A township fire chief terminated a firefighter for sending a private email supporting a political candidate running for township trustee to a small group of citizens because the chief believed the email contained false statements of fact. We find that the email was constitutionally protected speech under the test set forth in
Pickering v. Board of Education,
Background
The plaintiff, Brad Love, was a volunteer and part-time firefighter for the Sugar Creek Township Fire Department (“Department”) during the spring of 2006. 1 During the Republican primary election that spring, Bob Boyer, a retired volunteer firefighter, challenged the incumbent, C.O. Montgomery, for the office of Sugar Creek Township Trustee. One of the Trustee’s principal duties is to appoint a fire chief to oversee the Department.
Boyer’s campaign platform was based on what he viewed as unnecessary spending and inefficient management by the incumbent, particularly with regard to the Department. Specifically, he took issue with the Department purchasing five new vehicles over the past several years without using a bid process and then allowing five paid Department officers to drive the vehicles home and have them for personal use. Boyer also thought that the incumbent made a mistake in hiring as fire chief the defendant, Robert Rehfus (“Chief Reh-fus”), who Boyer described as “a ‘big city 1 fire chief with ‘big city’ ideas.” Appellant’s App. 219. He pledged that, if elected, he would “hire a fire chief with practical knowledge of running a small fire department.” Id. Not surprisingly, the election was hotly contested within the Department — most of the volunteer firefighters, including Love, supported Boyer and most of the career firefighters, including Chief Rehfus, supported the incumbent.
In addition to the concerns with the Department, Boyer also opposed the town *6 ship purchasing what he viewed as prime development land for a public park before seeking a less expensive alternative. Once the land was purchased, however, Boyer publicly committed to work toward the development of the park. This campaign issue gave rise to the current dispute.
On April 24, 2006, a few weeks before the May 2nd primary, an email concerning Boyer’s intentions with regard to the parcel of land set aside for the park was forwarded to Love by an acquaintance. The email alleged that Boyer would, if elected, sell the land. Two days later, while off-duty and from his home computer, Love sent a responsive email to a small group of citizens associated with a local children’s athletic league. Love’s email supported Boyer’s candidacy and discussed several issues, including the park, that were the topic of the upcoming primary election. The email read as follows:
Unfortunately [the allegation that Boyer intends to sell the township parks if elected] is just not true!!!
I have been on the board of directors for the New Palestine Cadet Football League for 6 years. I have been active in our pursuit of raising funds to help with the parks board. I am pushing for the parks as much as anyone, in fact even more than most.
I have been on the fire dept here in town since 1994 and have known Bob since then. I asked him face to face if this rumor is true, and he flat denies it. Bob may be a lot of things, but a liar is not one of them. The sad issue actually is that this rumor has been started by career firefighters that are afraid of loosing [sic] free reigns of the check book. They have started this and several rumors to take away from the real issues. The fact is that most of these firefighters want to tell us how to vote, but they don’t think our community is good enough to live in.
Bob is not going to lay firefighters off nor cut their benefits either. He will take away unnecessary cars and put people back on shift that should be there anyway.
THE REAL ISSUES ARE:
Our fire dept, expenditures have quadrupled since 1999.
We have 5 new sport utility vehicles that have been purchased in the last 4 years that are given to officers to have free use of. I see them in Castleton, Greenwood and all over the State. We pay for them, gas and insurance. These gas guzzling SUV’s [sic] are being driven home to Anderson, Greenfield, Franklin Township and other area’s [sic] outside of the township every day and YOU pay for it. They do not make emergency runs after 4PM and are just a perk that WE pay for. Large cities like Warren Twp, Lawrence Twp, City of Lawrence, Pike, Perry, and others do not have this many take home cars, and they sure don’t give the cars they have to Lieutenants or Captains like we do.
Our Tax Rate is 140% higher than any other Township in the County, that includes Greenfield.
Our current trustee has given himself a 29% pay raise since 1999.
We just took out a $700,000.00 emergency loan to pay for firefighters we hired that we did not have the money for, nor do we need. We could have put some current personal [sic] back on shift and took [sic] away their 7-4 jobs that we don’t need to accomplish the same thing. We make 1,300 emergency calls with the same number of people that Greenfield makes over 4,000 calls with. WHY? ? ?
The current administration says that their gross spending habits do not affect *7 tax rate, but where does the money come from to pay for all of this[?]
