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Resignations

Quitting pending discharge means no unemployment comp

07/13/2011
Employees who quit after being told they may be terminated aren’t eligible for unemployment compensation. That’s especially true if quitting provides another benefit, such as the ability to use the employer as a reference.

Whistle-blowers win big in New Jersey Supreme Court

06/28/2011
The New Jersey Supreme Court has delivered a powerful blow to New Jersey employers that find themselves in the crosshairs of a Conscientious Employee Protection Act lawsuit. It ruled in June that whistle-blowers who suffer retaliation that causes psychological damage can collect lost wages—even if they weren’t fired, but quit instead.

Without a noncompete agreement, can we stop a former employee from undercutting us?

06/08/2011
Q. We just had a successful salesperson quit his job and join one of our major competitors. We did not, unfortunately, have him sign either a noncompete agreement or a confidential information agreement. We are very concerned that he may have taken, and may be using, some of our company’s confidential business information, including detailed customer information. Is there anything we can do about this situation, given the absence of any written contract?

Merely worrying about pay cut doesn’t justify quitting

06/08/2011
Employees who quit because of substantially reduced pay may be able to collect unemployment. However, they can’t merely speculate that a new pay system will result in lower pay.

Fight unemployment benefits if employee quits because of unsubstantiated safety fears

06/08/2011
An employee who reports a serious safety hazard and stops coming to work after the employer refuses to fix the hazard may collect unemployment benefits. But that’s not true if the employee doesn’t give the employer a chance to remedy the problem and just quits out of fear.

Check for job search if employee was ‘forced’ to quit

06/07/2011
Under limited circumstances, an em­­ployee can claim that harassment or discrimination at work made her life so miserable that she had no choice but to quit. She can then walk out and sue as if she had been fired. But what if it turns out that the employee found a job before quitting? That can sink her claim.

Disabled employee wants open position? That may be a reasonable accommodation

06/01/2011
Employers have an obligation to reasonably accommodate disabled employees. They can’t just ignore an accommodation request—especially if it involves the relatively simple step of placing the employee in an open job.

Think co-worker religious bias wasn’t serious? Don’t bet on courts taking such a casual view

06/01/2011
Earlier this year, we told you about a North Carolina religious har­ass­ment case that was dismissed because the judge felt the alleged har­assment wasn’t serious enough to warrant a lawsuit. The EEOC asked the court to re­consider its decision and it did, order­ing the lawsuit reinstated.

No unemployment after quitting to take job that never happened

04/25/2011
Employees who lose their jobs through no fault of their own are generally en­­titled to unemployment compensation benefits. But if an employee simply re­­­­­­­signs from one job to take a better one that never materializes, he can’t collect.

I-35 bridge collapse hero takes retirement settlement

03/14/2011

Minneapolis Fire Department Capt. Shanna Hanson was off-duty when she heard of the I-35 bridge collapse in August 2007. Nevertheless, she grabbed her gear and dove into the Mississippi River in hopes of finding survivors. Television coverage of the disaster made Hanson a local hero. Now, accumulated injuries have taken their toll on the 19-year veteran, so she is taking a $113,000 workers’ compensation buyout and hanging up her fire helmet.