Linda Kalash, V State Of Wa Dept. Of Employment Security

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 28, 2014
Docket43947-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of Linda Kalash, V State Of Wa Dept. Of Employment Security (Linda Kalash, V State Of Wa Dept. Of Employment Security) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Linda Kalash, V State Of Wa Dept. Of Employment Security, (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

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IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II

LINDA K. KALASH, No. 43947 -6 -II

Respondent,

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STATE OF WASHINGTON DEPARTMENT UNPUBLISHED OPINION OF EMPLOYMENT SECURITY,

JOHANSON, A.C. J. — Linda Kalash appeals the Employment Security Department' s

Department) final order denying her unemployment benefits.' She argues that she is entitled to

2 benefits because she quit her job for good cause under the Employment Security Act (Act). She

also argues that the Department commissioner erred by imposing additional requirements beyond

those defined by the statutes and related regulations. Because substantial evidence supports the

commissioner' s finding that Kalash quit her job for personal reasons and because the

General Order 2010 -1 of Division II, In Re: Modified Procedures For Appeals Under The Administrative Procedures Act, Chapter 34. 05, and Appeals Under the Land Use Petition Act, Chapter 36. 70C RCW ( Wash. Ct. App.), available at http: / www.courts. wa.gov/ / appellate trial requires that the party filing an appeal in superior court, here Kalash, courts /,

shall have the responsibility for the opening and reply briefs before our court and shall be entitled to open and conclude oral argument, whether designated as the appellant or respondent on appeal to this court.

2 Title 50 RCW. No. 43947 -6 -II

commissioner did not misapply or misinterpret the law in concluding that she did not have good

cause to quit, we affirm.

FACTS

In August 2010, Kalash began working for La Petite Academy preschool center in

Covington, where she lived. In March 2011, Kalash moved to Bremerton for personal reasons,

making her commute substantially longer. She inquired about a job transfer to La Petite' s sister

company near Bremerton, but the sister company did not hire her so she looked for other jobs.

On May 13, Kindercare child center in Bremerton offered her a full -ime job starting May 31. t

On May 16, she gave La Petite notice that she was quitting and that her last day would be May 27. On May 26, Kindercare called Kalash and told her that they no longer had a job for her

because the person who planned to leave decided to stay after all. Nonetheless, Kalash' s last day

La Petite 27 did La Petite if could retain her job. Her at was May and she not ask she

replacement began on June 14.

In July, Kalash filed for unemployment benefits. On the Department' s " Voluntary Quit"

questionnaire, the Department asked, " Did you quit because you were hired for a new job ?"

Kalash responded, " No." Administrative Record ( AR) at 50 -51. To the question, " When did

you decide to quit," Kalash wrote in "[ c] ut hours 6 hours a week." AR at 50. She also told the

Department that the main reason she quit was because her commute was about 100 miles each

day after she moved to Bremerton, she was dissatisfied with the number of hours she was

working at La Petite, and that she tried to transfer to La Petite' s sister company but that the transfer did not work out. Later, La Petite challenged Kalash' s request for unemployment

benefits, arguing that she voluntarily quit to relocate and leave the area.

FA No. 43947 -6 -II

The Department denied Kalash benefits, finding that because she left her employment

due to a lack of hours, she did not have good cause to quit and did not qualify for unemployment

benefits. Kalash appealed the Department' s denial of benefits. An administrative law judge

ALJ) conducted a phone hearing in September 2011. Kalash and the La Petite director testified.

Kalash testified that she left La Petite because of the Kindercare job, but that she did not tell the

Department about it because she did not know that it would make a difference in drawing

unemployment benefits.

The ALJ found that Kalash was disqualified from receiving unemployment benefits

because she left work voluntarily without good cause under RCW 50. 01. 010, RCW

3 50. 20. 050( 2)( a), WAC 192 -150 -085, WAC 192 -320 -070, and WAC 192 -320 -075. The ALJ

found that she left La Petite due to the commute, the failure to get a transfer, and a reduction in

hours. Further, the ALJ found Kalash failed to show that her hours were cut, and that it was only

after being denied benefits that she claimed she quit in order to accept a bona fide offer of work.

The ALJ also concluded that she failed to exhaust all reasonable alternatives available short of

quitting because Kalash' s belated assertions that she left La Petite due to the bona fide job offer

were not credible and if she would have asked to rescind her resignation, La Petite would have

retained her.

Kalash petitioned the Department commissioner for review of the ALJ' s decision,

arguing that she quit for good cause and that the ALJ erred in finding that she did not quit to accept a bona fide job offer. Kalash also argued that the ALJ erred because under RCW

3 RCW 50. 20. 050 was amended twice during the 2009 legislative session, each without reference to the other. Throughout this opinion, we cite to the most recent version —RCW 50. 20. 050 ( as amended by Laws of 2009, ch. 493, § 3, effective July 26, 2009).

3 No. 43947 -6 -II

50. 20. 050( 2)( b)( i) and WAC 192 -150 -050, Kalash was not required to exhaust all reasonable

alternatives prior to quitting and was not obligated to retain employment at La Petite in order to

qualify for benefits. The commissioner agreed with the AD and adopted its findings of fact and

conclusions of law subject to some minor additions and modifications. The commissioner

explained that after reviewing the entire record and considering all factors relevant to credibility,

it agreed with the ALJ that Kalash' s testimony that the Kindercare job was the reason she quit

was not credible. The commissioner also explained that

b] ecause the [ Kalash] continued with her decision to quit work with [ La Petite] after her new job offer was revoked, she did not quit because of a bona fide job offer. Indeed, as credibly testified to at [ the] hearing, [ La Petite] would have continued to employ [ Kalash] after May 27, 2011, if [Kalash] had asked to rescind her resignation.... Rather, [ Kalash] quit for personal reasons, i. e., the

additional cost of the commute caused by her moving from Covington to Bremerton.

AR at 85. The commissioner concluded that she quit for reasons other than accepting an offer of

bona fide work and, therefore, Kalash failed to establish that she quit for good cause under RCW

50. 20. 050( 2)( b). 4 Kalash appeals.

ANALYSIS

Kalash challenges ( 1) the commissioner' s finding that she quit her employment for

personal reasons rather than because of a bona fide job offer, and ( 2) the commissioner' s

ultimate conclusion that she was not entitled to unemployment benefits. Kalash argues that

because she quit only after receiving a bona fide job offer from Kindercare, she quit for good

4 Upon Kalash' s petition for review, the superior court reversed the commissioner, finding that Kalash quit due to a bona fide job offer and was entitled to unemployment benefits.

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