branch on October 15, 1997 cannot be down played. This event must be addressed and steps taken to prevent a similar act....
Now is the time for the Library Board and Administration to take a firm stand and address the question: Are we ready to show the Library employees and Tan-gipahoa Parish residents that we will do everything possible to protect the safety of our Library employees and our Library patrons?
Kennedy signed the letter in her capacity as Automation Coordinator and Technical Services Supervisor and enclosed a copy of part of the Library’s Safety Program, which sets forth the Library’s policy for dealing with investigations of accidents. Included within this section are the directives “ENCOURAGE people to give their ideas for preventing a similar accident,” and “FOLLOW UP to make sure conditions are corrected.”
Kennedy mailed the letter to the members of the Board of Control and the Library branch managers. She hand-delivered a copy of the letter to Patanella the day she wrote it.
The following Monday, October 20, 1997, Kennedy attended a meeting called by Sledge at the Amite branch. At the meeting, Sledge reprimanded those in attendance for personally attacking her. Specifically, Sledge singled out Anne Ellzey. Sledge then indicated that she had spoken with Patanella, and that Patanella primarily desired that the Library employees stop gossiping about the rape. Remembering Patanella’s plea that no other librarians work alone, Kennedy ventured a comment that the situation was not about Sledge, but rather about Patanella and the safety of the patrons and employees at the Library.
After the meeting, Kennedy asked to speak with Sledge. Kennedy then showed Sledge the letter. Sledge perused it and remarked that it was well written. The encounter was unremarkable, and Kennedy departed to complete her work for that day in the usual manner.
Sledge answered the Council’s request for policy changes on October 20, 1997 with a 10-step plan designed to heighten security. Sledge’s proposal included a provision insisting that two employees be present at any Library branch open to the public, though the record does not reveal whether Sledge incorporated Kennedy’s idea or thought of it independently.
Three days later, on October 23, 1997, the Board of Control held a meeting. Security matters were not on the agenda, but Board member Howard G. Ridgel (“Rid-gel”) broached the topic. Board chairman Edward B. Dufreche attempted to postpone the issue, arguing that more time was necessary to examine all the options. Rid-gel urged the Board members to confront the problem and mentioned that Kennedy’s letter had also encouragеd the Board not to gloss over the rape and the safety concerns it highlighted. The Board members then voted to address the security issue and adopted Sledge’s 10-step plan at the meeting. 5
That afternoon, Sledge penned a letter demoting Kennedy and stripping her of all *364 her supervisory duties. Though Sledge and the Board of Control concede that Sledge demoted Kennedy in response to her letter, the announcement of this demotion criticized Kennedy in general terms:
It is with disappointment that I recognize and accept the fact that you and I no longer share the same vision of the future for the Tangipahoa Parish Library System.
It has become apparent that you have assumed far too much authority for your position as Automation Coordinator and Technical Services Supervisor. Your assigned role does not include discussing opening and closing of library branches, nor does include [sic] discussing with other employees what I, as the appointed Director, do correctly or, in you [sic ] opinion, incorrectly.
You [sic ] job does not include discussion of personnel, the daily administration of this Library System nor meeting with business representatives 6 that are not directly concerned with your departments, nor writing derogative comments about local communities.
Rather than delivering the demotion letter to Kennedy personally or at work, Sledge mailed the letter by сertified mail to three addresses in Kennedy’s personnel file. On October 30, 1997, fully a week after Sledge composed and sent the demotion letter, Kennedy’s father called Kennedy at work to tell her that he had declined to sign for a certified letter for her from the Library. On October 31, 1997, Kennedy, who was familiar with the Library’s protocol of delivering bad news by certified mail, called Sledge to find out what the letter said. Sledge refused to speak with Kennedy on the phone, but Sledge allowed that she would send a copy of the demotion letter to Kennedy at work on November 3, 1997. Kennedy read the letter on November 3, and thereby became informed of her demotion, more than 10 days after its occurrence.