I train firefighters all over the State of Indiana and Northern Kentucky and have worked in Ohio, Illinois and Michigan as well. I see everyone and how they do things. This is the worst managed spending I have ever seen in my 9 years of working with 100’s [sic] of fire depts.
I support Bob because he is a CPA and business man, not a driving instructor. He knows better how to handle funds of a Multi Million Dollar business.
Who would YOU hire to manage your personal funds, a CPA or a Driving Instructor? ?!!? ?
I ask you [to] support Bob Boyer because he is more qualified for the job and addresses current issues and not made up rumors.
Appellant’s App. 59-60.
Eventually, a copy of Love’s email made its way to Chief Rehfus. After consulting with township counsel, Chief Rehfus sought to verify whether some of the numbers cited by Love in his email were in fact true. The Chief was particularly offended by the statement alleging that “[t]hey do not make emergency runs after 4PM” because he had routinely made such runs. Concluding that Love had made some false statements in the email, on May 17, 2006, Chief Rehfus terminated Love’s employment for conduct unbecoming a firefighter and failure to be truthful, in accordance with the Department’s General Orders. The termination letter read as follows:
While it is every persons [sic] right to support and vote for whoever they so choose, it is totally inappropriate to lie about a person or several persons. One of those persons that you lied about was me in an E-mail to the New Palestine Soccer League.
To be specific you stated that I did not make runs after 1600 hours. That would be a lie and you know it.
None of the administration thinks that Sugar Creek Township is good enough for them to live in. That would be lie number two because two of us live in the township. Where is the rule that says you must live in the township in order to work here?
Lie number three is that we have more take home vehicles than any other fire department. You already know that is incorrect, but you will obviously say anything that will embellish your lies.
Effective this date you are terminated from this department for conduct unbecoming a firefighter, and failure to be truthful. Lying about the Chief of the Department is an inexcusable offense.
Id. at 61.
Love filed suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 in Hancock Circuit Court against Chief Rehfus, in both his individual capacity and his official capacity, and against Sugar Creek Township for violating his federal constitutional rights under both the First and Fourteenth Amendments. The defendants filed a motion for summary judgment arguing both (1) that Love’s constitutional rights were not violated because false statements are not protected by the First Amendment, and (2) that the Township could not be held liable under § 1983 on a theory of respondeat superior. The trial court entered summary judgment for the defendants on both grounds.
The Court of Appeals reversed.
Love v. Rehfus,
The defendants sought, and we granted, transfer,
Love v. Rehfus,
Discussion
I
We first address the defendants’ argument that the First Amendment does not protect Love’s speech. This Court has not addressed the First Amendment rights of government employees
2
since
Indiana Department of Highways v. Dixon,
A
A government employee may not be discharged or retaliated against for engaging in activity protected by the First Amendment,
Perry v. Sindermann,
B
The Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment prohibits the government from “abridging the freedom of speech.”
5
U.S. Const, amend. I. The government generally may not impose content-based restrictions on speech unless it satisfies the strictest judicial scrutiny.
See, e.g., R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul,
505
*9
U.S. 377, 382,
Nevertheless, citizens who work for the government remain citizens and do not completely forfeit their fundamental liberties by virtue of their public employment.
Id.
at 419,
In light of these competing interests, “the First Amendment protects a public employee’s right, in certain circumstances, to speak as a citizen addressing matters of public concern.”
Id.
at 417, 126 5.Ct. 1951 (citations omitted). In
Pickering v. Board of Education,
Pickering
and its progeny provide a two-step analysis for determining whether the First Amendment protects an employee’s speech. First, the employee must have been speaking as a citizen on a matter of public concern.
Garcetti,
B-l
The public employee must first establish that he or she was both (1) speaking as a citizen,
Garcetti,
We find that Love clearly satisfies the two threshold requirements of
Garcetti
and
Connick.
First, Love wrote the email from his home computer while he was off-duty; he was not fulfilling any of his duties as a firefighter. Like the letter to the editor in
Pickering,
Love was engaging in speech in which any other citizen could engage. The fact that the email was not published in a newspaper but was quasi-private because it was sent to a limited number of recipients is irrelevant,
see Rankin,
Second, the government’s allocation of funds and resources within the Department was clearly a matter of public concern, like the allocation of resources in
Pickering.
