IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
Beth Kearley, :
Petitioner :
: No. 1642 C.D. 2018
v. :
: Submitted: May 17, 2019
Unemployment Compensation :
Board of Review, :
Respondent :
BEFORE: HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
OPINION NOT REPORTED
MEMORANDUM OPINION
BY JUDGE McCULLOUGH FILED: July 11, 2019
Beth Kearley (Claimant) petitions, pro se, for review of the order of the
Unemployment Compensation Board of Review (Board), which affirmed a referee’s
decision that found Claimant ineligible for unemployment compensation (UC) benefits
under section 402(b) of the Unemployment Compensation Law (Law)1. We affirm.
Facts and Procedural History
Claimant worked as a full-time service agent for Convergys Customer
Management Group, Inc. (Employer) from January 22, 2018, until May 9, 2018, when
she officially resigned from her position citing workplace stress due to call metrics.
1
Act of December 5, 1936, Second Ex. Sess., P.L. (1937) 2897, as amended, 43 P.S. §802(b)
(relating to voluntary separation without cause of a necessitous and compelling nature).
(Referee Finding of Fact (F.F.) Nos. 1, 11.) Claimant applied for UC benefits and was
found ineligible under section 402(b) of the Law by the local service center. (Certified
Record (C.R.) at Item No. 5, p. 1.) Claimant appealed and a referee conducted a hearing
on July 11, 2018, at which Claimant and one witness for Employer appeared and
testified.
Claimant testified that, having worked at a similar call center previously,
she was not interested in working in that kind of a stressful environment again. (C.R.
at Item No. 9, Notes of Testimony (N.T.) at 3.) Claimant stated that “from the first
phone interview to [sic] the recruiter to the interview right on through while I was still
in training, I constantly asked about how important numbers and metrics, et cetera,
were.” Id. Claimant testified that she was always told that Employer was “very laid
back” and “not scripted” and that there was “nothing [Claimant] ha[d] to worry about.”
Id. However, Claimant explained that these assurances turned out to be false because,
after beginning her work for Employer, she received daily emails detailing both
individual and team numbers and metrics. (N.T. at 3-4.) Claimant testified that she
had to force herself to attend work and that company morale was low due to the
concentration on numbers. (N.T. at 4.) Claimant discussed her issues with her team
leader, who had told her to leave the numbers to him. (N.T. at 5.) While Claimant
found the position stressful, she was willing to try and “make the decision work.” (N.T.
at 5.)
Claimant explained that the “final straw” was when Employer shuffled the
teams on her floor and she was no longer under the same team leader. (N.T. at 4.)
Claimant discovered the change in team configuration from a coworker on one of her
days off. Id. Claimant stated that the shuffling of the teams was the catalyst for her
decision to resign from her employment. (N.T. at 5.) Claimant contacted Employer
2
soon after the teams were reassigned to state that she “just could not do it anymore.”
(N.T. at 4.)
After informing Employer of her intention to resign, Employer set up a
meeting with Claimant, where several work alternatives were given to Claimant in an
attempt to rectify the then current situation. Claimant testified that she was offered the
opportunity to either return to her old team leader or to work in the payroll queue.
Claimant did not accept the former offer, as Employer did not provide her a guarantee
as to how long she could remain on her old team. Although the latter offer would have
placed Claimant into a different department, she testified that she turned it down
because metrics and numbers would still have been a focus of the position. Claimant
felt misled as to what her position with Employer was to be, as she was led to believe
“that numbers and things like that were not going to be the main focus of the job.” Id.
Despite her stress and the feeling that she had been misled, Claimant testified that her
numbers were acceptable to Employer and that she had never been written up for
having poor numbers. (N.T. at 5.)
Employer presented the testimony of Ms. Amy O’Hara, Employer’s
Human Resources Business Partner. Ms. O’Hara testified that Claimant’s recollection
of events was basically correct. Ms. O’Hara testified that she was surprised to hear
that Claimant wished to resign and arranged a meeting with Claimant and others on
May 7, 2018, to see if Employer could “give [Claimant] some other options, [and
Claimant could] tell [Employer] what was going on.” Id. Ms. O’Hara testified that
during that meeting, Claimant expressed the stress and dissatisfaction she felt with the
emphasis placed on metrics and numbers. Claimant stressed to Ms. O’Hara and the
others that she felt she had been misled with regard to how important metrics and
numbers were to Employer. As a result of Claimant’s professed stress, Ms. O’Hara
3
testified that Employer offered Claimant a few solutions. Employer offered to return
Claimant back to her original team leader, but Ms. O’Hara admitted that she and
Employer were not sure how long that arrangement would remain feasible. Ms. O’Hara
also testified that Employer offered Claimant a position in a new line of business, i.e.,
payroll, which did not receive as many calls and, therefore, would be less stressful.
