SCHUDSON, J.
¶ 1. Vera Hutson, a probation and parole agent for the Wisconsin Department of Corrections (DOC), appeals from the circuit court order affirming a decision of the Wisconsin Personnel Commission dismissing her unlawful retaliation claim against
DOC, under the Wisconsin Employee Protection Act (Subchapter III of Chapter 230, the Wisconsin State Employment Relations Act), commonly known as the "Whistleblower Law."
The Commission, following a five-day hearing, determined that Hutson's memo to her supervisor, advising him of her caseload concerns, was not a disclosure of information protected under Wis. Stat. § 230.80 (1995-96) of the Whistleblower Law.
The Commission concluded, therefore, that it need not address Hutson's allegation that DOC unlawfully retaliated against her when it reprimanded her within six months after she wrote the memo.
¶ 2. Hutson argues that the Commission erred in concluding that her memo was not a disclosure of information protected under the Whistleblower Law. She is correct and, accordingly, this court reverses and remands for the Commission's consideration of Hutson's unlawful retaliation claim.
I. BACKGROUND
¶ 3. The Commission provided a fifty-page decision and order detailing many aspects of this case that may prove important following remand. Here, however, we briefly recount only those findings, undisputed on appeal, that help to clarify the context of the case and define the dispositive issue in this appeal.
¶ 4. Hutson began her employment as a DOC probation and parole agent in 1990. As an agent, she was responsible for monitoring offenders placed on probation or parole through Wisconsin's criminal jus
tice system.
Her caseload, like that of other agents, was "calculated by using a point system designed to reflect the amount of time spent by the agent supervising offenders." For the period relevant to this case, a "memo of understanding" between DOC and Hutson's union provided for a caseload maximum of 260 points. The point system, however, "did not include a category for cases in which the agent did not meet with the offender on a scheduled basis."
¶ 5. In October 1995, Hutson was assigned to Unit 033, the Milwaukee office of a new "administrative minimum" program designed to work with a private vendor to provide telephone-monitoring of thousands of clients classified as low-risk offenders. In that assignment, Hutson reported to her supervisor, James Wake. Wake reported to Kathleen Ware, one of three deputy chiefs for the Milwaukee district, and Ware reported to Allan Kasprzak, chief of the Milwaukee region.
¶ 6. On February 5, 1996, Hutson wrote a memo, "Re: Workload Relief," to Wake, with copies to Ware and two union officials. The memo stated:
I am writing this correspondence to request workload relief and/or authorized overtime of one hour per every 5.5 points over the 260 point caseload cap per our union contractual agreement for the 1995-1997 contract year. I am currently supervising a total of 559 cases [,] 475 under my agent number and 84 for a co-worker who will be out on sick leave for the next four to seven weeks. I am 319 points above the 260 maximum caseload cap. According to the Department of Corrections manual CC/SD standards [,] cases classified as minimum are weighted as one point per case. I am aware of the fact that some specialized units are excluded from the 260 point caseload cap maximum. However, the exclusion only takes effect after a mutual agreement is reached between the Secretary of the Department of Corrections, the Regional Chief(s), D[OC] Employment Relations, AFSCME Council 24 and the local union. To my knowledge that has not occurred. Therefore, I am fully covered under the 1995-1997 contract and the agreement of a 260 workload cap maximum.
Due to the excessive workload and a caseload that continues to grow without a foreseeable end, coupled with the lack of clarity under a supervisory style that is extremely arbitrary and capricious[,] I have found the work environment to be highly stressful and terribly distracting to try to manage my caseload adequately and professionally. I am at this time requesting that reasonable guidelines be established that would enable me to perform my job to best meet the needs of the protection of the community, the Department of Corrections and myself as agent in the Minimum/Administrative unit.
Your response will be appreciated;
Sincerely,
Vera Hutson
(Footnote added.) According to the Commission's find
ings, "[t]wo other agents in Unit 033, Vicki Turner and Michelle McKinstry, were also understood to support the memo."