Sledge made an appointment for November 10, 1997 to speak with Kennedy about her job. Sledge’s stated purposes for the meeting were to discuss the reasons for Kennedy’s demotion and her new job responsibilities, to agree upon a lower wage, and to assess Kennedy’s willingness to continue working at the library in a non-supervisory capacity. The meeting, however, never occurred. On November 10, 1997, Kennedy showed up for the meeting with a tape recorder and her father, whom she wanted along as a witness. Sledge, meanwhile, had asked Cindy Camp to join the meeting, unbeknownst to Kennedy. Sledge refused to permit Kennedy to record the meeting or to have her father presеnt as a witness. Sledge then fired Kennedy. 7
Kennedy filed a grievance with the personnel committee of the Library. The Board of Control upheld the personnel committee’s decision in favor of Sledge on February or March 17, 1997. Kennedy then filed this present action on March 26, 1998.
*365 During a hearing on December 2, 1998, the district court denied Kennedy’s motion to amend her complaint and granted Sledge’s motion to dismiss on grounds of qualified immunity. Ignoring the court’s order, Kennedy filed a first amended complaint on December 7, 1998. The district court permitted the clerk of the court to place the first amended complaint in the record.
Sledge, who apparently was unsure of the significance of the first amended complaint, and the Board then moved to dismiss the first amended complaint for failure to state a claim, or, in the alternative, for summáry judgment, which motion the district court granted, entering its final order on February 23, 1999. 8
II. Standard of Review
We apply
de novo
review to dispositive motions, like dismissals for failure to state a claim and grants of summary judgment.
See Lowrey v. Texas A&M Univ. Sys.,
A dismissal for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted is a disfavored means of disposing of a case.
See Shipp v. McMahon,
A grant of summary judgment is proper where “the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. Proc. 56(c);
see also Christopher Village, LP v. Retsinas,
III. Failure to State a Claim
Kennedy argues that her amended complaint properly alleges that she spoke on a matter of public concern, and thus states a claim for retaliation in violation of the First Amendment. To the extent that the district court did not consider her amended complaint because it denied her request to file one, Kennedy argues that the dis *366 trict court erred in not granting her permission to amend. The Board counters that, regardless of whether the district court considered Kennedy’s first amended complaint, her speech was private and not public, and therefore, Kennedy cannot state a claim.
An employee’s First Amendment retaliation claim has four elements: (1) an adverse employment action; (2) speech involving a matter of public concern; (3) the employee’s interest in speaking outweighs the employer’s interest in efficiency; and (4) the speech must have precipitated the adverse employment action.
See Teague v. City of Flower Mound, Texas,
The dispute here centers oil the second element, that is, whether Kennedy’s speech involved a matter of public concern.
9
Whether Kennedy spoke on a matter of public concern is a legal question,
see Rankin v. McPherson,
The second, “shorthand” test is the citizen-employee test: “when a public employee speaks not as a citizen upon matters of public concern, but instead as an employee upon matters
only
of personal interest,” the employee’s speech falls outside the parameters of speech involving matters of public concern.
Connick,
This is a “mixed speech” case. 10 Kennedy spoke in her letter in her capacity as a *367 citizen: a fear that Sledge and the Board were placing the public and Library employees, other than herself, in danger by downplaying the seriousness of the rape prompted her speech. Moreover, she spoke as an informed citizen on a topic that dominated the local media and against a background of vigorous public debate. But Kennedy also undoubtedly spoke as an employee: she signed the letter in her supervisory capacity, and she believed that speaking out about employee safety was part of her job as a supervisor and employee.
Mixed speech cases are perhaps the most difficult subset of employee speech cases to adjudicate. Because the employee admittedly speaks from multiple motives, determining whether she speaks as a citizen or employee requires a precise and factually-sensitive determination. We therefore embark upon an overview of the mixed speech cases
11
in this Circuit to aid us in our application of the content-form-context test. Our first mixed speech case was
Gonzalez v. Benavides,
In evaluating the facts, the Gonzalez court concluded that, because “[pjublic employees, by virtue of their public employment, may make valuable contributions to the public debate,” id: at 1299,' “we do not read Connick ... to exclude the possibility that an issue of private concern to the employee may also be an issue of public concern.” Id. at 1300-01. Determining that Gonzalez “raised such a mixеd issue,” id. at 1301, the panel held that the speech at issue related to the public concern for three reasons. First, whether the Commissioner’s Court complied with agency regulations was, in and of itself, a matter of public concern. Second, failure to so comply would lead to a withdrawal of federal funds, which also was a' matter of public concern. Finally, “the uncertain allocation of authority and responsibility among the County Court, the ... Administering Board, the Executive Director, and the Deputy Director,” id., related to the public concern because “this uncertainty generated friction and reduced the efficiency of the agency.” Id. Therefore, Gonzalez spoke on a matter of public concern.