While this option would have required Claimant to remain in her current position for
ten days, Employer was prepared to place her with the next training class. Despite
these offers, Ms. O’Hara testified that she received a resignation letter from Claimant
on May 9, 2018, two days after Employer’s meeting with her. While Claimant “did
thank [Employer] for the opportunities, [ ] she just didn’t think it was the right position
for her.” (N.T. at 6.)
By decision dated July 12, 2018, the referee found Claimant ineligible for
UC benefits. The referee found the following:
1. [Claimant] was employed by [Employer] as a full-time
service agent earning $12.75 per hour from January 22,
2018 through April 30, 2018, her last day of work.
2. During [Claimant’s] interview process, [Claimant]
questioned [sic] on whether call metrics were utilized in
reviewing performance.
3. [Claimant] was assured that [Employer] was laid back
and concentrated on customer service and not call
metrics.
4. Once [Claimant] began working, she saw that [Employer]
placed a large emphasis on call metrics and numbers as
emailed [sic] would be sent and boards would be updated
with individual and team numbers.
5. [Claimant] was not disciplined for her call metrics and
was meeting the standards.
6. On May 1, 2018, [Claimant] was off work and notified by
a coworker that [Employer] had shuffled all of the teams
4
and assigned individuals to different teams with different
leaders.
7. [Claimant] was upset by the team changes and notified
[Employer] that she would be resigning.
8. [Employer] conducted a meeting with [Claimant] on May
7, 2018, in an attempt to continue [Claimant’s]
employment.
9. During that meeting, [Claimant] expressed her
dissatisfaction with the emphasis on call metrics and
indicated that it was stressful.
10. [Employer] offered to keep [Claimant] on a team with her
current leader, and offered her a position in a different
line of business which [Employer] felt would be less
stressful.
11. [Claimant] resigned May 9, 2018, as she was dissatisfied
with [Employer’s] changes and felt emphasis on call
metrics was stressful.
(F.F. Nos. 1-11.)
Based on these findings, the referee concluded that Claimant did not have
a necessitous and compelling reason to quit her position. The referee noted that in
cases of voluntary separation, the burden is on the claimant to prove necessitous and
compelling circumstances existed for quitting. To establish eligibility for UC benefits,
a claimant must establish that she notified her employer of the necessitous and
compelling conditions so that the employer has the chance to respond to the conditions.
The referee observed that “a claimant’s dissatisfaction with an employer’s reasonable
modification in employment conditions is not considered good cause for termination.
Dissatisfaction with reasonable changes in hours, assigned duties, or worksites may
not, in and of themselves, be good cause for quitting.” (Referee Decision at 2.)
In Claimant’s case, the referee stated that while Claimant felt deceived as
to the workplace conditions, she continued working for Employer for four months. To
the referee, this showed that Claimant had accepted Employer’s terms and conditions
5
of the position. The referee further found that Claimant had not communicated to
Employer that its emphasis on call metrics was affecting her ability to perform her
position prior to resigning. Id. The referee found that Claimant ultimately voluntarily
resigned as a result of her dissatisfaction with Employer’s new team assignments. Id.
at 2-3. The referee stated that changing the configuration of the teams was a reasonable
modification on the part of Employer and, therefore, was not good cause for Claimant
to voluntarily terminate employment. The referee further noted that Employer had
offered to modify Claimant’s work to alleviate some of her stress, but Claimant had
not accepted Employer’s offer. Therefore, the referee found Claimant ineligible for
UC benefits. Id. at 3.
Claimant appealed to the Board, arguing that she had not presented all of
the facts in her hearing before the referee. Claimant asserted that she had informed
Employer that its call metrics were causing her stress and discussed it with her team
leader on a few occasions. Claimant further stated that the new position Employer
offered her in order to reduce her stress would not actually have accomplished that
goal, as there still would have been an emphasis on metrics in the new position.
