IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA 
Baldwin-Whitehall School District, : 
: 
Petitioner : 
: 
v. : No. 2080 C.D. 2003 
: 
Unemployment Compensation : 
Board of Review, : 
: 
Respondent : 
PER CURIAM 
O R D E R 
NOW, April 30, 2004, it is ordered that the above-captioned Memorandum 
Opinion, filed February 11, 2004, shall be designated OPINION and shall be 
REPORTED. 

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA 
Baldwin-Whitehall School District, : 
: 
Petitioner : 
: 
v. : No. 2080 C.D. 2003 
: 
Unemployment Compensation : Submitted: December 19, 2003 
Board of Review, : 
: 
Respondent : 
BEFORE: HONORABLE ROCHELLE S. FRIEDMAN, Judge 
HONORABLE RENÉE L. COHN, Judge 
HONORABLE JOSEPH F. McCLOSKEY, Senior Judge 
OPINION BY JUDGE COHN FILED: February 11, 2004 

This is an appeal by Baldwin-Whitehall School District (Employer) from an 
order of the Unemployment Compensation Board of Review (Board) that reversed 
a referee’s decision to deny benefits on the basis that Joseph L. D’Alessandro 
(Claimant) was not “unemployed” within the meaning of Sections 401 and 4(u) of 
the Unemployment Compensation Law (Law), Act of December 5, 1936, Second 
Ex. Sess., P.L. (1937) 2897, as amended, 43 P.S. §§801, 753(u). We must now 
decide whether Claimant, who worked 4-5 hours a day as a school bus driver, was 
“unemployed.” 

Claimant was called by the unemployment office, notified of his eligibility 
and, thereafter, filed for unemployment benefits with an effective date of April 28, 
2002; the Unemployment Compensation Service Center (Center) initially granted 
them. Employer then appealed. The referee reversed that decision concluding 
that, while the Center had correctly ruled that Claimant was not disqualified on the 
basis of refusal of suitable work, a determination not at issue here, it had 
incorrectly ruled that Claimant was unemployed. Claimant then appealed to the 
Board. 

On appeal, the Board made its own findings of fact.1 Claimant began 
working for Employer in February 2001 and continues to do so as a school bus 
driver. He works 4 to 5 hours per day, and there is no dispute that he has always 
worked for Employer for the same number of hours. Claimant filed an application 
for benefits effective April 28, 2002, and qualified for a weekly benefit rate of 
$442.00 and a partial benefit credit of $177.00, based on wages paid to him during 
the base year of January 1, 2001 through December 31, 2001. During his base year 
of 2001, Claimant only worked for Employer. However, during 2001, in addition 
to his wages from Employer, Claimant received compensation from his prior 
employer, LTV Steel, because of past wage concessions, and this compensation 
was included in the calculation of his base year wages. In his application, 
Claimant made claims for the waiting week ending May 4, 2002, and received 
partial benefits for the weeks ending April 12, 2002 through June 8, 2002, and 
September 7, 2002 through April 12, 2003. On his application, he reported his 
earnings for the school bus driver position, and the Board noted that he had worked 
the weeks in issue. In fact, the Board, in its adjudication, specifically explained 
that during the weeks in issue Claimant was actually working on a part-time basis, 
but that, “due to his high quarter wage and total base year wages he is financially 
entitled to an amount that permits[,] after deduction for his actual and potential 
earnings, partial benefits.”23 It also concluded that Claimant had remained able and 
available for suitable work and, accordingly, reversed the decision of the referee 
and granted benefits. Employer appealed here. 

We note, initially, that we have an anomaly here. The employer who is 
challenging the grant of benefits is not the one who should be responsible for 
paying them. The current employer, Baldwin-Whitehall, hired Claimant for part-
time work, and has continued to employ him in that capacity. However, it was the 
lump sum from LTV Steel, a prior employer, that generated Claimant’s right to 
unemployment compensation. The appropriate remedy for this is for the current 
employer, Baldwin-Whitehall, to file a notice under Section 302 of the Law, 43 
P.S. §782(a.2), for relief from charges.4 Section 302 provides: 
	If the department finds that an individual subsequent to separation 
	from his work is engaged in part-time work for a base year employer, 
	other than a base year employer from whom he has separated, 
	compensation paid to such individual with respect to any week of 
	unemployment occurring subsequent to such separation and while 
	such part-time work continues without material change, shall not be 
	charged to the account of such part-time employer; provided, such 
	part-time employer has filed a notice with the department in 
	accordance with its rules and regulations and within the time limits 
	prescribed therein. 

We cannot tell in this case whether Employer ever filed such a notice, which would 
have relieved it of liability. 

On appeal to this Court, Employer argues that the Board incorrectly ruled 
that Claimant was working part-time, without making a finding as to what 
constituted full-time work for one in Claimant’s position (i.e., school bus driver). 
It asserts that, in determining whether Claimant worked part-time, the Board was 
required to look to Claimant’s “normal full-time work,” and focus on the specific 
circumstances of Claimant’s case. Essentially, Employer’s argument is that 
Claimant was a school bus driver and persons employed by it in that capacity have 
always worked between four and five hours daily, occasionally more, and that is 
the normal “full-time” employment for Claimant. It maintains that, because the 
Board did not contradict any of the referee’s findings, it should have affirmed his 
order but, instead, applied an “incorrect” legal test to determine that Claimant was 
unemployed. 