¶ 7. In a February 9, 1996 memo to Hutson, with a copy to Ware, Wake responded by scheduling a February 20 meeting to discuss Hutson's concerns. Hutson replied with a memo reminding Wake and Ware that, a few weeks earlier, she had been assigned to be in Beloit to enroll clients in the unit. Wake promptly replied, offering to reschedule the meeting.
¶ 8. In the meantime, however, on February 19, Hutson and Wake had a "heated argument" involving a court hearing and related matters. Wake then took several steps. He contacted two of Hutson's previous supervisors for information about their experiences with her; filed a complaint with DOC's Affirmative Action office alleging Hutson was harassing him and creating a hostile environment; began to maintain a file documenting his interactions with Hutson; restricted his contact with Hutson to communications in writing or conversations in the presence of witnesses; and he directed Hutson "to review a list of [Milwaukee] Region . . . cases 'without files' and take certain actions by March 1st."
¶ 9. On February 29, Wake and Ware met with Hutson regarding her memo; they also met with McK-instry and Turner.
At the meeting with Hutson, Ware
"explained that Unit 033 was not subject to the memo of understanding between the agents' union and management, regarding caseload." Thus, on March 5, Ware wrote a memo to Hutson, McKinstry, and Turner, stating:
As Supervisor James Wake and I have concluded meeting with each of you regarding your request for workload relief!,] I want to advise you that no formal action to reassign workload or reduce the number of cases assigned will be taken at this time. The reasons for this action are as follows:
• No point classification is assigned to cases within the unit at this time. As you were advised, the legislature removed workload credit for minimum/administrative from the CC/SD system effective Jan. 1, 1996.
• In your request you indicated that per manual chapter 02.03.01-.02!,] cases at minimum are assigned 1 point. As you were advised, you are not required to meet the manual standards of face to face contact or home visits!,] as appropriate!,] which based on a time study generated 1 point.
• At present the unit does not have an exemption to the memorandum of understanding; however, the process has been started.
Both Jim and I continue to remain open to your feedback and to specific suggestions you may have regarding making the work environment more productive and to increase the efficiency of the Unit. I look
forward to your ideas for duties which a Program Assistant can assume to assist you in managing your workload.
¶ 10. On March 13, 1996, Wake convened a meeting "related to procedures and practices as well as issues within the unit." When, however, Hutson told Wake, "You are treating us like slaves," Wake "abruptly terminated the meeting."
¶ 11. On March 15, 1996, Hutson wrote a memo to Milwaukee Region Chief Kasprzak, with copies to Wake, Ware, and a union representative, stating that it seemed "no one [was] willing to listen" to the agents' concerns about Wake and the need for workload relief, and expressing additional concern about the agents' "personal safety" in light of Wake's anger. Kasprzak promptly responded by scheduling a March 19 meeting for members of his management team, Wake, Hutson, McKinstry, Turner, and the agents' union representative, to meet with him.
¶ 12. On March 19, three meetings relating to Hutson's concerns took place. Wake, Ware, and Kasprzak attended the third meeting and, according to the Commission, "Mr. Wake made contemporaneous notes" that "accurately describe Mr. Kasprzak's comments." Those notes stated, in part, that Kasprzak, referring to Hutson, McKinstry, and Turner, said:
• "The strategy is to separate them (the trouble makers) and grind them down one by one[.],"
• "The way to beat a bully is to beat him senseless."
• "I just ignore harassment complaints against me. The Dept[.] will ride it out and the complainant will be bought off and the reward to them (complain-
antQ] is piddly[]. They gave [an agent] $7000. After attorney fees she got nothing."
• "This is all part of being a manager."
("[an agent]" in Commission findings; all other alterations added.)
¶ 13. Following the March 19 meetings, Kasprzak wrote an "Outcomes" memo stating the six steps to be taken to address the agents' concerns, including: "Obtain an authoritative statement on whether caseload classification still applies to administrative/minimum cases ([Allan Kasprzak:] check w/ legal counsel or leg. liaison)"; and, "Foster a unit atmosphere of mutual respect in a harassment[-]free environment (All pledge to work on this)."