Finally, Claimant alleged that while the referee found that Claimant had worked under
Employer’s conditions for four months, she had actually been on the phones and
subject to Employer’s call metrics for only two months, due to training and difficulty
procuring equipment that would be compatible with her hearing aids. (C.R. at Item
No. 11.)
However, the Board affirmed the decision of the referee, adopting and
incorporating the referee’s findings. (Board Decision at 1.) In addition, the Board
found that “[Claimant’s] fears about stress [in the new position] were speculative, as
she did not make a good faith effort to preserve the employment relationship and
6
perform the different position prior to quitting.” Id. The Board also noted that
Claimant had not established a sufficient health reason for leaving her job. Id.
Discussion
Claimant now petitions this Court for review of the Board’s order,2
arguing that her reasons for terminating her employment were necessitous and
compelling, and therefore she is not ineligible for UC benefits under section 402(b) of
the Law. Claimant argues on appeal that her stress from working at a position that was
so heavily focused on numbers and metrics gave her a necessitous and compelling
reason to terminate her employment. Claimant alleges that she informed Employer of
the stress her position placed upon her and, therefore, she did not accept the terms and
conditions of her employment. Claimant also argues that, while Employer offered her
a position with its payroll queue that it claimed was less stressful, the offer was not
made in good faith, as she believed the position would still be based on the same
numbers and metrics that led her to quit her position. Claimant argues that “easier and
less stressful are not synonymous in this case.” (Claimant’s Br. at 13.) Therefore,
Claimant argues that the Board’s determination in her case should be reversed.
Section 402(b) of the Law provides that an employee shall be ineligible
for UC benefits for any week in which he or she voluntarily left his or her employment
without a necessitous and compelling reason. 43 P.S. §802(b). Whether a claimant
has a necessitous and compelling reason to quit is a conclusion of law that is reviewable
by this Court. Taylor v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 378 A.2d 829,
2
Our review of the Board’s order “is limited to determining whether the necessary findings
of fact were supported by substantial evidence, whether errors of law were committed, or whether
constitutional rights were violated.” Johns v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 87
A.3d 1006, 1009 n.2 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2014).
7
832 (Pa. 1977). The burden to show a necessitous and compelling reason existed to
terminate employment rests with the claimant. Petrill v. Unemployment Compensation
Board of Review, 883 A.2d 714, 716 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2005).
An employee who claims to have left employment for a necessitous and
compelling reason must prove that (1) circumstances existed which produced real and
substantial pressure to terminate employment; (2) such circumstances would compel a
reasonable person to act in the same manner; (3) the claimant acted with ordinary
common sense; and, (4) the claimant made a reasonable effort to preserve her
employment. Brunswick Hotel & Conference Center, LLC v. Unemployment
Compensation Board of Review, 906 A.2d 657, 660 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2006). “It is well-
settled that an employer’s imposition of a substantial unilateral change in the terms of
employment constitutes a necessitous and compelling cause for an employee to
terminate her employment.” Id. However, mere dissatisfaction with working
conditions is not considered a necessitous and compelling reason to terminate
employment. McKeown v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 442 A.2d
1257, 1258 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1982).
Here, Claimant argues that she did have a necessitous and compelling
reason to terminate employment. Claimant, bearing the burden of proof, must satisfy
the requirements laid out in Brunswick Hotel to prove that she had a necessitous and
compelling reason for quitting. Regarding the first two prongs of this test, this Court
concludes that circumstances existed that would place real and substantial pressure on
a reasonable person to terminate her employment. Claimant entered into a relationship
with Employer believing that the job she had been hired to do, a call center position,
did not focus on metrics and numbers. Claimant made it a point to ask multiple times
throughout the interviewing process and her training whether metrics would be a part
8
of her position. Claimant was told each time that Employer was “very laid back” and
that there was nothing to worry about. (N.T. at 3.) From these assertions, Claimant
could reasonably believe that metrics were not a focus of Employer. However, the
actions of Employer in disseminating the metrics and numbers of its teams paints a
different picture. Employer’s habit of emailing and posting its color-coded numbers
multiple times a day, indicates it was not “laid back” and did place emphasis on its
metrics. (N.T. at 5.)
