This case requires us to determine whether, following the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Garcetti v. Ceballos,
Plaintiff Robert Posey sued Lake Pend Oreille School District No. 84 (the “School District”), arguing that by eliminating his job, the School District retaliated for his prior speech, in violation of the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the School District, concluding — purely as a matter of law — 'that the speech in question had been spoken pursuant to Posey’s job responsibilities and thus in his capacity as a public employee, and that it was therefore not constitutionally protected. Posey appeals. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
We conclude that, following Garcetti, the inquiry into whether a public employee’s speech is protected by the First Amendment is no longer purely legal and presents a mixed question of fact and law. Summary judgment is therefore inappropriate where, as here, (1) plaintiff has spoken on a matter of public concern, (2) the state lacks an adequate justification for treating the employee differently from any other member of the general public, and (3) there is a genuine and material dispute as to the scope and content of plaintiffs employment duties. Accordingly, we reverse the grant of summary judgment on Posey’s First Amendment retaliation claim and remand to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
A. Factual Background
Posey, an employee of the School District assigned as a “security specialist” to *1124 Sandpoint High School, believed the School District’s safety and emergency policies were inadequate. In November 2002, Posey met with Sandpoint Principal Jim Soper to express his concerns about student discipline and safety issues, including ongoing drug and weapons violations and Posey’s feeling that his hands were tied in enforcing school policies. Soper did not respond directly to Posey’s expression of concern, and Posey became increasingly uneasy about security and safety issues throughout the following school years.
Posey’s disquiet eventually led him, in October 2003, to compose and deliver a lengthy letter to School District Chief Administrative Officer Steve Battenschlag, with whom Posey had a friendly relationship. The letter was copied to Superintendent Mark Berryhill and two other school administrators, Kathy Chambers and Todd Reed. It complained in general and specific terms about both personal grievances and what Posey perceived to be inadequate safety and security policies at the high school. With respect to personal grievances, the letter complained that Principal Soper had dealt with Posey “poorly” and occasionally in “an angry, threatening manner.” It acknowledged that Posey had “been fighting with the new administration for over a year now” because, in Posey’s view, the administration’s “new philosophy is to keep me out of everything except for parking and lost and found.”
The bulk of the letter, however, addressed Posey’s concerns about inadequate safety and security policy and enforcement at the school. Posey hoped his letter would prompt the school district to “correct the problems before someone gets seriously hurt.” The letter specifically detailed concerns about: (1) the administration’s general unresponsiveness to safety problems, (2) inadequate staff and faculty training, (3) concealment and insufficient documentation of safety violations, (4) ineffective enforcement of truancy policies, (5) ineffective enforcement of sexual harassment policies, and (6) inadequate fire safety and school evacuation planning.
Each of these concerns was substantiated by at least one specific example, including Posey’s recollection of students bringing weapons to school, student intoxication, sexual harassment and possibly rape among school staff, persistent student truancy, and failure to evacuate the building when there had been smoke in the hallways and the fire alarm had gone off. Posey also stated his concern that the Columbine school shootings “can happen here and almost did,” alleging that the administration’s failure to update safety and emergency policies “is not right” and “is plain negligence.” Following delivery of the letter to Battenschlag, Posey met with Battenschlag and Berryhill at Posey’s home, outside of school hours, to discuss his concerns.
The parties do not dispute that Posey wrote the letter at home, with his own resources, on his own time, and of his own initiative. The letter was written on plain paper and casually addressed to “Steve.” The parties also do not dispute that Po-sey’s workplace resources were inconsistent with his having written the letter on school premises.
The parties do dispute, however, whether Posey wrote the letter as part of his official employment responsibilities. The evidence indicates that Posey was initially hired in 1995 as a “parking lot attendant” for Sandpoint High School. His job title changed periodically throughout his subsequent nine years of employment for the District. Some time before 2002, Posey’s title was changed to “Security Specialist.” In that role, Posey was initially responsible for twenty enumerated tasks relating to preventing and responding to student misconduct.
*1125 In 2002, however, Principal Soper substantially reduced Posey’s job responsibilities. Posey was relieved of responsibility for all specified tasks except assisting with security and crime prevention, and supervising the school parking lot, grounds, and hallways. Posey had been but was no longer responsible for liaising with police, enforcing truancy policies, searching students, and investigating student misconduct.