The designated evidence in no way suggests that Love’s email was an extension of any dispute with his superiors.
Cf. Connick,
B-2
[11,12] Even if an employee speaks as a citizen on a matter of public concern, the government employer can restrict the speech if it can carry its burden of proving that the First Amendment interests of the employee and society are outweighed by the employer’s interest in operational effectiveness and efficiency.
E.g., Garcetti,
Although the government employer bears the burden of establishing the potential disruptiveness or the harmful effects of the speech, it is “not required to produce actual evidence of disruption to
*11
prevail.”
Gazarkiewicz v. Town of Kingsford Heights,
On the other hand, there must be evidence supporting the threat of harm to the government entity; the government’s concerns are not to be taken at face value.
See Rankin,
If the government carries its burden, the nature and extent of the potential disruption must be weighed against the First Amendment value of the speech.
See, e.g., Connick,
461 U.S at 154,
Because the government employer in this case was a fire department, any predictions of harm to the Department are entitled to some deference, but they are not conclusive. Here, however, Chief Reh-fus was not concerned about potential disruption, and the defendants did not allege any disruption in their brief supporting their motion for summary judgment in the trial court. 10 Chief Rehfus testified that *12 Love was terminated for lying about the Department in his email. There is thus little evidence suggesting the speech caused or had the potential to cause disruption or harm to the Department’s operations.
On appeal, the defendants make only a few arguments with regard to disruption' First, they argue that Chief Rehfus, upon advice of township counsel, was disrupted from his normal duties as Chief to gather specific documentation to prove that the allegations Love made in his email were false. Second, they argue that Love’s email resulted in debate among the firefighters in the Department over the email and its accuracy. Finally, they argue that Love’s email was intended to harm the political standing of the incumbent Trustee and his staff, including Chief Rehfus, and that the email had such effect.
The defendants’ first argument fails because Chief Rehfus was not required to undertake an investigation of the underlying facts — he could have chosen not to respond. There is no evidence suggesting that he was required to respond to cure any disruption in workplace harmony caused by the statements. In fact, he testified that he undertook these actions because he took personal offense to a few of Love’s statements. Similar to
Pickering,
The defendants’ second argument also fails. The fact that several firefighters discussed the email and thought there may have been inaccuracies does not suggest that workplace harmony or discipline was disrupted. The firefighters had been discussing the election and were already split into opposing camps before Love’s email was circulated. And this election was particularly divisive. Therefore, any potential disruption would not have been caused solely by Love’s speech.
See Cox v. Civil Serv. Comm’n,
The defendants’ third argument fails for a far more fundamental reason. The defendants contend that when a political message is intended to and does harm the political standing of a government official, such harm constitutes disruption under Pickering. But that would mean that the First Amendment’s protection for political speech decreases when the political effica *13 cy of the speech increases. The fact that speech on a matter of public concern brings about its intended effect cannot be considered as harm or disruption under the Pickering balance.
The defendants rely on
City of Kokomo v. Kern,
Considering the strength of the First Amendment interest at issue here, it would have taken a substantial showing of significant disruption for the government’s interest to prevail under the
Pickering
balance. The defendants have failed even to approach the required showing. They have failed to show that Love’s email had
any
potential to create difficulties maintaining discipline or loyalty (aside from political loyalty) or to interfere with the close-working relationships in the Department. Moreover, nothing suggests that writing and sending the email interfered with either Love’s ability to perform his duties or the regular operation of the department. There also appears to be no employment dispute from which the speech arose; the only dispute appears to be a hotly contested political election. And the time, place, and manner of the speech are in Love’s favor because the email was written while he was off-duty and sent from his own computer. Moreover, the email cannot be considered a personal attack because it does not even reference Chief Rehfus by name or position,
see infra
Part I-C-3.
Cf. Greer v. Amesqua,
We find that there are no genuine issues of material fact as to the facts considered under the Pickering balance and that Love’s speech was protected public-employee speech under the Garcetti-Con-nick-Pickering test. The government was not justified in treating Love differently from any other member of the general public.
C
Perhaps acknowledging the weakness of their case under the well-established Gar-cetti-Connick-Pickering test, the defendants primarily argue that Love’s email was not protected speech because it contained several knowingly or recklessly false statements of fact. In addressing this argument, we examine the intersection *14 of the Pickering line of cases with First Amendment defamation law.
