Section
2840.101 General Principles for Interpreting Section 601 of the Act [820 ILCS
405/601]
a) For an individual's
separation from work to be a voluntary leaving, the individual must have the
option to remain employed by the employing unit. The separation is a discharge
if the individual does not have the option to remain employed by the employing
unit. Notwithstanding any other provision to the contrary, when obtaining or
maintaining a "tool of the trade" necessary to perform a job,
including but not limited to an occupational or other license required by
federal or State law, is within an individual's control, a work separation that
results from the individual's failure to obtain or maintain the tool of the
trade is a voluntary leaving. An individual who is allowed to resign in lieu of
discharge is considered as having been discharged.
1) Example: The individual
is told that he/she will be discharged because of his/her poor attendance.
However, in order to avoid having a discharge on his/her record, he/she is
allowed to submit a resignation. This separation is not a voluntary leaving
because the individual does not have the option to remain employed.
2) Example: The employing
unit tells the individual that his/her position on the second shift has been
eliminated. However, a position is available to the claimant on the first
shift. The individual leaves rather than accept the first shift. This is a
voluntary leaving.
3) Example: An individual
is involved in an automobile accident, will be unable to work until released by
his/her doctor and so advises his/her employer. The employing unit advises the
individual that it cannot offer him/her a leave of absence and cannot keep his/her
job open. This is a discharge because the employing unit has not given the
individual the option of remaining employed.
4) Example: On Day 1, upon
returning home from work, an individual is advised by his/her babysitter that,
effective immediately, the sitter can no longer watch the individual's two
pre-school children. Before work on Day 2, the individual telephones his/her
employer to advise it of the situation and says he/she may need a few days to
find a new sitter. The employer indicates that he/she must come to work that
day or it will consider him/her as having resigned. On Day 3, he/she telephones
the employer to advise that he/she has some leads for a new sitter, but will
need a few more days. He/she is advised the employer has accepted his/her
resignation. The individual was discharged. By presenting the individual with
the choice between keeping his/her job and ensuring his/her two pre-school
children were properly attended, the employer did not provide the individual with
the opportunity to remain employed.
5) Example: Upon returning
home from work, an individual is advised by his/her babysitter that, effective
immediately, the sitter can no longer watch the individual's two pre-school
children. Before work the next day, the individual telephones his/her employer
to advise it of the situation. The employer acknowledges the importance of
finding a sitter with whom the individual is comfortable, indicates the company
will work around his/her absence while he/she looks for a sitter and instructs him/her
to telephone it at the end of two weeks if he/she still has not found a sitter.
Without contacting the employer in the interim, he/she reports to work at the
employer's premises one month later. He/she is advised that the employer
assumed he/she was no longer interested in the job and hired a replacement, and
there is no work available to him/her. The individual left work voluntarily. He/she
had the option to remain in contact with his/her employer and thereby preserve
the possibility of returning to work but did not avail himself/herself of that
option.
6) Example: An individual's
job requires that he/she maintain a valid driver's license. After learning that
the individual's driver's license has been suspended because of traffic
violations, the employing unit instructs the individual that it no longer needs
his/her services. The separation is considered a voluntary leave. The
individual failed to maintain a tool of his/her trade, in this case, a valid
driver's license.
7) Example: An individual
is hired with the understanding that he/she must pass a State mandated
licensing test within one year of his/her date of hire. The individual takes
all of the training courses available to prepare for the test but still fails
it on three occasions. The individual is told that his/her services are no
longer needed as a result of his/her failure to obtain the required license by
the one-year deadline. The resulting separation is not a voluntary leaving
because the individual made a reasonable and substantial effort to obtain the
required license. Obtaining the license was not within his/her control, and he/she
did not have the option to remain employed by the employing unit.
8) Example: Pursuant to
the terms of the collective bargaining agreement governing labor-management
relations at the individual's workplace, the payment of union dues was a
condition of employment. The individual refused to pay the dues, although he/she
was financially able to do so. After the individual ignored warnings from the
employer that he/she needed to pay the dues, the employer indicated that it was
no longer able to employ him/her. The separation was a voluntary leave. The
individual had the option of remaining employed by paying the dues, which he/she
had the means to do, but failed to avail himself/herself of that option.
9) Example: Rumors of a
shutdown circulate within a plant, although the employer has not given any
indication that it intends to close the plant or lay off any employees. After
hearing the rumors, a worker at the plant quits to begin looking for work
elsewhere, indicating he/she is not going to wait around to find out what
happens at the plant. The separation was a voluntary leave, since the worker
had the option of remaining at the plant.
