Whistleblower Aid Bill Gains Steam;
Constitutional Right?
Whistleblower Aid Bill
Gains Steam
By GINGER
ADAMS OTIS
A new bill that seeks to buttress the rights
and protections afforded to Federal employees acting as whistleblowers against
government fraud and mismanagement is garnering broad bipartisan support in
Congress.
COLLEEN M.
KELLEY: Bill aids workers, public.
The legislation,
known officially as the Federal Employee Protection Disclosure Act, was
introduced earlier this month by U.S. Sens. Daniel Akaka, a Democrat from
Hawaii, and Susan Collins, a Republican from Maine. It's already gotten an
additional nine co-sponsors who come from both parties. |
Spurred by Court Ruling
The bill is a response to a May 30, 2006 ruling from the U.S. Supreme Court
that said public employees have no First Amendment rights when they speak out on
topics related to their assigned duties.
The high court's 5-4 ruling in Garcetti et al. v. Ceballos was the first
decision issued after the retirement of Justice Sandra Day O'Connor. Her
replacement, Justice Samuel Alito, sided with the other conservative Justices in
reversing the established case law that public employees speaking out as part of
their job have constitutionally-protected rights.
The case involved a Deputy District Attorney in Los Angeles, Richard
Ceballos, who while on duty wrote a memo to supervisors questioning the validity
of a search warrant. He was then demoted and transferred - actions he alleged
were retaliatory. His employer denied the charge.
The U.S. Department of Justice filed an amicus brief in the Ceballos case
urging the court to rule against the employee. The National Treasury Employees'
Union, which represents Federal workers in many agencies, including the
Environmental Protection Agency and the Internal Revenue Service, submitted an
amicus brief on behalf of Mr. Ceballos.
'Deserve Protection'
"Again and again, public employees, armed with their specialized expertise
and data or other insights resulting from their work, have served the public
interest by exposing wrongdoing or waste of government funds and by presenting
unpopular but objectively sound conclusions and opinions. . . . This speech is
entitled to constitutional protection," NTEU lawyers wrote.
The Supreme Court, however, found a distinction between "citizen speech" and
"employee speech."
The majority decision stated that "two inquiries guide interpretation of the
constitutional protections accorded public employee speech. The first requires
determining whether the employee spoke as a citizen on a matter of public
concern. If the answer is no, the employee has no First Amendment cause of
action based on the employer's reaction to the speech."
The NTEU has said the impact of that ruling "was to effectively strip from
Federal employees protection from retaliation if they disclose information
obtained through their job."
'A Dangerous Loophole'
It also compounded problems caused by rulings of the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the Federal Circuit - which has exclusive jurisdiction to interpret the
Federal Whistleblowers Act and which has issued decisions substantially
narrowing whistleblower rights and protections - the union said.
The Akaka-Collins bill would "close a very dangerous loophole" opened up by
the Ceballos case, contended NTEU President Colleen M. Kelley. The union has
maintained that "when the voices of dissenting scientists, doctors, lawyers,
financial or law-enforcement professionals serving the public are silenced, the
American people will ultimately suffer."
The Akaka-Collins bill contains language clarifying that Federal employees
are protected for any disclosure of waste, fraud or abuse, including on those
matters learned about in connection with job duties.
It also would provide for an independent determination about the possibility
of retaliation against an employee-whistleblower for protected disclosures, and
it would suspend for five years the Appeals Court's sole jurisdiction over
Federal employee whistleblower cases.