We consider the interplay between the First Amendment and the right to be free of workplace harassment on the basis of protected status.
Facts
Professor Walter Kehowski sent three racially-charged emails over a distribution list maintained by the Maricopa County Community College District, where he teaches math. Every district employee with an email address received a copy. Plaintiffs, a certified class of the district’s Hispanic employees, sued the district, its governing board and two district administrators (the chancellor and the president) claiming that their failure to properly respond to Kehowski’s emails created a hostile work environment in violation of Title VII and the Equal Protection Clause.
Kehowski’s first email had “Dia de la raza” as its subject line and asked, “Why is the district endorsing an explicitly racist event?” (Citations and emphasis omitted.) Dia de la Raza translates as “Day of the Race” and is celebrated by some Hispanics instead of Columbus Day.
Kehowski’s next email, sent almost a week later, began, “YES! Today’s Columbus Day! It’s time to acknowledge and celebrate the superiority of Western Civilization.” Kehowski then offered excerpts from a variety of articles. One article quoted Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. as saying that “democracy, human rights and cultural freedom” are “European ideas.” Another promoted a theory that “Native Americans actually committed genocide against the original white-skinned inhabitants of
Two days later, Kehowski sent a third email that began, “Ad hominem attacks are the easiest to launch and the most difficult to defend against.” Kehowski quoted an email calling his messages “racist” and said: “Boogie-boogie-boo to you too! Racist? Hardly. Realistic is more like it.” He quoted an email claiming that “[m]ost thinking people believe that the European, Christian victory over the Moorish, Islamic (and African) culture in Spain is an example of a victory of a ‘backward’ culture over one that was more civilized.” He responded: “[H]istory has answered quite convincingly which cultures were backward.” And he warned: “[I]f we don’t pull ourselves out of the multicultural stupor, another culture with some pretty unsavory characteristics (here, here, and here) will dominate (here, here, and here) [and not without a little help from the treasonous scum Bill Clinton].” (Bracketed words in original.)
This third email linked to a website maintained by Kehowski on the district’s web server. The school’s technology policy encouraged faculty to develop district-hosted websites for use “as a learning tool,” although faculty also maintained sites of a personal nature. Kehowski’s site declared that “[t]he only immigration reform imperative is preservation of White majority” and urged visitors to “[r]eport illegal aliens to the INS.” (Emphasis omitted.) Like his emails, Kehowski’s website quoted and linked to articles. One critiqued a “shallow and self-contradictory” ideology in which “[r]ace must be held meaningless only by whites.” Another expressed concern that “[t]he persistent inflow of Hispanic immigrants threatens to divide the United States into two peoples.”
Prominent figures in the community condemned Kehowski’s ideas. The president of the college circulated an email:
[T]he openness of our [email] system ... allows individuals to express opinions on almost any subject.... However, when an e-mail hurts people, hurts the college, and is counter to our beliefs about inclusiveness and respect, I cannot be silent. In that context, I want everyone in the [college] community to know that personally and administratively, I support the District’s values and philosophy about diversity.
The chancellor of the district issued a press release stating that Kehowski’s “message is not aligned with the vision of our district” but explaining that disciplinary action against Kehowski “could seriously undermine our ability to promote true academic freedom.” Although Kehowski’s emails were not sent to any students, many obviously found out about them, and the student body president circulated an email to the faculty declaring that Kehowski “did not do anything illegal, but none of us believe [his] actions were ethical or in good taste.” Contemporary press accounts describe vocal student protests against Kehowski.
A number of district employees also complained to the administration that Kehowski’s statements had created a hostile work environment. No disciplinary action was taken against Kehowski, and no steps were taken to enforce the district’s existing anti-harassment policy.
Plaintiffs now seek damages and other relief on the ground that defendants “failed to take immediate or appropriate steps to prevent Mr. Kehowski from sending Plaintiffs harassing emails” and from disseminating harassing speech via his district-hosted website. The district court
Jurisdiction
On an interlocutory appeal from a denial of qualified immunity, jurisdiction is limited to the purely legal question of immunity. See Cunningham v. Gates,
The district court characterized the central question of our qualified immunity analysis — whether defendants violated a clearly established right of which a reasonable person would have known — as a factual inquiry, and denied immunity on the grounds that “[a] genuine issue of material fact exists as to whether the acts or omissions of Defendants ... were objectively reasonable.” Plaintiffs claim that we lack jurisdiction to review this determination, and that the question of qualified immunity must therefore go to a jury. But the contours of the right at issue, and the reasonableness of defendants’ actions, is not a question of fact — it’s a question of law. See, e.g., Knox v. Southwest Airlines,
Qualified Immunity
It’s clearly established in our circuit that public employees are entitled under the Equal Protection Clause to be free of purposeful workplace harassment on the basis of protected status. See Alaska v. EEOC,
Plaintiffs may wish that the district had disciplined or dismissed Kehowski, but the district wasn’t required to do so. When an employer is made aware of unlawful harassment, employees are entitled to have the employer take reasonable and appropriate steps to investigate and make it stop. Andrews v. City of Philadelphia,