Subsequent to
Gonzalez,
we decided
Terrell v. University of Texas Sys. Police,
Three years later, we again addressed mixed speech in
Moore v. City of Kilgore,
The Moore court found Moore’s speech to relate to the public concern. It first observed, regarding the content of Moore’s speech, that “[t]he public, naturally, cares deeply about the ability of its Fire Department to respond quickly and effectively to a fire.” Id. at 370. The Moore court continued:
While our analysis is grounded in significant part on the importance to the public of the content of Moore’s speech, Moore, as a citizen, also has a significant interest in speaking his mind on matters of public concern that factors importantly into our analysis. The First Amendment accords all of us, as participants in a democratic process, room to speak about public issues. The operation of the city Fire Department certainly is a matter that concerns interested citizens. When Moore spoke about the fire on December 26, 1985, he spoke as an informed citizen regarding a matter of great public concern.
Id. at 371.
The Moore court then turned to the context analysis. The district court had declared Moore’s speech private because “the need for public debate on the staffing issue had passed” and because “[Moore’s conduct] smacks of a disgruntled employee attempting to draw public attention to this job-related issue.” Id. The Moore court rejected this assessment, emphasizing that “[t]he speech in our case is not linked to a personal employment dispute between Moore and the City,” id. at 370 n. 2, and that, based upon the media questions to which Moore responded, “the public was receptive and eager to hear about the ability of the Fire Department to perform its duties.” Id. at 371.
Concluding with the form analysis, the Moore court conceded that, while Moore’s remarks “do involve a hint of ‘employee’ *369 considerations .... mixed motivations are involved in most actions we perform everyday.” Id. at 371-72. Viewing the speech as a whole, the panel found Moore’s speech to relate to the public concern.
Our next foray into the realm of mixed speech was
Thompson v. City of Starkville, Mississippi,
The
Thompson
court concluded that the content of Thompson’s speech was public. Unlike
Connick,
where “[Myers’] questionnaire, if released to the public, would convey no information at all other than the fact that a single employee is upset with the status quo,”
Likewise, the panel found the context and form of Thompson’s speech to be public. The court deemed the private nature of Thompson’s communications not disposi-tive: “This alone, however, does not necessitate a finding that his alleged speech was not connected to matters of public concern.”
Id. “
‘The private nature of the statement does not ... vitiate the status of the statement as addressing a matter of public concern.’ ”
Id.
at 467 (quoting
Rankin,
Moreover, the fact that Thompson felt aggrieved by the promotions of other, unqualified police officers did not preclude First Amendment protection: “Circuit courts have also recognized that an employee’s speech may contain a mixture of public and personal concerns.” Id. at 464. In this regard, the court observed that “Thompson stood to gain little personally through his grievance[.]” Id. at 465. “He did not seek back pay or promotion. Moreover, he aided others in filing similar complaints; these clearly did not redound to his own benefit.” Id. at 466. Additionally, the nature of the wrongdoing he exposed — “which could potentially affect public safety,” id. (footnote omitted)- — distinguished Thompson’s speech from that of Terrell, which “involve[d] a matter of purely intra-governmental concern.” Id. Thompson’s speech therefore fell within the scope of the First Amendment.
Wilson v. UT Health Ctr.,
The
Wilson
court found that Wilson’s speech related to the public concern. Regarding the content of her speech-allegations of sexual harassment-the court held that such reports, like accounts -of race discrimination,
see Givhan v. Western Line Consolidated Sch. Dist.,
In evaluating context, the Wilson court dismissed the defendants’ argument that the private forum of Wilson’s complaint stripped her speech of protection: “Nor did Wilson forfeit her right to speak by choosing an internal forum to speak as a citizen about sexual harassment within the UTHC police force.” Id. at 1270.
