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Unemployment Insurance
Web Library Topic -
Quit for Personal Reasons

Statute
§ 8‑73‑108(5)(e)(XXII), C.R.S.
2005
(5)(e) Subject to the maximum reduction consistent with federal law,
and insofar as consistent with interstate agreements, if a separation
from employment occurs for any of the following reasons, the employer
from whom such separation occurred shall not be charged for benefits
which are attributable to such employment and, because any payment of
benefits which are attributable to such employment out of the fund as
defined in section 8-70-103 (13) shall be deemed to have an adverse
effect on such employer's account in such fund, no payment of such
benefits shall be made from such fund:
(XXII) Quitting under conditions involving personal reasons that do
not, under other provisions of this section, provide for an award of
benefits, including compelling personal reasons.
Cases
Gatewood v. Russell, 29 Colo. App. 11, 478
P.2d 679 (1970)
"[T]he reason for voluntary termination of
employment must be for objective rather than personal reasons."
In this case, although the claimant asserted he quit because of
harassment, those circumstances were found to be a personality
conflict with his supervisor. Therefore, because the claimant
quit for subjective personal reasons, the claimant was disqualified
from the receipt of unemployment benefits.
Rotenberg v. Industrial Commission, 42 Colo. App. 161, 590 P.2d 521
(1979)
A claimant who quit because of cigarette smoke in
the work environment did not show the working conditions were
unsatisfactory or hazardous apart from his subjective assertions of
discomfort, and was properly disqualified.
Musgrave
v. Industrial Claim Appeals Office, 762 P.2d 686 (Colo. App. 1988)
Although the employer could have acted more
reasonably under the circumstances, that did not justify an award
for the claimant who quit because of her personal dissatisfaction
with the employer's otherwise reasonable actions.
Colorado
Division of Employment & Training v. Hewlett, 777 P.2d 704 (Colo.
1989)
§ 8-73-108(5)(e)(XXII)
is not applicable where the claimant’s "personal reasons" for
quitting would support an award under any of the qualifying
provision of § 8-73-108(4), C.R.S. 2004.
Cole v. Industrial Claim Appeals Office, 964
P.2d 617 (Colo. App. 1998)
Although the claimant's health problems and those of
her children contributed to her decision to quit, the claimant was
not prevented from working due to those circumstances, and thus the
claimant's resignation was a volitional act that disqualified her
under § 8‑73‑108(5)(e)(XXII).
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