Plaintiffs no doubt feel demeaned by Kehowski’s speech, as his very thesis can be understood to be that they are less than equal. But that highlights the problem with plaintiffs’ suit. Their objection to Kehowski’s speech is based entirely on his point of view, and it is axiomatic that the government may not silence speech because the ideas it promotes are thought to be offensive. See Brandenburg v. Ohio,
Indeed, precisely because Kehowski’s ideas fall outside the mainstream, his words sparked intense debate: Colleagues emailed responses, and Kehowski replied; some voiced opinions in the editorial pages of the local paper; the administration issued a press release; and, in the best tradition of higher learning, students protested. The Constitution embraces such a heated exchange of views, even (perhaps especially) when they concern sensitive topics like race, where the risk of conflict and insult is high. See R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul,
This is particularly so on college campuses. Intellectual advancement has traditionally progressed through discord and dissent, as a diversity of views ensures that ideas survive because they are correct, not because they are popular. Colleges and universities — sheltered from the currents of popular opinion by tradition, geography, tenure and monetary endowments — have historically fostered that exchange. But that role in our society will not survive if certain points of view may be declared beyond the pale. “Teachers and students must always remain free to inquire, to study and to evaluate, to gain new maturity and understanding; otherwise our civilization will stagnate and die.” Keyishian v. Bd. of Regents of the Univ. of the State of N.Y.,
The First Amendment also demands substantial deference to the college’s decision not to take action against Kehowski. The academy’s freedom to make such decisions without excessive judicial oversight is an “essential” part of academic liberty and a “special concern of the First Amendment.” Regents of the Univ. of Cal. v. Bakke,
These First Amendment principles must guide our interpretation of the right to be free of purposeful workplace harassment under the Equal Protection Clause. When Congress enacted the Fourteenth Amendment, it enshrined a concept of liberty that has been understood to include the “general principle of free speech.” Gitlow,
History likewise suggests that the Fourteenth Amendment was intended to extend, and not retract, the freedoms enshrined in the First. In the run up to the Civil War, professors and colleges played a key role in the spread of abolitionist ideas. See Robert Bruce Slater, The American Colleges That Led the Abolition Movement, J. Blacks in Higher Educ., Sept. 1995, at 95-97. The South moved to harshly suppress abolitionism as dangerous and incendiary, and Republicans responded by making “demands for free speech a centerpiece of their political program.” Michael Kent Curtis, The 1859 Crisis Over Hinton Helper’s Book, The Impending Crisis: Free Speech, Slavery, and Some Light on the Meaning of the First Section of the Fourteenth Amendment, 68 Chi.-Kent L. Rev. 1113, 1151 (1993); see also id. at 1131, 1134-38. It can hardly be surprising, then, that the Reconstruction Congress sought to protect freedom of speech along with other fundamental liberties when it enacted the Fourteenth Amendment. See, e.g., id. at 1172-74. Free speech has been a powerful force
We therefore doubt that a college professor’s expression on a matter of public concern, directed to the college community, could ever constitute unlawful harassment and justify the judicial intervention that plaintiffs seek. See Eugene Volokh, Comment, Freedom of Speech and Workplace Harassment, 39 UCLA L. Rev. 1791, 1849-55 (1992). Harassment law generally targets conduct, and it sweeps in speech as harassment only when consistent with the First Amendment. See R.A.V.,
In the context of a supervisory relationship, advocacy of discriminatory ideas can connote an implicit threat of discriminatory treatment and could therefore amount to intentional discrimination.
Plaintiffs assert that the district could have applied its harassment policy to suppress Kehowski’s speech because he spoke in a limited or nonpublic forum. For the purpose of this appeal, we assume plaintiffs are correct that the email list and servers were limited or nonpublic forums. See Perry Educ. Ass’n v. Perry Local Educators’ Ass’n,
Nor are we impressed by plaintiffs’ suggestion that the district could have suppressed Kehowski’s speech by limiting discussion on its mailing list and web servers to official school business. We assume the First Amendment would not prevent the district from restricting use in that manner. See id. at 49,
The power to limit or close a forum does not entail any such obligation. If speech is harassment, the proper response is to silence the harasser, not shut down the forum. And if speech is not harassment, listeners who are offended by the ideas being discussed certainly are not entitled to shut down an entire forum simply because they object to what some people are saying. Such a rule would contravene the First Amendment’s hostility towards laws that “confer broad powers of censorship, in the form of a ‘heckler’s veto,’ upon any opponent of’ certain points of view. Reno v. ACLU,
We therefore conclude that defendants did not violate plaintiffs’ right to be free of workplace harassment. See Pearson,
* * *
It’s easy enough to assert that Kehowski’s ideas contribute nothing to academic debate, and that the expression of his point of view does more harm than good. But the First Amendment doesn’t allow us to weigh the pros and cons of certain types of speech. Those offended by Kehowski’s ideas should engage him in debate or hit the “delete” button when they receive his emails. They may not invoke the power of the government to shut him up.
REVERSED.
Notes
. See Wikipedia, Columbus Day, at http://en. wikipedia.org/Columbus_Day (last visited March 19, 2010).
. Because this is not such a case, we cannot hold what standard should be applied to determine whether advocacy of discriminatory ideas by a supervisor contains an implicit threat and constitutes harassment. Suffice to say that supervisors retain First Amendment rights and their speech is entitled to significant breathing space before it will be deemed harassment. Cf. Lovell v. Poway Unified Sch. Dist., 90 F.3d 367, 372 (9th Cir.1996) (speech can only be prohibited as a threat if a reasonable person would foresee that it would be interpreted as a serious expression of intent to act in the threatened manner).