The
Wilson
court likewise rejected the defendants’ аssertion that the form of the speech indicated a private nature because Wilson acknowledged some duty, as a police officer, to report sexual harassment. Observing that “practically, such a rule would permit public employers to remove constitutional protection from speech on certain subjects by including those subjects within employees’ reporting duties,”
id.
at 1269, the
Wilson
court mused that “the rule proposed by the defendants could ironically facilitate the suppression of speech through a requirement that the speech be made.”
Id.
Instead, the panel reiterated Connick’s admonition that courts withhold First Amendment protection from speech on “matters only of personal interest,”
This Circuit again addressed the issue of mixed speech in
Gillum v. City of Kerrville,
Without conducting an explicit content-context-form analysis, the
Gillum
court determined that Gillum’s Speech did not relate to the public concern. Citing
Terrell,
the panel emphasized that “[we] focus on the hat worn by the employee when speaking rather than upon the ‘importance’ of the issue [to] reflect[ ] the reality that at some level of generality almost all speech of state employees is of public concern[.]”
Gillum,
In
Benningfield v. City of Houston,
Conducting an abbreviated content-context-form analysis, the
Benningfield
court first noted that the plaintiffs’ motivations included personal considerations: “[t]he Plaintiffs thought that their personal' careers were being negatively affected by mismanagement, gender discrimination, and a hostile work environment.”
Id.
at 375. Nevertheless, their speech also contained ■ matters of public concern: “The Plaintiffs complained about contamination of criminal histories .... resulting] from mismanagement and, in some instances, deliberate tampering.”
Id.
Therefore, the
Benningfield
court found the speech related to the public concern, despite the “fact that Plaintiffs chose to file internal grievances rather than . publicize their complaints[.]”
Id.
(citing
Givhan,
Finally, we reach 1999, a year in which this Circuit decided two significant mixed speech cases,
Harris v. Victoria Indep. Sch. Dist.,
Acknowledging that “[t]he Plaintiffs’ speech does not fit neatly within any of the factual scenarios in which we have held speech involved a matter of public concern,”
Harris,
The Harris court next examined the content of the plaintiffs’ speech and identified both personal and public interests in it: “Plaintiffs certainly had an interest in their speech as employees, because they could not help but benefit as teachers from the improvement of the educational environment at VHS. However, they also had strong interests as committee members in achieving the goals the committee set for itself and the school.” Id. The рanel then remarked that no evidence suggested that plaintiffs’ speech was merely an outgrowth of a personal employment dispute, and that the speech took place against a backdrop of public discussion of the problems at Victoria High School. Therefore, Harris and Martin spoke on a matter of public concern.
In Teague, Teague and Burkett, two police officers with the Flower Mound police department, investigated a fellow officer, Jones, whom they suspected of having committed aggravated perjury. Teague and Burkett’s supervisor, Chief Brungardt, eventually halted their investigation and hired a private investigation firm which exonerated Jones. Teague and Burkett believed the exoneration was unwarranted, so they requested a meeting with Chief Brungardt. Chief Brungardt rebuffed them, claiming that the district attorney’s office had also examined the facts and concluded that Jones was innocent of wrongdoing. Teague called the district attorney’s office and learned that it had never investigated Jones. At that point, Teague and Burkett filed a grievance against Chief Brungardt. Chief Brun-gardt then transferred Teague and Burk-ett, initiated an investigation of them, and ultimately terminated them.
After chronicling
Terrell, Moore, Gil-lum, Wilson,
and
Benningfield
(but exempting any discussion of Thompson), the
Teague
court concluded that Teague and Burkett did not speak on matters relating to the public concern. Though the court conceded that the content of their speech was public, it found the context of their speech to be “a private employee-employer dispute.”
Having thus canvassed our mixed speech precedent, we discern three reliable principles. First, the content of the speech may relate to the public concern if it does not involve solely personal matters or strictly a discussion of management policies that is only interesting to the public by virtue of the manager’s status as an arm of the government.
See Wilson,
*373
With respect to content, any arguments that Kennedy’s speech did not invоlve a matter of public concern are not well taken.
14
Kennedy spoke about how to guard against a recurrence of a violent crime that had shaken the local community and generated significant press coverage.