Conversely, the Board contends in its brief that it was the shuffling of the
teams that caused Claimant to quit, not the overall stress from the metrics. As a result,
the Board argues, Claimant’s request for UC benefits must be denied as the shuffling
of employees only amounts to an employer’s decision on how to distribute its personnel
and, therefore, it was a reasonable modification to the workplace that did not constitute
a necessitous and compelling reason to quit. Despite its contentions, the Board does
not dispute the referee’s findings, adopted by the Board, that Claimant expressed to
Employer that she was resigning due to her dissatisfaction with the emphasis placed
on call metrics and that she actually resigned because those metrics caused her stress.
(F.F. Nos. 9, 11.) Moreover, this finding is supported by Claimant’s testimony,
wherein she stated that while the shuffling of the teams was the final straw, she “felt
like [they] were just being shuffled around like decks of cards for better numbers.”
(N.T. at 5) (emphasis added). Further, in her brief, Claimant specifically acknowledges
that the changing of personnel was not the factor that caused her to terminate her
employment; rather “[i]t is and always was the policies, metrics and numbers of
[Employer] that is and was the issue.” (Claimant’s Br. at 13.)
As Claimant has proven a real and substantial pressure to terminate her
employment, the question then turns to if Claimant acted with ordinary common sense
9
and made a reasonable effort to preserve her employment and, in so doing, satisfied
the third and fourth requirements of the Brunswick Hotel test. “Claimants have the
duty to take all necessary and reasonable steps to preserve employment.” Anchor
Darling Valve Co. v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 598 A.2d 647,
649 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1991). When offered a new position or a possible solution to the
necessitous and compelling condition, a claimant may not speculate that the proposed
change is unsuitable; she must give the arrangement a chance in an attempt to preserve
her employment. Monaco v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 565 A.2d
127, 131 (Pa. 1989) (denying benefits where two employees speculated that their new
pay structure would be unsatisfactory but did not give the new pay structure a chance
before terminating their employment). “If the employer promises to take action to
alleviate the problem, good faith requires that the employee continue working until or
unless the employer’s action proves ineffectual.” Craighead-Jenkins v. Unemployment
Compensation Board of Review, 796 A.2d 1031, 1034 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2002). Never
attempting an employer’s proposed new arrangement to alleviate the necessitous and
compelling condition will not support a finding that the employer’s modifications were
unreasonable. Unangst v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 690 A.2d
1305, 1308 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1997) (holding that a claimant did not prove the job
modifications were unreasonable and rose to the level that would compel a reasonable
person to terminate her employment where she did not attempt the new position offered
to her and merely speculated that her workload would be increased).
In the present case, we hold that Claimant did not act with ordinary
common sense or make a reasonable effort to preserve her employment. Prior to
terminating her employment, Claimant was required to make a reasonable effort to
preserve her employment. Anchor Darling Valve Co., 598 A.2d at 649. Following
10
Employer’s shuffling of teams, Claimant approached human resources representatives
to inform them of her desire to resign. (N.T. at 4-5.) After Claimant informed
Employer of her intent to resign, Employer set up a meeting with Claimant to discuss
her reasons for resigning. Employer presented Claimant with two alternative work
arrangements in an attempt to alleviate some of the stress she felt. The first option was
to return to her old team leader, which both parties admitted was not a long term
solution, and the second was to transfer to Employer’s payroll queue. (N.T. at 4, 6.)
Claimant turned down the payroll queue option, despite being told the position would
be less stressful, testifying, “I still would have to worry about surveys. I still would
have to worry about numbers. I still would have to worry about the same issues that
compelled me to leave in the first place.” (N.T. at 4.)
Employer offered Claimant two possible solutions but Claimant did not
try either. Claimant instead speculated that the new payroll position would not be less
stressful even though she had no knowledge of what that position would entail. Similar
to the claimants in Monaco and Unangst, “[C]laimant’s crucial mistake was in not
giving the new arrangement a chance.” Monaco, 565 A.2d at 131. By failing to make
a good faith effort to attempt the solution Employer offered, which Employer assured
her would be less stressful and, instead, speculating on the nature of the modification,
Claimant failed to act with ordinary common sense and make a reasonable effort to
preserve her employment. The Board, in its decision, concluded Claimant’s fears about
the stress she would experience in the different position was speculative, “as she did
not make a good faith effort to preserve the employment relationship and perform the
different position prior to quitting.” (Board Decision at 1.) We agree with the Board.
