Plaintiff Elizabeth Phelan appeals the district court’s grant of Defendant’s motion for summary judgment. We exercise jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and affirm.
I. Background
Plaintiff Elizabeth Phelan has served as a member of the Board of Trustees for Laramie County Community College (“Board”) since the college opened in 1968. Claiming a violation of her First Amendment rights, Ms. Phelan sued the Board and each Board member in their individual capacities under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. She sought injunctive and declaratory relief in the district court, arguing the Board abridged her First Amendment rights by censuring her for violating its ethics policy.
In 1980, the Board adopted Policy 1530, its code of ethics. Ms. Phelan voted for the policy in 1980, and again in 1985 and 1994. The code describes the manner in which Board members agree to discharge their duties and responsibilities. The provision at issue provides: “[I will) base my personal decision upon all available facts in each situation; to vote my honest conviction in every case, unswayed by partisan bias of any kind; thereafter to abide by and uphold the final majority decision of the Board.” (emphasis added). In addition to adopting the ethics policy, Ms. Phelan also signed a general oath each time she was elected, pledging to discharge her duties as trustee “faithfully, honestly, and impartially.”
In August 1998, the Board began discussing how to fund the repair and renovation of main campus facilities. Specifically, the Board explored two approaches to funding the campus renewal plan: a five mill property tax assessment or general obligation bonds. The Board discussed the issues concerning the funding options at an open meeting on August 13, 1998, and again on August 19,1998, at a published Board meeting during which the Board voted on the renewal plan and appropriate funding. All members of the Board, including Ms. Phelan, voted in favor of the renewal plan and to present the five mill tax assessment to the public for popular vote.
Despite her vote in favor of submitting the five mill tax assessment to the public, Ms. Phelan placed an advertisement in the local newspaper encouraging the public to vote against the measure. The advertisement ran on November 2, 1998, the day before the public vote. Identifying Ms. Phelan in her role as “Trustee,” the advertisement supported the election of Richard “Dick” Lennox for trustee, declared college enrollment had declined fifteen percent, and urged voters to vote against the five mill tax assessment. Although the tax assessment passed, it did so by a much narrower margin than Board members expected.
On December 16, 1998, the Board voted to censure Ms. Phelan for violating its ethics policy. In censuring Ms. Phelan, *1246 the Board expressed its belief that her conduct in running the newspaper advertisement was contrary to the ethics policy and potentially detrimental to the college. The censure also asked her to discontinue this “inappropriate” behavior. The Board based its censure on the language in the ethics policy that requires trustees “to abide by and uphold the final majority decision of the Board,” concluding Ms. Phelan’s advertisement sought to undermine the final majority decision of the Board and provided false information to the public by stating enrollment had dropped fifteen percent.
Ms. Phelan later filed a § 1983 suit in federal district court, claiming that the Board’s formal censure punished her by tarnishing her public reputation in violation of her free speech rights under the First and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution. She also sued Charles Bohlen, the college president, asserting he is subject to liability under § 1983 because he conspired with the Board to deprive her of her constitutional rights. The district court granted the Board’s motion for summary judgment. We affirm the district court’s result, although we do so based on a different rationale.
United States v. Sandoval,
II. Standard of Review
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo.
Simms v. Oklahoma ex rel. Dep’t of Mental Health & Substance Abuse Servs.,
When First Amendment issues are raised, our review is also de novo.
Lytle v. City of Haysville,
III. Discussion
The Board contends, and the district court agreed, that we should use the balancing approach established in
Pickering v. Board of Education,
The Pickering line of cases does not, however, apply to facts like those in the case we consider today. Ms. Phelan is not a governmental employee or contractor; indeed, the Board members and Ms. Phe-lan occupy the same positions as elected public officials. Furthermore, this case does not involve the government’s exercise of contractual power or its “daily management functions,” factors which form the underlying factual basis for judicial deference and the application of the Pickering approach in the governmental employee and contractor contexts. Id.
Although we hold the
Pickering
approach does not apply, we need not apply an alternative approach to determine whether the Board has violated Ms. Phe-lan’s First Amendment rights because the Board’s censure does not trigger First Amendment scrutiny.
1
In order for governmental action to trigger First Amendment scrutiny, it must carry consequences that infringe protected speech.
2
U.S. West, Inc. v. FCC,
Although the government may not restrict, or infringe, an individual’s free speech rights, it may interject its own voice into public discourse.
See Meese v. Keene,
Thus, the Supreme Court has held that, although the governmental action may “fall short of a direct prohibition,” it must impose a specific collateral injury.
Laird,
Based on. the facts of this case, the Board’s censure is clearly not a penalty that infringes Ms. Phelan’s free speech rights. In censuring Ms. Phelan, Board members sought only to voice their opinion that she violated the ethics policy and to ask that she not engage in similar conduct in the future. Their statement carried no penalties; it did not prevent her from performing her official duties or restrict her opportunities to speak, such as her right to vote as a Board member, her ability to speak before the Board, or her ability to speak to the public.
See Zilich,
In short, the Board’s actions have not injured Ms. Phelan’s free speech rights.
See Laird,
Furthermore, the oath Ms. Phelan took after elected is a general public service oath, by which Board members pledge to uphold federal and state laws and to “faithfully, honestly, and impartially discharge the duties of Trustee.”
3
An oath
*1249
restricting an individual’s free speech rights would of course be subject to heightened First Amendment scrutiny.
See, e.g., Communist Party v. Whitcomb,
We therefore AFFIRM the district court’s grant of Defendant’s motion for summary judgment.
Notes
. Ms. Phelan alleges that the Board’s censure tarnished her public reputation. Although this alleged harm to her reputation is sufficient to establish standing,
Meese v. Keene,
. Because political speech is entitled to the "broadest protection,” Ms. Phelan's speech is clearly protected.
See Buckley v. Valeo,
. The oath is entitled the "Laramie County Community College Oath of Office” and contains the following language: "I, Elizabeth Phelan, do solemnly swear that I will support *1249 the Constitution and Laws of the United States, the Constitution and Laws of the State of Wyoming, and that I will faithfully, honestly, and impartially discharge the duties of Trustee of the District Board of Trustees of Laramie County Community College to the best of my ability and understanding, so help me God.”