The parties specifically dispute whether Posey had any policy-making responsibility or authority to support a conclusion that Posey’s letter “was required as a part of [his] official duties,”
Marable v. Nitchman,
Posey counters that no aspect of his job description required him to “report! ] wrongdoing by administrators or co-workers” and that “his role in student discipline did not extend beyond discrete tasks such as ensuring that the parking lot remained orderly at the end of the school day.” Indeed the record indicates, by Soper’s own admission, that responsibility for updating the emergency plan was reassigned in part “[bjecause Mr. Posey was not in full charge of those issues.” 1
At the conclusion of the 2003-04 school year, Posey was informed that the School District would be combining his job responsibilities as security specialist with three other employees’ responsibilities, in a new consolidated “preventative specialist” position. Posey applied but was not hired for the position.- He filed a grievance with the School District, which initially determined that he had been retaliated against for his letter to Battenschlag. The District’s governing board subsequently overrode that determination and refused to hire Posey.
B. Proceedings Below
Posey filed suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 in Idaho state court asserting, in addition to a range of state law claims, that the District’s elimination of his position and failure to rehire him in the newly consolidated position constituted retaliation for his letter to Battenschlag and subsequent meeting with Battenschlag and Berryhill, in violation of the First and Fourteenth Amendments. The School District removed the case to the Federal District Court for the District of Idaho pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1446.
Following discovery, the School District moved for summary judgment, arguing that Posey’s speech was not protected by the First Amendment because his “statements were made pursuant to his duties” in his role as “Security Specialist.” Granting the motion, the district court concluded that Posey had not communicated his concerns regarding school security and safety issues to the newspapers or his legislators *1126 and that his speech had stemmed from activities that he was paid to do. Because, in the district court’s view, Posey had not spoken as a private citizen, it granted summary judgment in favor of the School District on Posey’s First Amendment retaliation claim. The court remanded Posey’s remaining state law claims to the Idaho state court. Posey now appeals the grant of summary judgment.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo. Suzuki Motor Corp. v. Consumers Union of United States, Inc.,
III. DISCUSSION
A. The Protected Speech Inquiry after Garcetti
In order to sustain a First Amendment retaliation claim, a public employee must show “(1) [t]he employee engaged in constitutionally protected speech, (2) the employer took adverse employment action against the employee, and (3) the employee’s speech was a ‘substantial or motivating’ factor in the adverse action.”
Freitag v. Ayers,
Until recently, the first element of this test required the court to determine as a matter of law (1) whether the speech at issue “ ‘touch[ed] on a matter of public concern,’” and if so, (2) whether ‘“the interests of the[employee], as a citizen, in commenting upon matters of public concern [outweighed] the interest of the State, as an employer, in promoting the efficiency of the public services it performs through its employees.’ ”
Dible v. City of Chandler,
If a court determined that the speech at issue in any given case failed to raise a matter of public concern sufficient to outweigh the state’s interest in efficient operation, then the speech was not protected and a jury did not need to resolve the factual questions presented by the second and third elements of the test. This two-stage inquiry into the protected status of the speech was purely legal and therefore properly decided on summary judgment.
See Connick v. Myers,
Garcetti,
however, added a third stage to the first element of the First Amendment retaliation test, requiring a determination whether the plaintiff spoke as a public employee or instead a private citizen. The plaintiff in
Garcetti,
Deputy District Attorney Ceballos, had been assigned to review a case in which the police had allegedly filed an inaccurate affidavit to obtain a search warrant.
There, the Supreme Court concluded that when a public employee speaks pursuant to his or her official duties, as Ceballos did, the speech is not protected because any restriction on that speech “simply reflects the exercise of employer control over what the employer itself has commissioned or created.”
Id.
at 422,
But in
Garcetti
there was no dispute that Ceballos’s internal memorandum had been written in execution of Ceballos’s official employment responsibilities.
Id.
at 424,
Here there is room for precisely such debate regarding whether Posey wrote and delivered his letter in execution of his official employment duties. 2 Given the factual disputes presented in the record, we must therefore determine whether the inquiry into the protected status of speech remains one purely of law as stated in Connick, or if instead Garcetti has transformed it into a mixed question of fact and law.
Our sister circuits are split over the resolution of this question. In
Charles v. Grief,
The Tenth Circuit has also concluded that “[all] three steps” of the inquiry into the protected status of speech, including the “determin[ation] whether the employee [has spoken] pursuant to [his] official duties,” “are to be resolved by the district court [and not] the trier of fact.”
Brammer-Hoelter v. Twin Peaks Charter Acad.,
The District of Columbia Circuit has also held, following
Garcetti,
that the ques
*1128
tion whether a plaintiff “ha[s] spoken as a citizen on a matter of public concern” is a “question[] of law for the court to resolve,” and not a “question[ ] of fact ordinarily for the jury.”
