Florida Supreme Court Makes Whistleblower Retaliation Claims Harder to Win
1st Jun 2026
Florida employees who report workplace safety concerns and later face discipline or termination may now have a harder time winning whistleblower retaliation claims. In a significant decision issued on May 28, 2026, the Florida Supreme Court ruled that workers seeking protection under the state's private-sector Whistle-Blower's Act must prove the conduct they objected to was actually unlawful—not simply something they reasonably believed violated the law.
For workers, the case serves as a reminder that raising a concern and proving a legal violation are no longer the same thing.
Employers now have a clearer statewide standard for defending retaliation claims, while workers face a higher burden when attempting to prove they were punished for raising legal or safety concerns.
Quick Answer: What This Means for You
Employees bringing whistleblower retaliation claims under Florida's private-sector Whistle-Blower's Act must now show that the conduct they objected to was actually in violation of a law, rule, or regulation.
A sincere or objectively reasonable belief that conduct was unlawful may no longer be enough on its own to qualify for protection under the statute.
At a Glance: Key Legal Position
What changed?
The Florida Supreme Court rejected a more employee-friendly standard that allowed claims based on a reasonable belief that conduct was unlawful.
What standard applies now?
Employees must prove they objected to conduct that was actually in violation of a law, rule, or regulation.
What does that mean practically?
Future whistleblower cases may focus less on what an employee believed and more on whether the challenged conduct can be shown to have violated a specific legal requirement.
What Has Changed — and Why It Matters
The case arose from the termination of Clint Gessner, a welder mechanic who worked at Gulf Power Company's Pensacola facility.
Gessner worked for the company for nearly a decade. According to court records, he had received multiple disciplinary actions and was on probation before his employment ended. The company identified his use of racially disparaging language during a workplace meeting as the event that ultimately led to his dismissal.
Gessner challenged that explanation in court. He alleged that he was fired because he repeatedly raised concerns about workplace safety issues that he believed violated state or federal law.
His complaints involved a range of workplace practices, including hydrogen line repairs while turbines remained operational, natural gas purging procedures, coal dust accumulation and other safety-related concerns.
The dispute eventually reached Florida's highest court because judges disagreed on what employees must prove to qualify for whistleblower protection.
The Legal Problem Created
The entire case turned on the wording of Florida Statutes §448.102(3).
The statute protects employees who object to or refuse to participate in an employer activity, policy or practice that "is in violation of a law, rule, or regulation."
The question before the Court was straightforward but important: Must an employee prove an actual legal violation, or is it enough to show a reasonable belief that a violation occurred?
That distinction can determine whether a whistleblower retaliation claim succeeds or fails.
An employee may genuinely believe conduct is dangerous, improper or unlawful. But under the Court's interpretation, that belief alone may not trigger statutory protection if the conduct ultimately does not violate a law, rule or regulation.
Why the Court Sided With Employers
The Supreme Court concluded that the language chosen by the Florida Legislature requires proof of an actual violation.
The justices focused heavily on the statutory wording, noting that lawmakers referred to conduct that "is in violation" of the law rather than conduct merely suspected of being unlawful.
The ruling also resolves a long-running disagreement among Florida courts.
Some appellate courts had adopted a more employee-friendly approach that protected workers who reasonably believed their employer was breaking the law. Others required proof of an actual violation.
The Supreme Court ultimately adopted the stricter interpretation, creating a single statewide standard for whistleblower retaliation claims.
For businesses, the outcome brings greater certainty. For employees, it raises the evidentiary burden in many retaliation cases.
What Happens If You Raise a Complaint Before Confirming a Violation?
The ruling does not prevent employees from reporting workplace concerns.
Workers can still raise safety issues, question potentially unlawful conduct and object to practices they believe are improper.
What has changed is the importance of the underlying legal issue if a retaliation dispute later arises.
An employee who objects to conduct that ultimately turns out not to violate any law may face greater difficulty bringing a successful whistleblower claim if disciplinary action follows.
By contrast, where the conduct can be shown to violate a law, rule or regulation, statutory protection may still be available.
