Bradel v. Commonwealth, Department of Labor & Industry
Bradel v. Commonwealth, Department of Labor & Industry
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
This is an appeal from a decision and order of the State Civil Service Commission (Commission) sustaining the furlough of Frederick R. Bradel (Petitioner) from his position as an Employment Security Specialist III (ESS III), regular status, for the Department of Labor and Industry (Department). We affirm.
While he was employed by the Department, Petitioner was assigned to the Trade Readjustment Program (TRA) of the Bureau of Job Service, a division of the Department’s Office of Employment Security (Office). In a letter dated March 19, 1982, the Department informed Petitioner that he was being furloughed from his position pursuant to the provisions of Section 802 of the Civil Service Act (Act), Act of August 5,1941, P.L. 752, as amended, 71 P.S. §741.802, because of a cut in the Office’s funding, and Petitioner subsequently appealed this personnel action to the Commission pursuant to the provisions of Section 951(a) of the Act, 71 P.S. §741.951 (a). At a hearing before the Commission, the Office’s acting Executive Director, Wendell K. Pass, testified that as a result of cuts in the Office’s funding, it was determined in February of 1982 that 211 positions in the Office’s Work Incentive Program (WIN), and forty other Office positions, could not be funded in 1982. None of the positions that could not be funded, however, were located in the TRA program. Susan Benner, the Department’s Chief of Recruitment and Placement, testified, in turn, that of the 251 positions that could not be funded, two were in Petitioner’s class,
Petitioner, for his part, did not challenge the validity of Ms. Benner’s selection process, and in fact expressly agreed that he would have to be furloughed if the two ESS III positions in question were not funded. Instead, Petitioner alleged (1) that the Office’s TEA program received an additional $225,-000 in federal funding between the time when the initial decision was made to furlough 251 employees and the date they were actually furloughed, and (2) that the Office should have reduced the number of people it furloughed in light of this increase in funding. Specifically, Petitioner, who represented himself at the hearing, summarized his argument as follows: ‘ ‘ So my position is that here is money that they could have saved forty people, [sic] I could have been one of them. I’m not saying I would have been, I’m just saying that I could have been. ’ ’ In response to Petitioner’s argument, however, the Department recalled
After evaluating this evidence, the Commission issued an adjudication in which it incorrectly found as a fact that Petitioner had been employed in the WIN as opposed to the TRA program. The Commission also stated the following, however:
Appellant, however, contends that the scope of the furlough decision was excessive. His contention is based on the fact that funds totaling 225,000 dollars were made available for the • TRA unit . . . and, therefore, an adjustment should have been made to lessen the extent of the furloughs. This contention was refuted by testimony from the appointing authority’s witness to the effect that TRA money could not be used for the WIN program and, therefore, could not affect appellant’s designation for furlough. . . . The Commission finds this evidence credible....
The Commission accordingly affirmed the furlough action, and the present appeal followed.
The appointing authority has the burden of proving that a furlough was necessitated by a lack of funds or work, Section 802, and where as here the party with the burden of proof prevailed below, our scope of review is limited to a determination as to
Here, Petitioner alleges that the Commission incorrectly found that he was employed in the WIN program instead of the TEA program, and that it should have concluded that he was improperly furloughed since the TEA program received additional funding.
While it is true that the Commission incorrectly found that Petitioner was employed in the WIN program, this mistake is of no relevance to the Commission’s ultimate conclusion. As the Commission correctly realized, when a position is eliminated because of a lack of funding or work, the individual currently holding that position isn’t necessarily the individual who will be furloughed. Instead, Section 802 provides that decisions on the furloughing of employees are to be made on a class wide basis, taking into consideration the relative job performance and seniority of the members of that class. Hence, under the provisions of Section 802, an employee can be “bumped” from his position when furloughs are made, even if the program he was employed in was not the program that was cut. This is what occurred in the present case since Petitioner was “bumped” from his position in the TEA program, which was not cut, by an employee who held a position in the same class, but in a program that was cut. Since, in the present case, the additional funding the TEA program received could not be used to restore funding for positions which were not financed in other programs, and since the funding was not used to create additional ESS III
Order
Now, January 10, 1984, tbe order of tbe State Civil Service Commission at Appeal No. 3935, dated October 27,198.2, is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.