Wilburn v. Robinson,
In conflict with the Fifth, Tenth, and D.C. Circuits, the Third Circuit has “held that ‘whether a particular incident of speech is' made within a particular plaintiffs job duties is a mixed question of fact and law.’ ”
Reilly v. City of Atlantic City,
The Seventh Circuit has implicitly sided with the Third Circuit, concluding in
Davis v. Cook County,
*1129 Upon consideration, we agree with the Third, Seventh, and Eighth Circuits and hold that the determination whether the speech in question was spoken as a public employee or a private citizen presents a mixed question of fact and law.
Although the Supreme Court has previously recognized “the vexing nature of the distinction between questions of fact and questions of law,”
Pullman-Standard v. Swint,
Because the task of determining the scope of a plaintiffs job responsibilities is concrete and practical rather than abstract and formal, we are confident that a factual determination of a plaintiffs job responsibilities will not encroach upon the court’s prerogative to interpret and apply the relevant legal rules. “An issue does not lose its factual character merely because its resolution is dispositive of the ultimate constitutional question,”
Miller,
Accordingly, we conclude that the third element of the protected status inquiry — whether the plaintiff spoke as a public employee or a private citizen — is a mixed question of fact and law. We further conclude that the pleadings and evidence in this case present genuine disputes of material fact regarding the scope and content of Posey’s job responsibilities.
B. The Content of Posey’s Letter and the School District’s Justification for Adverse Employment Action
Determining that there are genuine disputes of material fact as to Posey’s employment duties does not necessarily mean, however, that the grant of summary judgment was improper. If Posey’s letter and subsequent meeting were to fail either of the other two elements of the protected status inquiry, then summary judgment would have been appropriate on these alternate grounds. We conclude, however, that Posey’s speech did raise matters of public concern and, as the School District
*1130
has already conceded, there was no “adequate justification for treating [him] differently from any other member of the general public.”
Garcetti,
“ ‘[C]ommunication on matters relating to the functioning of government ... ’ [such as] misuse of public funds, wastefulness, and inefficiency in managing and operating government entities are matters of inherent public concern,” regardless of the purpose for which they are made.
Johnson v. Multnomah County, Or.,
There is also no dispute that the School District lacked “an adequate justification for treating the employee differently from any other member of the general public,”
Garcetti
CONCLUSION
Agreeing with the Third, Seventh, and Eighth Circuits, we hold that after Garcet-ti the inquiry into the protected status of speech presents a mixed question of fact and law, and specifically that the question of the scope and content of a plaintiffs job responsibilities is a question of fact.
District courts should therefore determine first whether “the expressions in question were made by the speaker ‘...
*1131
upon matters of public concern,’ ”
Garcetti,
After having answered each affirmatively, only then should the court consider whether the plaintiff spoke as a private citizen or a public employee. But when there are genuine and material disputes as to the scope and content of the plaintiffs job responsibilities, the court must reserve judgment on this third prong of the protected status inquiry until after the fact-finding process.
Here, Posey spoke on matters of public concern, and the School District lacked adequate justification to treat him differently from other citizens. Because there are genuine disputes of material fact regarding his job responsibilities, we REVERSE the grant of summary judgment and REMAND the case to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Adding to the confusion surrounding Po-sey’s job responsibilities, the parties' characterizations appear to have shifted in the time between their depositions and the identification of the relevant legal questions at issue in this case. Principal Soper, for instance, indicated in 2006 that Posey “was very good at coordinating the parking lot .... but as far as the actual security of it, not really, he didn't have a lot to do with that.” And around the same time, Posey insisted that ensuring student safety and security "was my job description [and] was a function of my job.” In their briefing before this court, each party has made a resolute 180-degree turn in their respective characterizations of Posey’s duties.
. We have twice considered First Amendment retaliation claims after
Garcetti. See Marable,
. The circuits are also split on the question whether the balancing inquiry is an issue of law or fact.
See Weaver v. Chavez,
. In the face of this conflict, district courts within this circuit have also reached conflicting decisions.
Compare, e.g., Neveu v. City of Fresno,
No. CV-F-04-6490,
. That a portion of Posey’s letter addressed personal grievances is not relevant. In
Con-nick,
the Supreme Court considered whether an internal questionnaire prepared by the plaintiff raised a matter of public concern, concluding it was sufficient for First Amendment purposes that only "one of the questions in Myers’ survey touched upon a matter of public concern.”