15
Speech that potentially affects public safety relates to the public concern.
See Thompson,
Additionally, speech made against the backdrop of ongoing commentary and debate in the press involves the public concern.
See Harris,
The context of the speech was initially private, but became public. Kennedy distributed her letter on a “need to know” basis to Patanella, the Library branch managers, Sledge, and the Board members. She did not release her letter to the press or otherwise seek to publicize it. Nevertheless, the Daily Star published a newspaper article mentioning Kennedy’s letter, 17 and the Board claims that, at some point thereafter, members of the community obtained copies of the letter.
As we have seen in
Thompson, Wilson,
and
Benningfield,
by intending to speak privately, Kennedy did not forfeit her First Amendment protection. “Neither the [First] Amendment itself nor our decisiоns indicate that ... freedom [of speech] is lost to the public employee who arranges to communicate privately with his employer rather than to spread his views before the public.”
Givhan,
Moreover, unlike
Terrell,
where Terrell neither publicized his accusations nor “would [he] have had any occasion to do so,”
Finally, the form of the speech indicates that it was of a public nature. Specifically, Kennedy did not write the letter in the context of an employer-employee dispute.
See Connick,
Moreover, unlike Teague and Gillum, the record does not intimate that Kennedy’s letter itself sparked an employment dispute. Upon first reading the letter, Sledge rеmarked only that Kennedy had written it well without hinting in the slightest that Kennedy’s conduct somehow exceeded the bounds of workplace decorum. Appellees further concede that the letter was “written in a humble and cordial tone.” See Brief for Appees., p. 24 n. 8. And the contents of the letter were obviously non-controversial: Kennedy’s proposed requirements of at least two employees on duty at all times and closing library branches when only one employee is present mirrored (or perhaps were incorporated into) Sledge’s own security proposal.
Finally, unlike
Gonzalez
— where the speech involved was found nevertheless to be protected — Kennedy’s proposal did not even impact her own job. Kennedy did not work in any of the branches that were short-staffed and never would confront a situation in which she had to work alone.
See Tompkins,
Weighing these factors — the public nature of the content, the public-leaning nature of the context, and the public nature of the form of the speech — yields the conclusion that Kennedy spoke on a matter of public concern. 18 She therefore stated a claim for retaliation in violation of the First Amendment.
Though we are not obligated to apply thе citizen-employee test in mixed speech cases, we observe that it produces an identical conclusion. Following
Connick,
we must ascertain whether Kennedy spoke “not as a citizen upon matters of public concern, but instead as an employee upon matters
only
of personal interest.”
Because Kennedy’s complaint reveals that she spoke on a matter of public concern, we hold that the district court should not have dismissed her complaint for failure to state a claim.
We must still consider, however, the possibility that the district court dismissed Kennedy’s claim without considering her first amended complaint. Though the lower court permitted Kennedy’s first amended complaint to remain in the record, we have nothing but appellees’ assurances that the trial court considered it.
If the district court dismissed Kennedy’s complaint without an opportunity to amend, it erred. “Ordinarily, when a complaint does not establish a cause of action in a case raising the issue of immunity, a district court should provide the plaintiff an opportunity to satisfy the heightened pleading requirements of these cases.”
Jacquez v. R.K. Procunier,
Kennedy’s initial complaint unquestionably did not allege her best case: at 23 paragraphs, it is short on facts and law, but long on conclusory statements. Kennedy’s first amended complaint remedies these failings: at 86 paragraphs, it states a claim for a First Amendment violation, explaining specifically why her speech is of public concern, and why her interests outweigh those of the Board. Therefore, the district court should not have denied Kennedy leave to amend.
We hold that the district court should have permitted Kennedy to amend her complaint and should have considered the first amended complaint if it did not. We further conclude that Kennedy alleged, as a matter of law, that her speech related to the public concern. We therefore must reverse the district court’s dismissal of Kennedy’s claim on any of the aforementioned grounds and, subject to our summary judgment analysis below, remand for a new trial on the merits.
IV. Qualified Immunity
The district court granted Sledge’s motion for summary judgment on grounds of qualified immunity. Kennedy argues that in so doing, it erred because she has alleged a violation of a clearly established right and raised a fact issue as to whether Sledge acted in an objectively reasonable manner in demoting her for writing the letter. Appellees respond that Kennedy’s right to speak on security matters was not clearly established at the time Sledge fired Kennedy.