10) Example: An individual
becomes temporarily bed ridden after contracting the flu on a Sunday. When he/she
telephones the employer the following day (Monday) to indicate that he/she is
unable to go to work, the employer indicates that if he/she is not at work by
the next day (Tuesday), he/she will be considered as having resigned. The
individual is unable to return to work on Tuesday. When he/she calls the
employer on Tuesday to indicate he/she is still unable to go to work, the
employer indicates that it has accepted the individual's resignation. The
individual was discharged. He/she did not have the option of remaining employed
by the employer.
b) An individual has good
cause for leaving work when there is a real and substantial reason that would
compel a reasonable person who was genuinely desirous of remaining employed to
leave work and the individual has made a reasonable effort to resolve the cause
of his/her leaving, when such effort is possible.
1) Example: When hired,
the individual commuted 5 miles each way to work. The employing unit then
relocated its plant to a town over 150 miles from the individual's residence,
causing a substantial increase in the individual's commuting costs and
commuting time. As a result, the individual leaves his/her job. The individual
had good cause for leaving work.
2) Example: An individual
retires at the same time a coworker retires, because he/she believes work would
not be as enjoyable without the coworker. The individual does not have good
cause for leaving the job.
3) Example: An individual's
paychecks are repeatedly returned due to insufficient funds, despite the individual's
numerous complaints to the employer. Upon having yet another paycheck returned
due to insufficient funds, the individual resigns. The individual has good
cause for leaving the job.
4) Example: When hired,
the individual was able to walk to work from his/her home in 15 minutes.
Thereafter, the employing unit relocates to a distance approximately 5 miles
from the individual's home, requiring the individual to use public
transportation. The commute on public transportation is approximately 45 minutes
each way. The individual quits his/her job because of the increase in
commuting time. The individual does not have good cause for quitting.
c) To be attributable to an
individual's employing unit, his or her reason for leaving work must be within
the control of the employing unit. Situations in which the reason for leaving
is attributable to the employer include, but are not limited to, situations in
which the employing unit has implemented a substantial change in the conditions
of employment.
1) Example: The individual
relocates to a town over 150 miles from the job site. Because the commute would
take more than 2 hours each way, the individual resigns. The individual's
reason for leaving is not attributable to the employing unit because the employing
unit had no control over where the individual chose to reside.
2) Example: When hired,
the individual commuted 5 miles each way to work. The employing unit then
relocated its plant to a town over 150 miles from the individual's residence,
causing a substantial increase in the individual's commuting costs and
commuting time. As a result, the individual leaves his/her job. The reason for
his/her leaving is attributable to the employing unit since the employing unit
changed the conditions of employment by moving its plant to a location
substantially farther from the individual's residence.
3) Example: An individual
concludes he/she is not living up to his/her full potential in his/her present
job and quits to return to school. The employer has made no changes in the
terms or conditions of his/her employment and has not given the individual any
reason to suspect any such changes are forthcoming. The individual's reason for
leaving is not attributable to the employing unit.
4) Example: An individual
quits his/her job to work for a different employer. The employing unit that the
individual leaves has made no changes in the terms or conditions of his/her
employment and has not given the individual any reason to suspect any such
changes are forthcoming. The individual's reason for leaving is not
attributable to the employing unit.
5) Example: The employer
announces that, as a result of a loss of a major client, hourly wages will be
reduced from $15 to $10, whereupon an employee quits. The employee's reason for
leaving is attributable to the employer, since the reduction is a substantial
change in working conditions. The employee will still have to demonstrate that
there was good cause for leaving.
6) Example: An individual
quits work because his/her supervisor is demeaning and abusive to him/her, but he/she
has not complained to higher management about the supervisor even though the
employer has a policy encouraging employees to report abusive supervisors, and
higher management is not otherwise aware of the supervisor's conduct. The
individual's leaving is not attributable to his/her employer. Since higher
management was not aware of the supervisor's conduct, the reason for the
individual's leaving was not within the employer's control.