C-l
As a general matter, First Amendment protection “does not turn upon ‘the truth, popularity, or social utility of the ideas and beliefs which are offered.’”
N.Y. Times Co. v. Sullivan,
False and defamatory speech, though, is one of the traditional categories of speech that is said to be without First Amendment protection.
Beauharnais v. Illinois,
The First Amendment, however, embodies “a profound national commitment to the principle that debate on public issues should be uninhibited, robust, and wide-open, and that it may well include vehement, caustic, and sometimes unpleasantly sharp attacks on government and public officials.”
N.Y. Times Co. v. Sullivan,
In
Pickering,
the Court expressly declined to adopt the
New York Times
standard as the test to apply to government-employee speech on public matters because of the difficulty in applying a general standard to the “enormous variety of fact situations” in which public employees speak to the dismay of their employers.
Because we conclude that appellant’s statements were not knowingly or recklessly false, we have no occasion to pass upon the additional question whether a statement that was knowingly or recklessly false would, if it were neither shown nor could reasonably be presumed to have had any harmful effects, still be protected by the First Amendment.
Id.
at 574 n. 6,
C-2
In
Dixon,
this Court suggested, in dictum, that recklessly or knowingly false statements by public employees may still be protected under
Pickering.
We decline to revisit the Dixon dictum because we find that there are no genuine issues of material fact and that Love’s statements were not made with actual malice as a matter of law.
C-3
At oral argument before this Court, the defendants argued that two statements were knowingly or recklessly false. In their briefs, they argue that several additional statements were also unprotected. The two statements discussed at oral argument were those statements for which Love was actually terminated. Thus, we devote our analysis to those statements.
Statement No. 1: The defendants first allege as knowingly or recklessly false the statement, “They do not make emergency runs after 4PM.” This statement appears to have been the sole or at least the primary cause for Love’s discharge. The defendants argue that Love knew this statement was false when he made it because “they” included all of the officers with take-home vehicles, and Love knew both that Chief Rehfus had a take-home vehicle and that he made emergency runs after 4 p.m. Love testified that, although Chief Rehfus made emergency runs after 4 p.m., he was not aware that other members with take-home vehicles made such runs. Moreover, those who lived outside the township were unable to make emergency runs because they lived too far away. The defendants argue that the pronoun “they” objectively includes Chief Rehfus. Love argues that he did not intend “they” to include the Chief, with whom he had made emergency runs, but rather the officers with take-home vehicles who lived outside the county.
A similar situation arose in
New York Times Co. v. Sullivan,
in the context of a defamation suit. The Commissioner of Public Affairs of Montgomery, Alabama, brought a claim against the
New York Times
and four individuals alleging that an advertisement describing the resistance Civil Rights leaders faced in Montgomery defamed him.
N.Y. Times Co. v. Sullivan,
The Supreme Court of Alabama, which had found in favor of the Commissioner, relied on the following proposition:
[T]he average person knows that municipal agents, such as police and firemen, and others, are under the control and direction of the city governing body, and more particularly under the direction and control of a single commissioner. In measuring the performance or deficiencies of such groups, praise or criticism is usually attached to the official in complete control of the body.
Id.
at 291,
The email in this case used the terms “career firefighters,” “officers,” and “they.” It did not mention Chief Rehfus by name or position. In fact, the only specific ranks referred to were “Lieutenants or Captains” (not Chief). Just as the advertisement in New York Times Co. v. Sullivan could not be taken to refer to the Commissioner individually, Love’s email cannot be taken to refer to Chief Rehfus.
Statement No. 2: The defendants also allege as knowingly or recklessly false the statement, “Large cities ... do not have this many take home cars, and they sure don’t give the cars they have to Lieutenants or Captains like we do.” They attack this statement on two grounds. First, they argue that the statements were recklessly false because Love did not know the exact number of vehicles each department referenced in the statement owned. Chief Rehfus testified that none of the departments referenced had fewer take-home vehicles. Love testified that the basis of the allegation was his personal experience and interactions with members of those other departments and personally seeing the number of vehicles in those departments’ parking lots. Second, the defendants argue that it was recklessly false because, as Chief Rehfus testified, there were no lieutenants with take-home vehicles. On the date of his deposition, in February, 2008, Love testified that he could not recall each officer’s rank at that time but that he did know their ranks when he wrote the email, based on his personal knowledge and experience. He also testified that his basis for the allegation that other departments did not give take-home vehicles to lieutenants or captains was based on his personal experience in working with those departments.