“[Government officials performing discretionary functions generally are shielded from liability for civil damages insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitu
*377
tional rights of which a reasonable person would havе known.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
As Kennedy has stated a First Amendment claim, she has alleged a violation of a clearly established right. Since 1983, the year the Supreme Court decided
Connick,
government employers have known that, unless their interest in efficiency at the office outweighs the employee’s interest in speaking, they cannot fire their employees for making statement's that relate to the public concern. Though Sledge argues vigorously that the law does not support Kennedy’s right to' speak on security matters, she is defining the right far too narrowly.
See Warnock v. Pecos County, Texas,
Moreover, Kennedy has presented a fact issue sufficient to survive summary judgment as to whether Sledge acted in an objectively reasonable manner in light of Kennedy’s clearly established rights. Government employers undoubtedly have broad authority and discretion to discipline employees whose speech impairs the smooth and efficient operation of government offices.
See Connick,
*378
Applying the
McBee-Pickering-Connick
balancing test to this summаry judgment record, we find that it favors Kennedy. The balancing test demands that we consider whether Kennedy’s speech (1) was likely to generate controversy and disruption, (2) impeded the department’s general performance and operation, and (3) affected working relationships necessary to the department’s proper functioning.
See Browner,
First, as the letter struck a “humble and cordial” tone and bolstered the suggestions in Sledge’s own security plan, we conclude that it was not likely to generate controversy and disruption. Though the letter did urge Sledge and the Board to act, and sought to prevent them from de-emphasiz-ing the gravity of the rape, Sledge did not find these aspects of the letter disruptive or likely to generate controversy when she first read the letter, and we may conclude that Kennedy’s tone and her narrow distribution of the letter allayed the letter’s potential in this regard. 19
Sledge does argue that Kennedy made allegedly derogatory comments about local communities in the letter, and that, by virtue of having signed the letter in her official capacity, Kennedy misled the public into believing that the letter was a statement of Library policy. This, Sledge asserts, caused disruption and controversy. Sledge’s argument here must fail. Kennedy only distributed her letter to Sledge, Patanella, the Library’s branch managers, and the Board of Control members — a group of individuals who all knew Kennedy’s position in the Library and were well aware that her letter did not state Library policy. The record reveals that the only people who might have been confused learned of the letter and its contents through an October 24, 1997 news article, which ran after Sledge demoted Kennedy on October 23, 1997. Therefore, any confusion that Kennedy’s letter might have generated could not have been a factor in Kennedy’s demotion because the confusion would have arisen after Sledge demoted Kennedy.
Second, the letter would not have impeded the Library’s general performance and operation: it did not have any bearing on the day-to-day business of circulating books within the community.
Cf. Moore,
Viewing these facts, as we must on summary judgment, in the light most favorable to Kennedy, she has alleged a violation of a clearly established right and also raised a fact issue as to whether Sledge acted in an objectively reasonable manner in light of Kennedy’s clearly established rights.
So as to preempt any confusion about the implications of this holding, we clarify that we express no opinion as to whether Sledge in fact acted in an objectively reasonable manner or whether she ultimately will be entitled to qualified immunity. Our only holding is that we cannot tell, at the summary judgment stage of the case where we must view the evidence in the light most favorable to Kennedy, whether Sledge acted in an objectively reasonable manner. We further caution that our holding today turns on four critical concessions by appellees: (1) appellees admitted that Sledge demoted Kennedy in response to the letter; (2) Sledge confessed that she gave Kennedy’s First Amendment rights no thought before demoting her; (3) the Board agreed that Patanella’s rape was a matter of public concern; and (4) appellees characterized the tone of Kennedy’s letter as “humble and cordial,” not controversial or disruptive. At trial, however, “a very different picture may result thаn the one painted by the summary judgment record because [Kennedy] must prove the issues that this opinion assumes in [her] favor, and the jury can choose to credit certain facts over others, which we cannot do in reviewing a [grant] of summary judgment.”
Gutierrez v. City of San Antonio,
Therefore, we hold that the district court erred when it granted Sledge summary judgment on the issue of qualified immunity.