¶ 14. On March 29, Hutson spoke with DOC Secretary Michael Sullivan about her concerns. Then, on April 19, 1996, exactly one month after the March 19 meetings, Ware directed Hutson to report for an investigatory interview because of her alleged violation of
work rules involving harassment and use of inappropriate language with offenders. Three days later, Hutson wrote Secretary Sullivan seeking his "assistance in dealing with these issues" involving Wake, Ware, and the workload.
¶ 15. On June 6,1996, Hutson filed her complaint against DOC with the Commission. She alleged unlawful discrimination based on race and military status, unlawful retaliation under the WFEA, and unlawful retaliation under the Whistleblower Law.
¶ 16. On June 10, 1996, Hutson (as well as McKinstry, Turner, and another agent) transferred out of Unit 033 and, on August 19, 1996, following various disciplinary proceedings, DOC issued a written reprimand citing Hutson for various work-rule violations, including insubordination, disobedience, negligence, and harassment. Hutson appealed her reprimand under her contractual grievance procedure and, at arbitration, the reprimand was upheld. •
¶ 17. In May and June 1999, the Commission conducted a five-day hearing on Hutson's complaint and, more than one year later, on August 28, 2000, the Commission issued its Decision and Order dismissing Hutson's action against DOC. Hutson then sought circuit court review of the Commission's decision,
see
Wis. Stat. §§ 227.52-227.57, and, on September 20, 2001, the circuit court affirmed, leading to this appeal,
see
Wis. Stat. § 227.58. Here, only the Commission's dismissal of Hutson's whistleblower claim is at issue.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
¶ 18. On an appeal from a circuit court's order affirming or reversing an administrative agency's deci
sion, we review the decision of the agency, not that of the circuit court.
Barnes v. DNR,
178 Wis. 2d 290, 302, 506 N.W.2d 155 (Ct. App. 1993). We do not substitute our judgment for that of the Commission, as to the weight of the evidence or credibility of witnesses.
See Kannenberg v. LIRC,
213 Wis. 2d 373, 384, 571 N.W.2d 165 (Ct. App. 1997); Wis. Stat. § 227.57(6). Whether the Commission properly interpreted a statute, however, presents a question of law; we are not bound by the Commission's interpretation.
See Kannenberg,
213 Wis. 2d at 384; § 227.57(5).
¶ 19. In this appeal, no factual finding is in question. The issue, simply, is whether Hutson's February 5 memo is a protected disclosure under Wisconsin's Whistleblower Law.
As we will explain, resolution of
that issue required the Commission to determine whether the memo disclosed "information," as defined by Wis. Stat. § 230.80(5), which further required the Commission to determine whether the memo described "mismanagement," as defined by § 230.80(7).
¶ 20. Thus, we are presented with a purely legal issue involving the Commission's interpretation of the statutes. Nevertheless, we defer to an agency's statutory interpretations in certain situations.
Kannenberg,
213 Wis. 2d at 384-85. As we have explained:
We give great weight when:
(1) the agency was charged by the legislature with the duty of administering the statute; (2)... the interpretation of the agency is one of long-standing; (3)... the agency employed its expertise or specialized knowledge in forming the interpretation; and (4)... the agency's interpretation will provide uniformity and consistency in the application of the statute.
We also give great weight to an agency's interpretation if it is intertwined with factual determinations or with value or policy determinations. We give a lesser amount
of deference — due weight — when the agency has some experience in the area but has not developed the expertise that necessarily places it in a better position than the court to make judgments regarding the interpretation of the statute.
Under the great weight standard, we uphold an agency's reasonable interpretation of the statute if it is not contrary to the clear meaning of the statute, even if we conclude another interpretation is more reasonable. However, under the due weight standard, we uphold the agency's reasonable interpretation if it comports with the purpose of the statute and we conclude there is not a more reasonable interpretation.