As a result, future disputes are likely to focus on whether a legal violation actually existed rather than whether an employee's concerns were ultimately supported by the law.
What Could Go Wrong?
Workers who raise concerns about workplace practices may face new challenges under the Court's interpretation.
A worker may identify what appears to be a serious safety concern and report it internally. If the issue later becomes the subject of disciplinary action or termination, the employee may still have difficulty establishing whistleblower protection unless the challenged conduct can be shown to violate the law.
The ruling therefore creates a distinction between reporting concerns and proving legal wrongdoing.
For employers, the decision may reduce exposure in cases where complaints involve conduct that is controversial, risky or unpopular but not actually unlawful.
Financial and Practical Consequences
Florida's whistleblower law allows employees to seek significant remedies if retaliation is proven.
Available remedies can include reinstatement, recovery of lost wages, restoration of benefits and other compensatory damages.
Because the Supreme Court has clarified what qualifies as protected activity, future litigation may focus heavily on the legality of the underlying conduct.
That could increase legal costs for both sides, particularly where workplace complaints involve technical safety, regulatory or compliance issues.
The decision may also extend disputes as parties seek to establish whether a specific law, rule or regulation was actually violated.
That uncertainty may leave workers unsure whether a retaliation claim can withstand legal scrutiny.
For employers, it reinforces the importance of documenting performance issues, disciplinary actions and workplace investigations carefully.
Can Employees Still Refuse to Participate in Illegal Conduct?
Yes. Importantly, the Court did not require employees to wait until a violation has already occurred before receiving protection.
The justices indicated that workers may still be protected when refusing to participate in conduct that would violate the law if carried out.
The Court used the example of an employee instructed to engage in conduct that would constitute an illegal act. Protection may still apply even if the unlawful conduct never actually takes place.
That aspect of the ruling preserves an important safeguard for employees faced with instructions that would require them to break the law.
What About OSHA Safety Complaints?
Part of Gessner's argument relied on workplace safety concerns.
He also referenced OSHA's General Duty Clause, which requires employers to provide a workplace free from recognised hazards likely to cause death or serious physical harm.
However, the courts concluded that argument was not sufficiently developed to support his whistleblower claim.
As a result, the case does not significantly expand or redefine OSHA protections. Instead, it focuses on how Florida's whistleblower statute should be interpreted.
The Hidden Issue Behind the Decision
The decision does not alter workplace safety laws, OSHA requirements or employers' obligations to comply with federal and state regulations. What changes is the evidence an employee may need when seeking protection under Florida's whistleblower statute.
That is the issue many readers may overlook.
What ultimately matters is whether the conduct complained about can be shown to violate a law, rule or regulation.
That shift could become one of the most important aspects of the decision in future employment disputes.
The Real Constraint Most People Miss
Many workplace retaliation disputes follow a familiar pattern: an employee raises a concern, disciplinary action follows, and termination eventually occurs.
The assumption is often that the complaint itself triggers protection. The Supreme Court's decision highlights that another question comes first: was the challenged conduct actually unlawful?
If the answer cannot be established, whistleblower protection may be much harder to obtain. That legal threshold could become the decisive issue in many future cases.
The Decision You're Actually Making
For employees, the decision highlights the difference between objecting to conduct that appears unlawful and objecting to conduct that can ultimately be proven unlawful.
For employers, it reinforces the importance of maintaining clear records that separate workplace complaints from legitimate disciplinary decisions.
Future disputes are likely to focus more heavily on the underlying conduct itself rather than solely on an employee's belief about that conduct.
What Happens Next?
The ruling resolves years of uncertainty within Florida's appellate courts and establishes a single statewide standard for private-sector whistleblower retaliation claims.
Employment lawyers, HR departments and businesses now have clearer guidance on what qualifies as protected activity under Florida Statutes §448.102(3).
The opinion noted that it was not yet final when issued and remained subject to Florida's rehearing process.
Even so, the decision is likely to influence how workplace complaints are investigated, documented and litigated across Florida for years to come.