V. Conclusion
• We hold, as a matter of law, that Kennedy spoke on a matter of public concern, and therefore, that her first amended complaint states a claim for retaliation in violation of the First Amendment. We further hold that the district court should have granted Kennedy leave to amend her complaint and should have considered her first amended complaint. We are thus constrained to reverse the district court’s dismissal of the case on these grounds and remand for a new trial on the merits.
We further hold that Kennedy has alleged a violation of a clearly established constitutional right and raised a fact issue as to whether Sledge acted in an objectively reasonable manner in demoting Kennedy in response to her letter. We therefore reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment on this ground and remand for a trial on the merits.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. One newspaper described Patanella's appearance on Friday, October 17, as follows: "Her face [had] ... two deep purple/pink bruises where eyes should be. Her eyes had just barely slit open a little that morning for the first time since the attack, she said. She had stitches on the side of her head, and her hair was stiff with dried blood.” Gloria Lupo, I’m Going to Kill You, Says the Attacker, The Amite Tangi Digest, Oct. 22, 1997, at 1.
. Indeed, Patanella said the same thing in The Amite Tangi Digest article. Id. at 1 (“I don't want it to happen to anyone else. I hope no one will have to be left alone in the libraries again.”).
. The Board did in fact approve the resolution to purchase a building for the Hammond branch on November 7, 1997. See Sharyn C. Brecheen, Parish Library Wants to Buy Permanent Home for Hammond Branch, The Amite Tangi Digest, Nov. 12, 1997.
. These references relate to an incident in which a patron sat in the Kentwood branch and stared at the librarians for hours on end. Shortly thereafter, the librarians found a dead cat in their drop box.
. A newspaper article detailing the October 23, 1997 Board of Control meeting reports that Ridgel mentioned Kennedy's letter. See Sylvia Schon, Libraries Take Safety Measures, Daily Star, Oct. 24, 1997, at 1. The article also quotes Kennedy telling the Board of Control, “I appreciate the fact that Buddy [Ridgel] brought this up. We're all wondering what’s going to be happening. It’s good to let the employees and the public know that you're talking about this and doing something about it.” Id.
. This is apparently a reference to an incident in which a representative of a security company talked to Kennedy about where he should place a cable. As the location of cables for the computer network was within Kennedy’s authority as Technical Services Supervisor, she was the correct Library representative tо answer the security company representative's questions. Kennedy’s conduct in this regard presented no problem to Sledge until Kennedy mentioned at the October 23, 1997 Board of Control meeting that she had spoken with a representative of the security company.
. The parties dispute the facts surrounding this meeting. Kennedy claims that Sledge planned to fire her on October 23, the date of the Board meeting. Kennedy surmises that Sledge demoted Kennedy because of the letter, waited two weeks as required by Library policy, and then fired her. Kennedy supports her inference with the fact that Sledge had prepared Kennedy’s final paycheck prior to the meeting. Sledge, on the other hand, claims that when Kennedy indicated her desire to record the meeting, Sledge promptly fired her for insubordination.
. The record is in an unfortunate state that leaves unknown the true grounds for the district court’s dismissal. Appellees styled their motion to dismiss as a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, or in the alternative, for summary judgment. The district court stated its reasons for the dismissal from the bench during oral argument, but neither party requested that a court reporter make a record of oral argument. Moreover, the district court’s judgment relates the grounds of dismissal only as being those set forth during oral argument. As we lack any objective account of the district court’s reasoning for the dismissal, we must conduct both Rule 12(b)(6) and Rule 56 analyses before we may properly reach our conclusion that the district court’s dismissal warrants reversal and remand for a trial on the merits.
. With respect to the other elements, Kennedy's demotion satisfies the first element because it indisputably constitutes an adverse employment action.
See Harris
v.
Victoria Indep. Sch. Dist.,
Appellees do argue, that Kennedy's demotion is irrelevant because they claim that Sledge ultimately terminated Kennedy for insubordination, not her speech. But that issue is not relevant to the failure to state a claim analysis. The pertinent question for the Rule 12(b)(6) analysis is whether Kennedy has alleged an adverse employment action motivated by her speech, and the demotion satisfies that inquiry.