Based on the conflicting testimony, there appears to be a question of fact as to how many take-home vehicles each department had in April, 2006, and a question of fact as to whether any lieutenants in the Department had access to a take-home vehicle in April, 2006. These questions of fact, however, are not material. Even viewing the facts as the defendants describe them and accepting this statement as false, it is clear that Love neither “ ‘entertained serious doubts as to the truth of his publication,’ ” nor acted with a “ ‘high degree of awareness of ... probable falsity.’ ”
Masson,
Other Statements: The defendants allege that five other statements were know *18 ingly or recklessly false. They allege as false the following statements:
• The remark denying the allegation that Boyer intended to sell the park. 15
• “The ... rumor has been started by career firefighters....” 16
• “We have 5 new sport utility vehicles purchased in the last 4 years....” 17
• “I see [the vehicles] in Castleton, Greenwood and all over the State.” 18
• “We make 1,300 emergency calls with the same number of people that Greenfield makes over 4,000 calls with.” 19
The defendants at no time have argued that these statements were the grounds for Love’s termination. Even if they were, Love’s termination could not be justified under the defendants’ proposed rule because none of these additional statements were made with actual malice.
Assuming the falsity of the other statements, an arguable assumption, see supra footnotes 15-19, the designated evidence shows only that Love made the statements believing them to be true. The defendants have provided no evidence and made no arguments that question Love’s testimony. In fact, the defendants have not challenged the veracity of any of Love’s designated evidence.
The defendants have not created a material issue of fact that
any
of Love’s statements were made with actual malice. Almost all of Love’s email was substantially correct, and the few statements that may be viewed as false to some degree were not made with actual malice as a
*19
matter of law. Rather, “[t]he manner in which [they] are false is perfectly consistent with good-faith error, and there is no evidence in the record to show that anything other than carelessness or insufficient information was responsible for their being made.”
Pickering,
D
Love’s email supported a political candidate for public office and was sent a few weeks before an election. Moreover, it was sent in response to an email that was critical of Love’s preferred candidate— that is, it was sent in the midst of a debate on public issues. Defendants have not shown any harm or disruption to the operation of the Department caused by the email. And requiring Love to verify the truthfulness of each statement and then pen with precision a statement that accurately and exactly reflected those verified facts on the threat of losing his employment may have resulted in self-censorship that would have been detrimental to the ongoing public debate surrounding the election. Although the history and jurisprudence of the First Amendment are anything but simple, it is clear that Love’s activities in this case were protected by the Free Speech Clause. Therefore, although we agree there are no genuine issues of material fact, the trial court misapplied the law and thus erred in granting the defendants’ motion for summary judgment on the First Amendment claim.
II
The defendants also moved for summary judgment on the basis that suit against the Township itself could not be maintained because a municipality cannot be held liable under § 1983 on a theory of
respondeat superior.
20
Love concedes that municipal liability cannot be premised on
respondeat superior
but argues that municipal liability is proper here under the holding of
Pembaur v. City of Cincinnati,
The plaintiff brought this suit as a federal civil rights action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, 21 which provides:
Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage of any State ... subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or other person within the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities se *20 cured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law....
42 U.S.C. § 1988 (2006). In
Monroe v. Pape,
Monroe
recognized § 1983 liability for state and local officials individually but it also held that Congress did not intend to include municipal corporations within the definition of “person.”
22
It is clear that municipal liability may be imposed for a single decision made by a municipal official with final policymaking authority.
Pembaur,
*21 The question here is whether the Rule 56 materials before us demonstrate that Chief Rehfus had final policymaking authority with respect to his firing of Love, such that the Sugar Creek Township is liable for the Chiefs action. We conclude that there are genuine issues of material fact that must be resolved in order to determine whether, as a matter of state law, Sugar Creek Township is liable under § 1983 for the Chiefs actions. Accordingly, summary judgment is not appropriate for either party.
Determining whether a particular official is a final policymaker is a question of state and local law for the court to decide. In that regard, we must review “the relevant legal materials, including state and local positive law, as well as custom or usage having the force of law” to determine whether the particular municipal officials are final policymakers for the local government in a particular area, or on a particular issue.
Jett v. Dallas Indep. Sch. Dist,
In this case, there are various Indiana statutes generally outlining the authority of township trustees with respect to fire protection services and the trustees’ authority to appoint and remove firefighters. But these statutes merely alert us that the Sugar Creek Township Trustee is the ultimate policymaker with respect to firefighters. They say nothing at all as to whether a fire chief has final policymaking authority with respect to firefighters. And even though the statutes may suggest that the trustee often does delegate policymaking authority to the fire chief, the record before us is not at all clear that the Sugar Creek Township Trustee did so with respect to Chief Rehfus’s firing of Love.
Love contends that he was not given an opportunity to have Chief Rehfus’s termination decision reviewed. We read the record to be unclear on this point. First, Love testified by way of deposition — which was a part of the summary judgment materials before the trial court — that he sought reinstatement by speaking with Township Trustee Boyer. The Trustee advised Love that the matter would be reviewed after a new chief assumed office. Appellant’s App. at 49. Indeed, after the new chief took office — sometime after January 1, 2007 — Love’s termination was reconsidered and, according to Love, “[the new chief] sent me a reply that after reviewing my personnel file that he did not see a reason to overturn that decision by Chief Rehfus.” Id. Second, the summary judgment materials presented to the trial court also included portions of the Sugar Creek Township Employee Handbook prepared by the Trustee’s office. Specifically included were three Sugar Creek Township Fire Department General Orders: General Order 1.1 concerning “Political Activity,” id. at 98; General Order 1.11 concerning “Disciplinary Action,” id. at 100; and General Order 10.0 concerning “disciplinary standard[s],” id. at 101-02. Pursuant to these orders, disciplinary action against a firefighter includes “dismissal.” Id. at 100, 101. Importantly, under General Order 10.0 a firefighter may be terminated for certain conduct, which “shall automatically be reviewed by the chief and the executive committee.” Id. at 102. The executive committee is composed of “all department officers of a captain rank and above.” Id. “The executive committee may lower any action, raise any action or order any already served action expunged from the members [sic] record.” Id. Of course, this case presents something of a wrinkle with respect to General Order 10.0 because it was the Chief that terminated Love. But the salient point here is that there may have been a review process *22 in place 23 that was established by the Trustee — the originally authorized policymaker. The record is silent as to whether Love availed himself of this avenue of review.
If an official has some discretion to act, but his or her actions are renewable by the originally authorized policymakers, then those policymakers have not delegated final policymaking authority to that official.
City of St. Louis v. Praprotnik,
The proper inquiry in this case is whether Chief Rehfus had final policymaking authority with regard to the employment of probationary, part-time, volunteer firefighters, not whether he was the final poli-cymaking authority with regard to all employment matters for the Township, or even all employment matters within the Department. To resolve this inquiry, on remand, the record must be further developed with the principles of the post-Pemb-aur decisions in mind. Thus, the trial court must determine who the final policymaker was and, if it was not Chief Rehfus, determine whether that official delegated to Chief Rehfus the relevant final policy-making authority.
Conclusion
We reverse in whole the order of the trial court granting summary judgment for the defendants and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Love was both a volunteer and a part-time employee because a volunteer firefighter with the Department was required to work 24 hours per month and was paid a gross salary of $130 for the month.
. "Government employee” and "public employee” are used interchangeably throughout this opinion.
.
See Garcetti v. Ceballos,
. We agree with the conclusion of the Court of Appeals that Love was not terminated because of his political affiliation and that the political-affiliation cases, such as
Elrod v. Burns, 427
U.S. 347,
. The First Amendment applies to the states by way of incorporation through the Fourteenth Amendment.
McIntyre v. Ohio Elections Comm'n,
. Speech is on a matter of public concern if it is addressed to "any matter of political, social, or other concern to the community,” as determined by its content, form, and context.
Connick,
. Public employee speech that meets the threshold Connick-Garcetti test and does not disrupt the government’s operations is protected because the Pickering balance will have no government interest.
.We recognize that the dictum in
Dixon,
. That this case is here on appeal from a grant of summary judgment "means only that the
Pickering
elements are assessed in light of a record free from material factual disputes.”
Gustafson,
. At oral argument before this Court, the defendants argued that the issue was before the trial court. Although the defendants cited the Pickering balance in a most general sense, *12 they did not provide any argument under the balancing approach, choosing to rely instead on their argument that Love’s speech was unprotected because it was false, a matter we address in Part I-C, infra. The plaintiff, however, provided a detailed argument concerning the Pickering balance in its brief opposing summary judgment. As such, the trial court had the issue before it, as well as designated evidence supporting both sides’ arguments.
