Lynch v. Department of Employment & Training

Johnson, J.,

¶ 7. dissenting. The majority’s cramped view of the unemployment statute and our decision in Turco v. Department of Employment Security, 141 Vt. 135, 446 A.2d 345 (1982), results in an unfair denial of unemployment benefits to an employee who chose to leave her job rather than continue in an intolerable workplace environment. The key fact that compels unemployment in this case is that the employer, an office of the Defender General, had long-standing knowledge of the offending supervisor’s conduct, acknowledged that the supervisor was a problem, but failed and refused to take adequate steps to remedy the problems created by the supervisor in the work environment. Upholding the denial of benefits in this circumstance distorts the purpose of unemployment, which is to be liberally construed to support employees who are no longer working due to circumstances beyond their control. Lane v. Dep’t of Employment Sec., 134 Vt. 9, 10-11, 347 A.2d 454, 455 (1975) (“The complex pattern of the whole statute is one of compensation for involuntary unemployment, with disqualification and penalties where the unemployment is due to choice or fault.”). I respectfully dissent.

¶ 8. After three-and-a-half years of employment as a secretary at the Bennington County Public Defender’s Office, claimant resigned in 2004 due to a hostile work environment created by her direct supervisor. The public defender had knowledge of the supervisor’s conduct *544and the detrimental effect it had on claimant as early as 2003, when claimant formally complained and indicated her intent to resign if the supervisor’s conduct continued. At that time, she was told to work it out with her supervisor. She did as she was told and matters improved for awhile. The public defender was aware, however, that the supervisor continued to create a difficult working environment even after he had spoken with the supervisor after claimant’s 2003 complaint.

¶ 9. Despite this knowledge, when claimant formally complained a year later, the day after she had been the target of the supervisor’s rage, the public defender gave claimant three options, two of which placed the burden on the employee to take steps to resolve the problem, and the third promised no immediate help for the situation. As a result, claimant resigned.

¶ 10. The legal issue is whether claimant quit for reasons not attributable to her employer. Because the employer offered three inadequate options to the employee, and claimant made a different choice, the majority upholds the ESB’s conclusion that claimant willingly chose to resign. The majority’s decision rests on its interpretation of Turco, which it reads as barring a claimant from unemployment compensation if the employer does “anything” to address an employee’s work-related problems. In Turco we held that the claimant was entitled to unemployment compensation because the employer did nothing to remedy the claimant’s situation. 141 Vt. at 138, 446 A.2d at 347. As the majority points out, however, we reached this conclusion by analyzing the totality of the circumstances, including “the history of harassment, [the employee’s knowledge of it, the employer’s failure to address the problem, and the seemingly calloused indifference to claimant’s plight.” Id. Therefore, Turco does not limit this Court from finding an employer’s actions to be so inadequate that a claimant’s decision to quit work is justified under the statute.

¶ 11. None of the options the public defender presented to claimant was reasonable in light of the problem presented. First, the public defender advised the employee to -file a grievance with the Vermont State Employees Association (VSEA). But the problem as reflected by the hearing officer’s findings of fact relates to the conduct of the supervisor, who was frequently rude and nasty to others. The public defender did not dispute that the supervisor was a problem. He was well aware of this fact because he had reprimanded her on a prior occasion for offending a judge, going so far as to require her to send a letter of apology to the judge. Thus, this was not a personal conflict that existed exclusively between the supervisor and the claimant, nor one in which the employer disputed that the supervisor was a problem in the office. In either of those situations, it might have been reasonable to ask the employee to take her issue to the VSEA.

¶ 12. Nor was it reasonable to ask claimant, a clerical employee, to go to the Defender General’s Office and complain about her immediate supervisor, because the public defender in charge of the office refused to address the problem in a timely fashion. This was a brush-off that claimant rightly perceived was likely to result in even greater harassment from her supervisor.

¶ 13. The third option, that the public defender would address the issue during an annual performance review of the supervisor in two weeks, promised little hope of a resolution given the amount of attention that the public defender had been willing to give to the situation in the past. Again, Turco requires us to look at the context in which these long-standing problems were occurring. Although the public defender was entitled to handle or *545not handle the personnel problem as he saw fit, that is a different question from whether claimant was entitled, at some point, to hit her limit with the employer and leave, without suffering a loss of benefits. Asking claimant to exhaust all options proffered by the employer, when none had any chance of resolving an immediate problem, is unreasonable as a matter of law. See In re City of Franklin, 485 A.2d 295, 298 (N.H. 1984) (interpreting a nearly identical statute and holding that claimants are not required to exhaust all available remedies within the employer’s organization before terminating employment on account of the employer, but requiring claimants to show under broader reasonable-person test that circumstances warranted termination); see also N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 282-A:32(I)(a) (2005); N.H. Code Admin. R. Ann. [Emp. Sec.] 503.01 (2005).

¶ 14. Moreover, the majority’s decision places an unreasonable burden on the claimant to resolve a workplace problem that, based on the findings, was not of her own making and not within her control. The majority upholds the ESB’s decision on the standard of review, which is 'deferential to the Department of Employment Security. But the ESB is also bound by Turco, and by the liberal statutory construction in favor of benefits. Considering all of the findings and discussion in the hearing officer’s decision, subsequently upheld by the ESB, the decision is an unreasonable interpretation of the law. Claimant should be entitled to unemployment compensation under 21 V.S.A. § 1344(a)(2)(A).