For this reason, Claimant failed to prove she had a necessitous and compelling reason
to quit and her claim for benefits must be denied.
11
Claimant also challenges the Board’s ruling that, by working for
Employer for four months, she had accepted the terms of employment and, therefore,
could not subsequently argue they constituted a necessitous and compelling reason to
terminate her employment. (Claimant’s Br. at 8-11.) Once an employee has accepted
the terms of employment, it is assumed that the conditions of employment are
acceptable. Speck v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 680 A.2d 27, 30
(Pa. Cmwlth. 1996). “Therefore, the employee may not later assert that dissatisfaction
with those terms constitutes a necessitous and compelling reason, unless there has been
a change in the employment conditions or the employee was deceived by the employer
or the employee was reasonably unaware of the unsuitable conditions when he accepted
the position.” Id.; Naylon v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 477 A.2d
912, 913 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1984). However, the claim of being deceived or being unaware
of employment conditions can only go so far; “once an employee has accepted new
employment terms, he has admitted to their suitability . . . and therefore any later
dissatisfaction with those terms, under well settled law, would not constitute cause of
a necessitous and compelling nature.” Romao v. Unemployment Compensation Board
of Review, 443 A.2d 1217, 1218 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1982).
Claimant disagrees with the referee’s assertion that “[Claimant] worked
for [Employer] for 4 months after accepting the position, and therefore . . . [Claimant]
accepted the terms and conditions of employment.”3 (Referee Decision at 2.)
3
In her brief, Claimant raises several new points of fact surrounding the timeline of when she
worked for Employer, which she claims prove that she did not accept Employer’s terms and
conditions. Claimant argues that she had only been performing the job for less than a month due to
delays in training and that she had informed her team leader of her issues with the position frequently
at their weekly one-on-one meetings. Additionally, Claimant, for the first time, submits
documentation from her physician detailing her history with anxiety. However, these facts were not
raised before the referee in the hearing and so are not a part of the record of the case. Therefore, this
12
However, when asked by the referee during the hearing why she had not left the
position as soon as she had discovered that it was based on metrics, Claimant
responded, “I tried to make the decision work . . . . And I was willing to say okay, let’s
see how that goes.” (N.T. at 5.) Despite learning of the emphasis on numbers and
metrics when starting the job, Claimant continued to work for Employer for four
months.
This Court has previously found that even a two-month period of
employment where an employee worked under an employer’s conditions before later
quitting and citing an issue with those same conditions constituted a “delay [that] may
be construed as an acceptance.” Romao, 443 A.2d at 1218. In Romao, the claimant
was held to have accepted a new pay schema set by his employer and therefore had
agreed to the new terms of his employment when he continued working for his
employer for two months following the change. Id. Claimant in this instance delayed
informing Employer that its conditions were not acceptable to her for close to four
months. Specifically, Claimant testified that “right before they broke everybody up,
[she] had even talked to Jeremy, [her] team leader, about it.” (N.T. at 5) (emphasis
added). Thus, Claimant worked for Employer for four months, only discussing her
issues with the numbers and metrics aspect of the job at the end of her employment.
Four months was a more than sufficient amount of time for Claimant to
determine whether or not the conditions of her employment were acceptable.
Therefore, we hold that Claimant accepted the new terms and conditions of her position
and in so doing cannot claim that they were a necessitous and compelling reason for
terminating her employment with Employer. See, e.g., Romao 443 A.2d at 1218.
Court cannot consider these facts on appeal and must constrain itself to deciding this matter on the
facts contained within the certified record. Umedman v. Unemployment Compensation Board of
Review, 52 A.3d 558, 564 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2012).
13
Conclusion
Accordingly, because Claimant has not established a necessitous and
compelling reason to terminate her employment in accordance with section 402(b) of
the Law, the Board’s order denying Claimant UC benefits is affirmed.
________________________________
PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
14
IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
Beth Kearley, :
Petitioner :
: No. 1642 C.D. 2018
v. :
:
Unemployment Compensation :
Board of Review, :
Respondent :
ORDER
AND NOW, this 11th day of July, 2019, the order of the Unemployment
Compensation Board of Review, dated November 16, 2018, is hereby affirmed.
________________________________
PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge