Carr, R. v. PennDOT & SCSC Appeal of: PennDOT

CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 19, 2020
Docket3 MAP 2019
StatusPublished

This text of Carr, R. v. PennDOT & SCSC Appeal of: PennDOT (Carr, R. v. PennDOT & SCSC Appeal of: PennDOT) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carr, R. v. PennDOT & SCSC Appeal of: PennDOT, (Pa. 2020).

Opinion

[J-77-2019] IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA MIDDLE DISTRICT

SAYLOR, C.J., BAER, TODD, DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, JJ.

RACHEL L. CARR : No. 3 MAP 2019 : : Appeal from the Order of the v. : Commonwealth Court at No. 380 MD : 2017 dated June 12, 2018, which : reversed the adjudication of the State COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, : Civil Service Commission, entered DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION : August 1, 2017, at Appeal No. 29058. AND COMMONWEALTH OF : PENNSYLVANIA, STATE CIVIL SERVICE : ARGUED: September 12, 2019 COMMISSION : : : APPEAL OF: PENNSYLVANIA : DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION :

OPINION

JUSTICE MUNDY DECIDED: May 19, 2020 We granted allowance of appeal in this matter to consider whether a government

employer properly terminated a probationary employee based on messages she posted

to a social networking website. As set forth herein, we conclude that the Commonwealth

Court failed to engage in the required balancing of interests, and therefore erred when it

reversed the adjudication and order of the Pennsylvania State Civil Service Commission

(Commission) dismissing the probationary employee’s challenge to her termination.

Appellant, the Department of Transportation (Department) originally hired Rachel

Carr as a seasonal/non-permanent employee, Clerk I. It promoted her to the position of

Roadway Programs Technician I, which she started on March 5, 2016. Upon her

promotion, Carr was subjected to a 180-day probationary period. On May 24, 2016, Carr, while off-duty and at home, posted a “rant” through her personal Facebook1 account to

the closed Facebook group “Creeps of Peeps.”2 She also made several subsequent

responses to comments made by members of the Facebook group to the original post.

Carr’s Facebook profile identified her as a Roadway Programs Technician employed by

the Department. She originally posted the following:

Rant: can we acknowledge the horrible school bus drivers? I’m in PA almost on the NY boarder [sic] bear [sic] Erie and they are hella scary. Daily I get ran [sic] off the berm of our completely wide enough road and today one asked me to t- bone it. I end this rant saying I don’t give a flying shit about those babies and I will gladly smash into a school bus[.]

N.T. Commission Hearing, 11/17/16, Ex. AA-7. Some of her subsequent responses to

comments included the following:

If you see a vehicle coming perpendicular you [sic] with no turn signal on, do you pull out from your stop sign anyway? Lmk when you’re done googling perpendicular

Good then, you don’t? Then they shouldn’t either

...

And that’s my problem? They broke traffic law[s], which I’m abiding and I’m in the wrong? Get fucked. What world do you live in that I’d deliberate [sic] injure myself in stead [sic] of somebody else. [sic] Didn’t call myself a hero

1 Facebook is a social networking website. “Users of that Web site may post items on their Facebook page that are accessible to other users, including Facebook ‘friends’ who are notified when new content is posted.” Elonis v. United States, 575 U.S. ___, 135 S.Ct. 2001, 2004 (2015). 2A closed or private group allows only current members to post, comment or share in the group. “What are the privacy options for Facebook groups?” https://www.facebook.com/help/220336891328465 (last visited Jan. 22, 2020).

[J-77-2019] - 2 No I’m saying you don’t care about the random fucks that drive your kids and are you serious? Haha

I care about me.

Your children and your decision to chance them with a driver you’ve never been a passenger with is your problem. A vehicle pulls out in front of me or crosses the yellow line, that’s their problem. A sedan, school bus or water truck. You’re [sic] kids your problem. Not mine Id.

Three members of the Creeps of Peeps group forwarded complaints to the

Department’s Facebook page, including screenshots of Carr’s posts, and asked the

Department to take responsive action.3 The complaints were forwarded to the

Department’s human resources office, which scheduled a pre-disciplinary conference.

Following the conference, Carr was placed on suspension pending further investigation.

Subsequently, the Department terminated Carr’s employment due to inappropriate

behavior.

Carr appealed to the Commission pursuant to Section 951(b) of the Civil Service

Act (Act), alleging the Department violated Section 905.1 of the Act by terminating her

employment for her exercise of her right to free speech. Carr testified and offered the

testimony of Robert Chiappelli, the Department’s Human Resources Officer for the

district. The Department presented testimony from Anthony Reda, its Labor Relations

Supervisor. Chiappelli testified that he explains to all new employees the Department’s

expectations regarding their conduct, which includes off-duty conduct that has a nexus to

3One member of the group stated: “I hope there are consequences for for [sic] words.” The second admonished: “You need to take care of this.” The third insisted: “Rachel Carr should be fired for this!” N.T. Commission Hearing, 11/17/16, Ex. AA-7.

[J-77-2019] - 3 the Department and its mission. Chiappelli testified that Carr’s Facebook posts

undermined the Department’s goal of ensuring safety for the public on Pennsylvania

roads. He conceded her posts did not directly reflect an inability of Carr to perform her

job function. Chiappelli testified that Carr was not treated differently by the Department

than it has treated other employees in similar circumstances.

Reda, similarly testified that Carr’s off-duty behavior and not her job performance

constituted the reason for the termination of her employment. He explained that her posts

affected the Department’s image before the public and exposed the Department to

potential liability should Carr act in a manner consistent with her posts. Reda also testified

that the Department’s disciplinary action against Carr was consistent with actions against

similarly situated employees.

Carr testified that she never intended to act in accordance with her rant, which she

described as a response to her frustration over the perceived unsafe driving by school

bus drivers in her area. She expressed surprise that the tone of her post was of concern

to the public. Given the reaction, however, she testified she would not post in that manner

again.

The Commission affirmed the Department’s termination of Carr’s employment.

Based on its findings, the Commission concluded as follows:

[T]he Commission is at a complete loss to find any reasonable public interest in a rant about harming children or a bus driver. [Carr]’s remarks do not provide any educational information to the public or serve to inform them about any public matter. Furthermore, even if the Facebook rant contains an inkling of public interest, we find Chiappelli and Reda credible that [Carr] presented herself as an appointing authority employee and her rant completely disregards the basic safety mission put forth in its mission statement. [Carr]’s Facebook rant caused disruption to the appointing authority’s reputation and mission that outweighed [Carr’s] interest in her free speech. Thus, [Carr]’s Facebook rants do not constitute protected free speech.

[J-77-2019] - 4 Commission’s Adjudication, 8/1/17, at 18-19 (citation omitted). The Commission also

found that Carr did not present sufficient evidence that she had been treated differently

from other employees whose off-duty remarks brought the Department’s mission into

disrepute.

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