Id.
at 385 (citations omitted).
¶ 21. In this case, the Commission argues that its decision is entitled to great weight, while Hutson suggests that the decision may be entitled to "no special deference" given that "this court is as competent as the administrative agency to decide the legal question involved." We conclude, however, that the Commission's decision deserves due weight (though we hasten to add that our resolution of this appeal would be the same even under the great-weight standard).
¶ 22. In its lengthy decision, the Commission devoted three pages to a discussion of whether Hutson's memo was a protected disclosure under the Whistle-blower Law. The Commission cited no case law addressing a similar issue (and indeed, on appeal, the parties have not cited a single case to which the Commission could have turned for clear guidance), and only one of its own administrative decisions, issued March 14, 1997, dealing with a comparable question.
¶ 23. Thus, while the Commission clearly has the duty to administer the Whistleblower Law,
see
Wis.
Stat. §§ 230.03(8) & 230.89, its interpretation of the statutes in question is not "of long-standing," and its "expertise or specialized knowledge in forming the interpretation" still appears to be in the formative stage,
see Kannenberg,
213 Wis. 2d at 385 (citations omitted). Thus, the situation here seems to be of the kind we anticipated when explaining that due deference is appropriate "when the agency has some experience in the area but has not developed the expertise that necessarily places it in a better position than the court to make judgments regarding the interpretation of the statute."
Id.
B. The Statutes
¶ 24. Wisconsin's Whistleblower Law is part of Chapter 230, the Wisconsin State Employment Relations Act. The Statement of Policy of the Act provides, in part, "It is the purpose of this chapter to provide state agencies . . . with competent personnel who will furnish state services to citizens as fairly, efficiently and effectively ás possible." Wis. Stat. § 230.01(1). The Statement of Policy also provides, "It is the policy of this state to encourage disclosure of information under subch. Ill and to ensure that any employe[e] employed by a governmental unit is protected from retaliatory action for disclosing information under subch. III." Wis. Stat. § 230.01(2).
¶ 25. Subchapter III, entitled "Employe[e] Protection," provides the statutory framework under which governmental employees may gain protection against retaliation for making certain disclosures of information under certain circumstances. As relevant to the circumstances of the instant case, Wis. Stat. § 230.81 provides:
Employe[e] disclosure. (1) An employe[e] with
knowledge of information the disclosure of which is not expressly prohibited by state or federal law, rule or regulation may disclose that information to any other person. However, to obtain protection under s. 230.83, before disclosing that information to any person other than his or her attorney, collective bargaining representative or legislator, the employe[e] shall do . . . the following:
(a) Disclose the information in writing to the employee's supervisor.
¶ 26. Wisconsin Stat. § 230.80(5) defines "information":
"Information" means information gained by the employe[e] which the employe[e] reasonably believes demonstrates:
(a) A violation of any state or federal law, rule or regulation.
(b) Mismanagement or abuse of authority in state or local government, a substantial waste of public funds or a danger to public health and safety.
In this case, the parties agree that Hutson's memo, if protected at all, complained of "Mismanagement" under Wis. Stat. § 230.80(5)(b). Wisconsin Stat. § 230.80(7) defines "mismanagement":
"Mismanagement" means a pattern of incompetent management actions which are wrongful, negligent or arbitrary and capricious and which adversely affect the efficient accomplishment of an agency function. "Mismanagement" does not mean the mere failure to act in accordance with a particular opinion regarding management techniques.
C. The Commission's Decision
¶ 27. The Commission concluded that Hutson's February 5,1996 memo failed to state a claim under the Whistleblower Law because it did not describe "a pattern of incompetent management," under Wis. Stat. § 230.80(7) and, therefore, did not qualify as a protected disclosure of "information" under Wis. Stat. § 230.80(5)(b). The Commission explained, in relevant part:
Complainant's comments about an "arbitrary and capricious" supervisory style and the lack of "reasonable guidelines" are too general and conclusory to satisfy the statutory requirement for making a disclosure of "information." Complainant's statements could relate to the general concept of "mismanagement" that is defined in [Wis. Stat.] § 230.80(7), but it is impossible to say that these references in her February 5th memo describe mismanagement. Therefore, complainant's references to the style of supervision and to a lack of guidelines do not satisfy the requirements for a protected whistleblower disclosure.
