Jim Barrett v. Walker County School District

872 F.3d 1209, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 19012
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 2, 2017
Docket16-11952
StatusPublished
Cited by71 cases

This text of 872 F.3d 1209 (Jim Barrett v. Walker County School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jim Barrett v. Walker County School District, 872 F.3d 1209, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 19012 (11th Cir. 2017).

Opinions

ROSENBAUM, Circuit Judge:

Control the clock and control the game. Winning coaches in many sports have employed this strategy.1 And Plaintiff-Appel-lee Jim Barrett asserts that the lesson wasn’t lost on Defendant-Appellant Walker County School District, either. To speak at a Walker County Board of Education meeting, the District requires a member of the public to first go through a process that can consist of several steps. If the entire process is not completed at least one week before the Board meeting, the citizen may not speak at the meeting. Yet critically, the Board completely controls the timing of a step at the beginning of the process. If the Board drags its feet in completing this step, a member of the public cannot finish the rest of the steps in time to be permitted to speak.

Barrett is a public-school teacher who believes that the District has wielded this policy to unconstitutionally censor speech critical of the Board and its employees at school-board meetings. He filed suit in federal court, asserting a variety of First Amendment facial and as-applied claims in his quest for, among other things, an injunction against various aspects of the Board’s policy governing public comment at its meetings.

The district court ultimately granted Barrett a permanent injunction based on some of his facial claims and enjoined the Board’s public-comment policy. It also allowed a number of Barrett’s other claims to proceed to discovery.

Defendants now appeal the injunction. We have appellate jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1), which allows us to review “[ijnterlocutory orders ... granting ... injunctions.” After careful review, and with the benefit of oral argument, we affirm in part, vacate in part, and remand for further proceedings.

I.

[1215]*1215A.2

According to his verified complaint, Barrett is employed by the District as a seventh- and eighth-grade social-studies teacher. He is also the president of the Walker County Association of Educators (“WCAE”).

The District is managed by the Walker County Board of Education, which itself is composed of five elected officials. One of those officials, Defendant Mike Carruth, is the Chairperson of the Board; in that capacity, he presides over Board meetings, signs documents on behalf of the Board, and performs other duties. Defendant Damon Raines is the Superintendent of the District, a job that makes him responsible for all operations of the District, including the implementation of District policies and procedures.

Except in January and February, the Board holds a meeting every month. The Board also holds a planning session each month. Members of the public are allowed to comment at the meetings and planning sessions. In advance of each meeting or planning session, the Board publishes an agenda of items to be discussed, and the agenda indicates the time allotted for public comment. The Board has a policy that governs how members of the public may obtain permission to speak during these public-comment sessions (the “Policy”).

Barrett is no stranger to the public-comment sessions of Board meetings: according to his complaint, he “has publicly participated in Board meetings in the past by endorsing actions of the Board, commending the Board on past actions and recognizing employees of the Board for good deeds.” And he contends that, despite the existence of the Policy, he “has not been subjected to the procedural requirements of [the Policy] prior to making such public comments.”

But Barrett asserts that the Board’s tune changed when Barrett’s comments began to strike the wrong chord with the Board: Barrett contends that the Board started requiring him to comply with the Policy only when he started speaking critically of the Board.

Barrett’s litigation saga begins with a topic controversial in any school: grades. In the period from May 2014 to January 2015, Barrett became a “vocal critic” of new grading procedures that the Superintendent had implemented without the Board’s having taken any official action. As Barrett saw things, this new grading policy negatively affected student performance and teacher-performance evaluations.

So in his capacity as President of WCAE, Barrett publicly criticized the grading policy during meetings of WCAE and during in-person discussions with the Superintendent. According to Barrett, he had “several discussions with Superintendent Raines on this topic” during which the Superintendent “vehemently disagreed with Mr. Barrett about the impact of his new procedures” and “often became agitated and upset with Mr. Barrett for his attempts to raise this issue with the Board and in public.”

Barrett eventually took the issue of the grading policy to the membership of WCAE, and “the organization agreed to publicly speak against the new grading policy.” The Board meeting scheduled for February 17, 2015, presented “the first opportunity for WCAE to speak to the Board in opposition to the policy.” So Barrett set out to obtain permission from the Board to speak during the public-comment session of that meeting.

[1216]*1216To comply with the Policy, Barrett emailed the Superintendent on January 20, 2015, “requesting to meet with [the Superintendent] in order to speak with the [Board] at its next Planning Session with respect to matters of school/district administration.” The Superintendent responded that he was “available” eight days-later, “on Wednesday, January 28.” Barrett and the Superintendent met on the agreed-upon day, and Barrett “presented his concerns in writing and requested the process to be completed so that he could appear at the February Board meeting.”

After the meeting, Barrett followed up with the Superintendent by e-mail, asking that the Superintendent respond in writing to Barrett’s written concerns. The Superintendent replied by e-mail on February 4, stating that he would “have written documentation prepared addressing the concerns” and that he would “deliver [the documentation] on Monday, February 9.”

Barrett and the Superintendent met for about an hour on February 9. The Superintendent gave Barrett four single-spaced written pages in response to Barrett’s previously raised concerns, and the two discussed the results of the Superintendent’s investigation. As Barrett tells the story, “The Superintendent expressed his dissatisfaction with Mr. Barrett’s views on the issues and Mr. Barrett’s efforts to speak to the Board about education policy issues that were critical of actions taken by [the District] and the Superintendent.”

Immediately after the meeting, Barrett mailed a letter-to the Superintendent. The letter,1' dated February 9, asked that the Superintendent “accept th[e] letter as [Barrett’s] written request to speak at the February 16, 2015 regular meeting of the Walker County Board of Education.” Barrett explained in the letter that he wished to speak about the new grading policy and three other topics.

Two days later, on February 11, 2015, Barrett received a letter from the Superintendent postmarked February 11. The letter noted that, on February 11, the Superintendent received Barrett’s request to speak. This, the letter explained, was too late under the Policy for Barrett to be permitted to speak at the Board’s February 17 meeting.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
872 F.3d 1209, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 19012, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jim-barrett-v-walker-county-school-district-ca11-2017.