. In their supplemental motion on appeal, appellees cite
Gerhart v. Hayes,
. We include in this overview only those cases that use the term “mixed speech,” and conduct a mixed speech analysis. We are cognizant, however, that other cases may exist to which the term "mixed speech” might arguably be applied.
.
But see
Richard H. Hiers,
First Amendment Speech Rights of Government Employees: Trends and Problems in Supreme Court and Fifth Circuit Decisions,
45 Sw. L.J. 741, 792 (1991) (“[Terrell's] reading of
Connick
conflicts with other Fifth Circuit holdings that public employee speech about both matters of public concern and other matters, in short, a mixed bag of concerns, would be protected." (citing
Gonzalez,
. In
Teague,
We perceive reasonable rebuttals to
Teag-ue
's criticisms. First, regardless of
Teague's
judgment about the wisdom of granting federal review to all mixed speech cases, that is what the plain language of
Connick
demands: "when a public employee speaks not as a citizen upon matters of public concern, but instead as an employee upon matters
only
of personal interest, [no First Amendment protection inheres.]”
Second, given that the case
Teague
cites as creating a circuit split with
Wilson, Hartman
v.
Board of Trustees,
Finally, the rule of orderliness has little persuasive force when the prior panel decision at issue confliсts with a Supreme Court case to which the subsequent panel decision is faithful.
. To argue that the content is private, appel-lees have improperly lumped this dispute over security at the Library's branches into the category of disputes over working conditions, which, in turn, are private matters not involving the public concern. Examples of disputes over working conditions, however, belie their assertion: the category of "working conditions” encompasses "the length of time on the job, the number of breaks employees received and so forth.”
Piver v. Pender County Bd. of Educ.,
Appellees do cite one case from this Circuit that they claim stands for the proposition that matters of security do not relate to the public concern.
See Robinson v. Boyer,
Appellees therefore have failed to advance a meritorious argument in favor of the proposition that the content of Kennedy’s speech was private!
. In the Board’s own words, "news of the brutal attack was immediately broadcast by the press and was the topic of constant discussion in the Tangipahoa Parish Community.... [N]ews of the attack was a matter of public concern.” Brief for Appees., p. 23.
. While no case in this Circuit specifically defines "official misconduct” or "wrongdoing,” the term clearly envelopes conduct exposing the state to mere civil liability.
See Connick,
. See Schon, supra note 5.
.
Teague
cites
Gillum
for the proposition that context and form weigh more heavily than content in the Fifth Circuit because "we are chary of an analytical path that takes judges so uncomfortably close to content based inquiries.”
Teague,
. Sledge avers that Kennedy's conduct after Sledge demoted her was disruptive and controversial. Specifically, Sledge alleges that Kennedy encouraged her coworkers to carry tape recorders to work, to file grievances, and to request financial information about the Library. Sledge faces two problems with this argument. The first is a matter of proof. Sledge has presented absolutely no evidence showing that Kennedy encouraged her coworkers to behave insubordinately; Sledge merely presented evidence of the other employees' contumacious conduct and now asks this court to assume that Kennedy instigated it. This we cannot do on summary judgment.
The second problem is one of relevance. The McBee-Pickering-Connick test balances the potential of the speech involved to cause disruption and controversy. And Sledge never argues that Kennedy’s letter precipitated the problems with Kennedy’s coworkers. Rather, she concedes that the issue with Kennedy's coworkers arose only after Sledge demoted Kennedy — in response to her letter— without considering her First Amendment rights. Therefore, the conduct of Kennedy’s coworkers is not relevant to the McBee-Pick-ering-Connick balancing test.
Sledge also points to Kennedy’s propounding of a memorandum critical of the Board’s proposed budget for the Library as evidence of her insubordination. Kennedy’s actions in distributing this memorandum are so analogous to the facts of
Pickering v. Board of Educ. of Township High Sch. Dist. 205, Will County, Illinois,
Finally, to the extent that Sledge presents this evidence of Kennedy’s alleged insubordination subsequent to being demoted to show that Kennedy caused Sledge to fire her for insubordination two weeks after her demotion, that argument goes to Kennedy’s damages, an issue not before us presently.