The second topic of complainant's February 5th memo is her allegation that she has an excessive workload. The record raises significant questions about whether it was reasonable to conclude that the workload was excessive....
Even though there is significant evidence suggesting it would have been unreasonable to believe complainant's caseload was excessive, agents McKinstry and Turner shared complainant's opinion. Without deciding this point,
the Commission will assume that complainant has been able to meet her burden of showing hers was a "reasonable belief that the caseload assigned her was excessive and, as a consequence, a wrongful and negligent management action.
Even assuming complainant has met the "reasonable belief standard and that establishing a workload level is a wrongful management action that is not a "management technique," complainant's disclosure did not describe a "pattern of incompetent management actions" as required in the definition of "management." This language reflects a clear legislative intent to provide the protections of the Whistleblower Law to only those employe[e]s who identify a series of incompetent management actions, i.e. more than an isolated instance of alleged mismanagement.
Complainant's reference to an excessive workload is not a protected disclosure of "information."
(Footnotes omitted;
"series"
italicized in Commission's decision; other emphases added.)
D. Analysis
¶ 28. What constitutes "information" under Wis. Stat. § 230.80(5), and "mismanagement" under subsec
tions 230.80(5)(b) and (7), are matters of first impression for Wisconsin's appellate courts. In this case, we see several flaws in the Commission's analysis.
¶ 29. First, we note that at the two portions of its decision where the Commission quoted Hutson's February 5 memo (in its factual findings and, later, in its introductory paragraph preceding its whistleblower decision just quoted), it did so incompletely. At both these critical junctures, the Commission failed to quote substantial portions of Hutson's memo. The first of the deleted portions states:
I am 319 points above the 260 maximum caseload cap. According to the Department of Corrections manual CC/SD standards [,] cases classified as minimum are weighted as one point per case. I am aware of the fact that some specialized units are excluded from the 260 point caseload cap maximum. However, the exclusion only takes effect after a mutual agreement is reached between the Secretary of the Department of Corrections, the Regional Chiefis), D[OC] Employment Relations, AFSCME Council 24 and the local union. To my knowledge that has not occurred. Therefore, I am fully covered under the 1995-1997 contract and the agreement of a 260 workload cap maximum.
¶ 30. Without this deleted portion, Hutson's memo might seem to be one complaining of a "mere failure to act in accordance with [her] particular opinion regarding management techniques," thus not constituting information demonstrating "mismanagement" as defined by Wis. Stat. § 230.80(7). But with its explicit reference to DOC's own standards, and its implicit reference to a DOC-AFSCME agreement controlling any exception to those standards, it is difficult to discern any basis for concluding that Hutson's memo failed to adequately allege "mismanagement."
¶ 31. Second, and in a closely related sense, Hutson's memo, asking that "reasonable guidelines be established that would enable [her] to perform [her] job
to best meet the needs of the protection of the community, the Department of Corrections and [her] self as agent in the Minimum/Administrative unit," presented more than a personal complaint of "the mere failure to act in accordance with a particular opinion regarding management techniques." Wis. Stat. § 230.80(7). Here, again, we note that the Commission, at both portions of its decision where it quoted Hutson's memo, deleted critical words. It failed to quote: "to best meet the needs of the protection of the community, the Department of Corrections and [her] self as agent in the Minimum/Administrative unit."
¶ 32. And here, again, the deleted words weave into much more than personal matters or "particular opinion[s] regarding management techniques."
Id.
