IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA 
DIANA A. BURGER, : 
Petitioner ::
v. : NO. 1014 C.D. 2000 
: SUBMITTED: December 6, 2000 
UNEMPLOYMENT COMPENSATION: 
BOARD OF REVIEW, : 
Respondent : 
BEFORE: HONORABLE JOSEPH T. DOYLE, President Judge 
HONORABLE JAMES GARDNER COLINS, Judge 
HONORABLE BERNARD L. McGINLEY, Judge 
HONORABLE DORIS A. SMITH, Judge 
HONORABLE DAN PELLEGRINI, Judge 
HONORABLE JIM FLAHERTY, Judge 
HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Judge 
OPINION BY JUDGE SMITH FILED: May 18, 2001 

Diana A. Burger (Burger) petitions for review of an order of the 
Unemployment Compensation Board of Review (Board) that affirmed the decision 
of a referee denying her claim for unemployment compensation benefits. Burger 
states the issue as whether an employee's off-the-job drug activity will support a 
finding of willful misconduct when the drug activity does not violate the 
employer's drug policy and the activity is not connected to the employee's work. 
Garvey Manor (Employer) employed Burger as a certified nurse's aide 
from March 24, 1994 until November 9, 1999. On that date, Burger was 
summoned to a meeting with Joann Kasun, the Director of Human Services for 
Employer, and Mary Ann Sirko, Director of Nursing Services. Burger had
sustained a work-related injury and had received treatment from her personal 
physician. Burger's physician sent Employer a bill with an attached medical 
history in which Burger admitted to using marijuana daily and using prescription 
medications illegally. Kasun and Sirko confronted Burger with the allegation of 
illegal drug use and then showed her the medical history. Kasun stated that Burger 
admitted using marijuana on a daily basis and stated further that she used her 
daughter's pain prescriptions but did not use prescriptions off the streets, as the 
report indicated. 

Employer had distributed to all employees a handbook with a partial 
listing of behavior considered unacceptable in the workplace, including reporting 
to work or working under the influence of alcohol or illegal drugs, or the improper 
use, causing impairment, of prescription medication and violation of safety or 
health rules. Kasun testified that Burger, as a certified nurse's aide, was in constant 
contact with residents and that she was terminated because Employer could not be 
sure that she would be able to care safely for residents. Burger testified that she 
did use marijuana on a daily basis, in the evening, but that she never reported to 
work directly after using marijuana. 

The referee denied Burger's application for benefits under Section 
402(e) of the Unemployment Compensation Law (Law), Act of December 5, 1936, 
Second Ex. Sess., P.L. (1937) 2897, as amended, 43 P.S. §802(e), which provides 
that a claimant shall be ineligible for benefits for any week in which his or her 
unemployment is due to "discharge or temporary suspension from work for willful 
misconduct connected with [the] work." See Broadus v. Unemployment 
Compensation Board of Review, 721 A.2d 70 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1998). The referee 
stated that nothing in the record established that Burger's admitted drug use
affected her job performance. Therefore it did not fall under Employer's policy. 
Nevertheless, the referee concluded that under the general definition of willful 
misconduct, Burger's conduct was behavior that an employer should not have to 
accept from an employee. The Board affirmed. The Court's review of the Board's 
order is limited to determining whether there was a constitutional violation or an 
error of law and whether the necessary findings of the Board are supported by 
substantial evidence in the record. Broadus. 

Whether employee conduct constitutes willful misconduct is a 
question of law fully reviewable by this Court. Gwynedd Square Center v. 
Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 656 A.2d 562 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1995). 
The employer bears the burden of proving willful misconduct. Broadus. Burger 
begins by quoting the definition of willful misconduct in Gillins v. Unemployment 
Compensation Board of Review, 534 Pa. 590, 633 A.2d 1150 (1993). She cites 
Webb v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 670 A.2d 1212, 1216 (Pa. 
Cmwlth. 1996), for the principle that Section 402(e) requires "that willful 
misconduct be connected with a claimant's work." She notes that the Court stated 
in Gallagher v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 388 A.2d 785, 787 
(1978), that "[a]n employer may require that his employees be exemplary citizens 
off the job as well as on. He may discharge them for failing to live up to this 
standard…. However, acting in a manner meriting the employer's disapproval does 
not disqualify an employee from receiving unemployment compensation upon his 
discharge unless his dereliction is connected with his work." 