7) Example: An individual
assigned to clean an area in the facility where he/she works objects to the
odor of the cleaning fluid the employer provides and requests the employer to
switch to a fluid the individual considers preferable. The employer denies the
request, stating that there is no indication the fluid it uses is unsafe, and
no one else has objected to the odor. The individual quits because the request
is denied. The type of cleaning fluid used is within the employer's control,
so the reason for quitting is attributable to the employer. However, to avoid
disqualification, the individual will have to demonstrate he/she had good cause
for quitting.
d) Subsection B of Section
601 of the Act [820 ILCS 405/601B] lists situations in which an individual will
not be disqualified from receiving unemployment benefits even though he or she
has left work voluntarily for a reason that is not necessarily attributable to
his or her employer. The following provides examples of some of those
situations, but is not an exhaustive list of circumstances, in which subsection
B would apply:
1) Example: The individual
is employed as a full time bank teller. His/her spouse develops a serious
medical condition that requires constant supervision. A friend can watch the
claimant's spouse each morning. The individual asks if he/she can work
mornings only so that he/she can be home to watch his/her spouse during the
afternoon. The employer indicates that it is unable to switch the individual
to part time hours. If the claimant leaves work to care for his/her spouse, he/she
is not subject to disqualification because his/her case falls within the
exception provided at Section 601B(1).
2) Example: The individual
works the third shift. The individual's spouse becomes ill and needs 24-hour
assistance. The individual is able to obtain county services to care for the
spouse during the day, but the only option for nighttime care is prohibitively
expensive. The employer indicates that it is unable to move the individual to
the first shift. If the individual leaves work to care for his/her spouse, he/she
is not subject to disqualification because his/her case falls within the
exception set forth in Section 601B(1).
3) Example: The individual
is a skilled metalworker. He/she quits his/her job to start his/her own metal
working business. For a few weeks, the business is quite successful, and he/she
earns over his/her weekly benefit amount in each of at least two weeks.
However, after a while, business falls off substantially. He/she files a claim
for unemployment insurance benefits. He/she is not subject to disqualification
because his/her case falls within the exception provided at Section 601B(2).
4) Example: An individual
complains to his/her supervisor about persistent sexual advances by a
coworker. The supervisor takes no further action believing the individual can
take care of himself/herself. The advances continue causing the individual to
quit his/her job. The individual is not subject to disqualification because his/her
case will fall within the exception at Section 601B(4) since the employer knew
of the harassment and failed to take any action.
5) Example: An individual's
ex-boyfriend/girlfriend periodically waits outside his/her job site and
threatens him/her when he/she arrives and leaves work. Fearing for his/her
safety, he/she stops coming to work, informing the employing unit of his/her
reason for leaving and providing the Department with a copy of a letter signed
by the individual's social worker, indicating the individual is receiving
domestic violence services. His/her case falls within Section 601B(6).
6) Example: An individual
who works nights lives with his/her 17-year-old child. His/her child's
ex-boyfriend/girlfriend has been harassing the child, repeatedly following the child
in public and making threatening telephone calls to the child at his/her home
at night. Fearing for the child's safety, the individual quits his/her job to
be home at night with the child. He/she informs the employer of his/her reason
for quitting and provides the Department with a copy of the police report
regarding the threatening calls. His/her case falls within Section 601B(6).
7) Example: An individual's
ex-boyfriend/girlfriend periodically waits outside his/her job site and
threatens him/her when he/she arrives and leaves work. Fearing for his/her
safety, he/she stops coming to work. He/she informs the employer of his/her
reason for leaving but fails to provide the Department with any of the evidence
enumerated in Section 601B(6) as acceptable proof of domestic violence. His/her
case will not fall within Section 601B(6).
8) Example: An individual
lives and works in Chicago with his/her spouse. The spouse accepts a new job in
Los Angeles, CA, and the individual and his/her spouse both agree they will
move to Los Angeles together. The individual leaves his/her job when it is time
to move to Los Angeles. The individual is not disqualified for leaving the job.
It would be impractical for him/her to commute from Los Angeles to his/her job
in Chicago, and his/her case, therefore, falls within Section 601B(7) of the
Act.
9) Example: An
individual's drive to work from Lincoln to Bloomington took about 45 minutes.
The individual moved to Decatur when his/her spouse was transferred to that
city. The individual quits his/her job to look for work in Decatur, although there
is no reason that he/she could not have continued driving to work in
Bloomington as the drive to Bloomington would only have been 15 minutes longer
from Decatur. The individual's case does not fall within Section 601B(7)
because commuting from Decatur to Bloomington would not be impractical.
10) Example: An individual's
commute to work within the City of Chicago by bicycle took about 45 minutes.
The individual and his/her spouse move to Skokie, a Chicago suburb, when his/her
spouse is transferred to Buffalo Grove, another Chicago suburb. While the
individual's commute time by automobile would still be about 45 minutes, the
individual refuses to use an automobile even though one is available to him/her.
Leaving under these circumstances would not fall within the exception in
Section 601B(7) of the Act [820 ILCS 405/601B(7)] because commuting would not
be impractical. Bicycling is the individual's personal preference.
(Source:
Added at 34 Ill. Reg. 8520, effective June 16, 2010)