. Moreover, the fact that only Love was disciplined supports the Chief’s testimony that he was fired for his alleged falsities, rather than the fear of potential disruption to the Department’s operations.
. "Actual malice” is a term of art used "to describe the First Amendment protections for speech injurious to reputation,”
Masson v. New Yorker Magazine, Inc.,
. The party alleging that the speech is unprotected must also prove the falsity of the speech,
Phila. Newspapers, Inc. v. Hepps,
.
E.g., Johnson v. Multnomah County,
. This statement was true. Although Boyer initially opposed purchasing the parcel, once it was purchased, he considered it a done deal and had no intention of selling the land.
. This statement was substantially true. No evidence was designated to suggest that the rumor was not started by career firefighters, but the evidence does show that the email containing the rumor was generated and passed along by a career firefighter.
. This statement was substantially true. The time period reasonably may have been viewed as a 4- or a 5-year period, depending on whether the first vehicle was purchased before or after April 26, 2001. Regardless, this fact is inconsequential because the gist of the statement was no different if it were a 4-, 5-, or even a 6-year period. Notably, Chief Reh-fus did not identify the specific day of the first purchase during his deposition. Love was not required to conduct an exhaustive investigation, prior to exercising his First Amendment right to engage in political speech, to discover facts of which Chief Rehfus, even after preparing for a deposition, was unaware.
. This statement was substantially true. The term "all over the State” is susceptible of many meanings. For example, it could mean that Love saw the vehicles in some or every other city, town, or township, some or every congressional district, or some or every time zone (at least in Indiana). And it is undisputed that certain employees were permitted to drive these vehicles to neighboring counties.
.This statement was substantially true. Chief Rehfus testified that, in 2005, the Department made 952 calls with 30 career firefighters, whereas the Greenfield fire department made 2,387 runs with 41 career firefighters. Although the numbers are wrong for 2005, Love’s email did not indicate a relevant time period. Moreover, the discrepancy between the numbers of runs of each department was similar. Using Love's numbers, Greenfield made approximately three times as many runs as Sugar Creek, and using Chief Rehfus's numbers, Greenfield made approximately two-and-a-half times as many runs as Sugar Creek. And when the number of runs is divided by the number of career firefighters, it is clear that Greenfield firefighters (2387/41 = 58.2/1) were almost twice as busy as Sugar Creek firefighters (952/30=31.7/1). The gist of Love’s statement was that Greenfield firefighters did significantly more work than Sugar Creek firefighters, which appears to be true.
. The defendants do not challenge the propriety of bringing a § 1983 action against Chief Rehfus in his individual capacity, and it is clear that Chief Rehfus is subject to suit under § 1983 because he was a person acting under color of law when he terminated Love.
See Monroe v. Pape,
. Although this is a federal claim, filing suit in state court was permissible because the state courts have concurrent jurisdiction with the federal courts to entertain actions brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
Martinez v. California,
. State governments are not considered a "person” under § 1983 because of the Eleventh Amendment, which generally bars suits against States, governmental entities considered "arms of the State,” and State officials who are sued in their official capacities.
Alden v. Maine,
. We say "may have been” because the General Orders are not altogether clear on whether the process of review applied in this instance. For example, Chief Rehfus indicated that he terminated Love for conduct unbecoming an officer. But the General Orders in the record before us include no such violation. There is, however, a category of conduct referred to as "violation of public trust.” Appellant’s App. at 101. And it is at least arguable that conduct unbecoming an officer may fall under this category. General Order 10.0 also provides "[a]ny firefighter or appointed Department line officer may suspend a firefighter for [among other things violation of public trust].” Id. at 101 (emphasis added). However, the termination of a firefighter "may be recommended by any two line officers of the rank Lieutenant or above. One of the officers shall be at the chief level.” Id. at 102. This provision raises the question of whether the Chief alone may terminate a firefighter. Further, the General Orders before us are silent on the question of whether a decision by the executive committee is final or whether the decision may be appealed to the Township Trustee.
. The Seventh Circuit considered a similar set of circumstances in
Kujawski v. Bartholomew County Board of Commissioners,