While the Commission argues that "[i]t is clear that Hutson simply disagreed with DOC management about what was or was not an excessive caseload," Hutson's memo emphatically and specifically expressed far more than simple disagreement. When one juxtaposes Hutson's memo, including these deleted words, to the position description of a DOC probation and parole agent,
see
n.l, the memo emerges as a clear and cogent attempt to alert DOC superiors to critical concerns at the very heart of Hutson's and her colleagues' ability to be "responsible for the provision of services to protect the public."
¶ 33. Third, the Commission, determining that Hutson's memo failed to disclose "a pattern of incompetent management actions which are wrongful, negligent or arbitrary and capricious and which adversely affect the efficient accomplishment of an agency function," Wis. Stat. § 230.80(7), concluded that the statutory language "reflected] a clear legislative intent to provide the protections of the Whistleblower Law to
only those employe [e]s who identify a
series
of incompetent management actions, i.e.[,] more than an isolated instance of alleged mismanagement." We disagree.
¶ 34. In the first place, the Commission provided nothing to support its assertion of a "clear legislative intent" that would allow or require "pattern" to be read as "series," and on appeal, the Commission does not renew this theory. In fact, at oral argument before this court, the Commission conceded that the legislature has "left us with some puzzlement" in defining "mismanagement."
In the second place, such a theory
makes no sense; it would, in many instances, defeat the very purpose of the Whistleblower Law.
¶ 35. Interpreting a statute, we first look to the words the legislature has chosen and give the words of a statute their plain meaning.
Jungbluth v. Hometown, Inc.,
201 Wis. 2d 320, 327, 548 N.W.2d 519 (1996). If the intent of the legislature is clear from a statute's language, we must give effect to this intent and look no further.
Jadair Inc. v. United States Fire Ins. Co.,
209 Wis. 2d 187, 195, 562 N.W.2d 401 (1997). In the absence of ambiguity, we give words in a statute their common meaning, which may be established by reference to a recognized dictionary.
Kollasch v. Adamany,
104 Wis. 2d 552, 563, 313 N.W.2d 47 (1981). When a statute "is capable of being construed in different ways, that construction which works an absurd or unreasonable result should be avoided."
Jadair,
209 Wis. 2d at 195.
¶ 36. In Webster's Third New International Dictionary (1993), "pattern" is defined as "a fully realized form, original, or model accepted or proposed for imitation: something regarded as a normative example to be copied."
Id.
at 1657. "Series," however, is defined as "a group of usu[ally] three or more things or events standing or succeeding in order and having a .like relationship to each other."
Id.
at 2073. Obviously, therefore, a "pattern" may be triggered or established by a single act.
See Steinberg v. Arcilla,
194 Wis. 2d 759, 769, 535 N.W.2d 444 (Ct. App. 1995) (No "minimum number of 'specific instances'" is required to establish
"habit" under Wis. Stat. § 904.06(2); under certain circumstances, "one is enough."). Hutson's memo is an excellent example. Assuming, as the Commission did, that Hutson's memo complained of a single "wrongful and negligent management action," it nonetheless alerted her superiors to an action potentially affecting numerous probation and parole agents and thousands of offenders under their supervision.
¶ 37. What could better demonstrate "a pattern of incompetent management actions which are wrongful, negligent or arbitrary and capricious and which adversely affect the efficient accomplishment of an agency function"?
See
Wis. Stat. § 230.80(7). What possible purpose, consistent with the Whistleblower Law, could be served by requiring a probation and parole agent to await a "series" of actions before alerting superiors to a single action establishing a pattern that endangers our citizens? Indeed, in this case, Hutson's memo all but points directly at the very purpose of the Wisconsin State Employment Relations Act: "to provide state agencies ... with competent personnel
who will furnish state services to citizens as fairly, efficiently and effectively as possible."
Wis. Stat. § 230.01(1) (emphasis added).
¶ 38. Therefore, we conclude, the Commission erred in determining that Hutson's February 5 memo was not a protected disclosure of "information" under Wis. Stat. § 230.80(5). Thus, we reverse and remand for the Commission to consider Hutson's retaliation claim under Wisconsin's Whistleblower Law.
By the Court.
— Order reversed and cause remanded with directions.