Burger points out that in Webb the Court held that the connection-towork 
requirement meant that a claimant's off-the-job arrest for driving under the 
influence of alcohol did not constitute willful misconduct under Section 402(e) of
the Law, where the employer's work rule against an employee's using alcohol for 
five years after rehabilitation was deemed to be unreasonable. She contends that 
Webb controls and that it would not permit a finding of willful misconduct. In 
addition, Burger notes that this case was decided under Section 402(e), and she 
asserts that Section 3, 43 P.S. §752, stating that compensation is intended to assist 
"persons unemployed through no fault of their own," therefore does not apply. If 
the Court deems Section 3 to be applicable, Burger contends that Employer has 
failed to satisfy its burden of proving that her behavior "directly reflects upon [her] 
ability to perform [her] assigned duties." Mills v. Unemployment Compensation 
Board of Review, 539 A.2d 956, 957 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1988). 

Employer responds that, because Burger habitually used marijuana at 
night and abused prescription painkillers, she could have harmed patients, and 
therefore she subjected Employer to potential liability in disregard of Employer's 
interests and of the standard of behavior that it had a right to expect. Employer 
compares this case to Derry v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 693 
A.2d 622 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1997), where the Court affirmed the denial of benefits to a 
worker with troubled adolescents who violated a known employer policy against 
illegal drug use, even away from work, thereby undermining his own function as a 
role model and possibly the public's confidence in the employer's programs. 

The Court agrees that Burger's conduct constituted willful misconduct 
connected with her work. First, Burger admitted to using marijuana at home in the 
evening every day, and she agreed that she should not be working when she was 
under its influence — she denied ever reporting to work in such a condition. In 
addition, she admitted to having a problem in regard to using painkillers that were 
not prescribed for her, for which she thought Employer should have given her
rehabilitation rather than termination. N.T. at pp. 7, 9. The Court agrees that these 
admissions gave rise to a perfectly legitimate concern on Employer's part that 
Burger might well attempt to work in a sufficiently impaired condition to create 
safety problems. Burger's causing this concern was conduct connected to her work 
in violation of the standards that Employer had a right to expect. 

In the alternative, the Supreme Court has stated that the policy of 
Section 3 of the Law, that benefits be reserved for those unemployed through no 
fault of their own, must be considered when construing all other sections of the 
Law. Gillins. The Supreme Court in Gillins adopted the test stated by this Court 
in Unemployment Compensation Board of Review v. Derk, 353 A.2d 915 (Pa. 
Cmwlth. 1976), for analyzing cases involving criminal conduct away from the 
workplace: an employer must prove (1) that the conduct of the claimant leading to 
the arrest was inconsistent with acceptable standards of behavior and (2) that the 
claimant's conduct directly reflects upon his or her ability to perform assigned 
duties. In the present case, although there was no arrest, Burger's admitted conduct 
is inconsistent with acceptable standards of behavior. The daily use of illegal 
drugs involved here, unlike some other forms of criminal activity, does reflect 
directly upon Burger's ability to perform her duties. Therefore, the order of the 
Board is affirmed. 

DORIS A. SMITH, Judge

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA 
DIANA A. BURGER, : 
Petitioner ::
v. : NO. 1014 C.D. 2000 
: 
UNEMPLOYMENT COMPENSATION: 
BOARD OF REVIEW, : 
Respondent : 
O R D E R 
AND NOW, this 18th day of May, 2001, the order of the 
Unemployment Compensation Board of Review is affirmed. 
DORIS A. SMITH, Judge