J. Line v. UCBR

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 25, 2015
Docket731 C.D. 2015
StatusUnpublished

This text of J. Line v. UCBR (J. Line v. UCBR) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. Line v. UCBR, (Pa. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

James Line, : Petitioner : : No. 731 C.D. 2015 v. : : Submitted: September 11, 2015 Unemployment Compensation : Board of Review, : Respondent :

BEFORE: HONORABLE BERNARD L. McGINLEY, Judge HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge HONORABLE JAMES GARDNER COLINS, Senior Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE McCULLOUGH FILED: November 25, 2015

James Line (Claimant) petitions, pro se, for review of the April 1, 2015 order of the Unemployment Compensation Board of Review (Board) which affirmed a referee’s determination that Claimant was ineligible for benefits under section 402(b) of the Unemployment Compensation Law (Law).1 Claimant was employed by Beacon Light Behavioral Health (Employer) as a family-based mental health professional from July 5, 2008, until his last day of work on September 29, 2014. The local service center found that Claimant was ineligible for benefits because he voluntarily quit his employment without informing

1 Act of December 5, 1936, Second Ex. Sess., P.L. (1937) 2897, as amended, 43 P.S. §802(b). Employer of his reason for leaving. Claimant appealed, asserting that he had necessitous and compelling reason to leave his employment. The matter was assigned to a referee, who held a hearing on November 24, 2014. Claimant, who by then had obtained new employment, participated by telephone, and Employer offered the testimony of three witnesses. Claimant testified that he was required to submit a family-based enactment video that satisfied state requirements in order to maintain his position with Employer. Claimant said that his first video, submitted in February of 2014, failed to pass state regulations. (Notes of Testimony (N.T.) at 13.) Claimant stated that after his first video did not pass state requirements, he met with his supervisor, Aimee Kaple, and a state representative on May 21, 2014, to discuss necessary improvements that he could make in his videos. (N.T. at 17.) Claimant testified that he continued to submit videos to Kaple throughout the summer of 2014, but Kaple did not feel that they satisfied the state requirements and did not send any of those videos to the state. Claimant stated that he sought help in passing the regulatory requirements from both Kaple and another supervisor. (N.T. at 9.) According to Claimant, his requests for help were largely ignored, and Kaple’s advice was vague and fruitless. (N.T. at 13.) Claimant testified that after his requests for help and the videos he submitted were ignored, he sent an email to Kaple in August 2014 explaining that he had concerns about his employment. Claimant stated he was called into Kaple’s office on August 28, 2014, and expected that he would meet with Kaple alone about his videos or work. Claimant said that, instead, he met with both Kaple and Nate Gressel, Employer’s vice president of children’s services, and he was given a written warning for failing to submit a passing video. Claimant testified that portions of the

2 warning were inaccurate, including the statement that he failed to seek help regarding the video. According to Claimant, he consistently sought help, and he even took the lead in creating the video when his partner was absent from work for sixteen days. Claimant testified that he asked Kaple and Gressel what would happen if he failed to complete a passing video, but they gave him only vague responses. Claimant said that their answers greatly concerned him; Claimant feared that he would never pass the video requirements, giving Kaple and Gressel reason to push him out of the company. (N.T. at 10.) Claimant stated that Kaple wanted Claimant out of the agency and, toward that end, she continuously failed to send his videos to the state. (N.T. at 17.) Claimant also testified that he had applied for several different positions within the agency. He said that it became evident during the August 28th meeting with Kaple and Gressel that he would not be hired in any other position, and he believed that it was only a matter of time until he was discharged. According to Claimant, Gressel told him that Kaple had described him as, “not cut out for this type of work,” which increased Claimant’s concern that his employment was in jeopardy. (N.T. at 18-19.) Claimant said that he feared that his employment would be terminated, although he admitted that neither Kaple nor Gressel told him he would be discharged during the August 28th meeting. Claimant stated that he did not want to risk discharge by failing another video, so he submitted his resignation the day after the August 28th meeting. Claimant noted that he complied with Employer’s requirement to give thirty days’ notice. (N.T. at 11-12.) Claimant testified that while he continued working, he received a second written warning and a five-day suspension during a September 2, 2014 meeting with

3 Kaple because he failed to submit a passing video. Claimant stated that, during this meeting, Kaple told him that if he did not submit a passing video by October 3, 2014, he would be discharged. Claimant explained that he did not believe he could satisfy the video requirements and he left his employment as planned on September 29, 2014. (N.T. at 12.) Kaple testified that during the May 21, 2014 meeting, Claimant was made aware that he had three months to resubmit a video and that, contrary to Claimant’s testimony, she offered Claimant training in his weak areas. Kaple stated that shortly after they met in May, Claimant told her that he was no longer going to try to satisfy the state video criteria. Kaple said that she and Claimant subsequently looked into other fields of employment within Employer’s facility and that she continued to offer Claimant support for his video. (Record Item Number 2 at 27; N.T. at 20.) Kaple acknowledged that Claimant submitted numerous videos through the summer of 2014, but she said he did not make it known that he wanted a video submitted to the state until August 29, 2014. Kaple testified that she and another supervisor reviewed the video on August 29th and found that it did not demonstrate necessary skills. (N.T. at 20.) Kaple stated that when she met with Claimant on September 2, 2014, she offered him training in Pittsburgh, which he attended. Kaple testified that following the training, Claimant submitted a video on September 25, 2014. Kaple said that she did not review that video because Claimant resigned on September 29, 2014. (N.T. at 20.) Gressel testified that during the August 28th meeting, he voiced concern about Claimant’s inability to submit a passing video. Gressel said that there was

4 discussion of Claimant’s desire to be transferred within the company but that Claimant did not explicitly request a transfer during the meeting. Gressel testified that he did not hear anything else from Claimant regarding concern for his employment before or after Claimant resigned. (N.T. at 26-27.) The referee accepted the testimony of Employer’s witnesses as credible and rejected Claimant’s testimony that he exhaustively attempted to maintain his employment. The referee’s decision set forth the following relevant findings of fact:

2. Due to state regulations, the claimant was required to complete and submit a video of a family-based enactment that received a passing grade in accordance with regulations, in order to maintain his certification.

3. The claimant submitted a video sometime in the spring of 2014; however, that video did not pass regulations.

4. On May 21, 2014, the employer met with the claimant and advised him that his video had not passed the requirements, and gave the claimant three additional months to re-submit a video that passed the requirements.

5.

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J. Line v. UCBR, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-line-v-ucbr-pacommwct-2015.