Section 401 of the Law provides that compensation shall be payable to “any 
employe who is or becomes unemployed …” (emphasis added). Section 4(u) of 
the Law defines the term “unemployed” as follows: 
	An individual shall be deemed unemployed (I) with respect to any 
	week (i) during which he performs no services for which 
	remuneration is paid or payable to him and (ii) with respect to which 
	no remuneration is paid or payable to him, or (II) with respect to any 
	week of less than his full-time work if the remuneration paid or 
	payable to him with respect to such week is less than his weekly 
	benefit rate plus his partial benefit credit. 

For a claimant to be regarded as unemployed, he must have, for the weeks in 
question, been working less than his normal full-time work. Corning Glass v. 
Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 616 A.2d 175 (Pa. Cmwlth. 
1992), petition for allowance of appeal denied, 535 Pa. 624, 629 A.2d. 1384 
(1993). The term “full-time work” is undefined in the Law. Part-time work is 
defined, however, in Board Regulation 63.35(a), 34 Pa Code §63.35(a), as 
“[w]ork other than normal full-time work of a claimant with a regular base-year 
employer which is ordinarily performed for less than the total number of hours or 
days customarily worked in the business, occupation or industry.” In applying 
this definition, we are required to look to the individual circumstances of the 
claimant’s employment, rather than focus on the number of hours worked. 
Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania v. Unemployment Compensation Board 
of Review, 692 A.2d 586 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1997). Additionally, where, as here, there 
has been an involuntary separation from full-time employment and, subsequently, 
employment with reduced hours, we look to the work from which the claimant 
was separated before commencing the new part-time work. Philadelphia 
Newspapers, Inc. v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 426 A.2d 
1289 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1981). It is this last point that Employer has not addressed. 

Although it might be true that school bus drivers work 4 to 5 hours per day, 
Claimant’s prior full-time employment in the steel industry must be considered to 
determine whether Claimant’s current employment is part-time.5 

Because the Board was the ultimate fact finder in this case, Peak, and 
because it found that Claimant was working part-time, whereas the referee in his 
discussion stated that “there is no evidence …that the claimant was working less 
than his full-time work as a school bus driver,” we must examine the record to see 
if there is substantial evidence to support the Board’s finding. Substantial 
evidence is that which a reasonable mind, without weighing the evidence or 
substituting its judgment for that of the factfinder, might accept as adequate to 
support the conclusion reached. Centennial School District v. Department of 
Education, 503 A.2d 1090, 1093 n.1 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1986), affirmed, 517 Pa. 540, 
539 A.2d 785 (1988). 

Regarding the finding that Claimant was employed as a bus driver only part-
time, we do agree with Employer that the Board did not make specific findings as 
to what constituted full-time work for one in Claimant’s position as a school bus 
driver. However, the record indicates that Claimant had worked 46 hours a week 
for LTV Steel. (Ex. 10, Notice of Determination, Finding of Fact 3). This was 
Claimant’s “normal full-time work.” When his current employment as a school 
bus driver is compared to his prior employment, there is reasonable evidence from 
which one could conclude that Claimant works part-time for Employer. 

Employer relies on Womeldorf v. Unemployment Compensation Board of 
Review, 449 A.2d 865 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1982), to bolster its assertion that Claimant 
worked full-time. In Womeldorf, we affirmed a decision in which the Board had 
held that a claimant who worked only 11.46 hours a week was a full-time 
employee. That case is readily distinguishable from the matter sub judice. In 

Womeldorf, the claimant worked as a flexible clerk, with a widely fluctuating 
schedule, and was guaranteed only four hours of work per week, but was, 
nonetheless, required to remain available. She testified that she often worked as 
many as 22 hours a week, and the record there reflected that her average number 
of hours worked per week was 11.46. This evidence was deemed sufficient to 
support a finding of full-time work.6 Here, however, we look to Claimant’s 
previous employment to determine what constituted full-time work for this 
Claimant.7 The Womeldorf case, when contrasted with this one, merely illustrates 
that each case is highly fact driven. 

Because we determine that the Board committed no error in concluding that 
Claimant was a part-time employee who was entitled to collect benefits, we must 
affirm the Board’s order. 8 

RENÉE L. COHN, Judge 


IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA 
Baldwin-Whitehall School District, : 
: 
Petitioner : 
: 
v. : No. 2080 C.D. 2003 
: 
Unemployment Compensation : 
Board of Review, : 
: 
Respondent : 
O R D E R 
NOW, February 11, 2004, the order of the Unemployment Compensation 
Board of Review in the above-captioned matter is hereby affirmed. 
RENÉE L. COHN, Judge 











NOTES:

1 In an unemployment compensation case, the Board is the ultimate factfinder and is 
empowered to make credibility determinations. Peak v. Unemployment Compensation Board of 
Review, 509 Pa. 267, 501 A.2d 1383 (1985). In making those determinations, the Board may 
accept or reject the testimony of any witness in whole or in part. Greif v. Unemployment 
Compensation Board of Review, 450 A.2d 229 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1982). 

2 These high wages, it appears, were due to some sort of a lump sum payment that related 
back to his previous employment with LTV Steel, his former employer. 

3 Our scope of review is limited to determining whether the Board's adjudication is in 
violation of constitutional rights, whether an error of law was committed, or whether the factual 
findings are supported by substantial evidence. Nolan v. Unemployment Compensation Board of 
Review, 797 A.2d 1042 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2002). 

4 Section 302 of the Law was added by Section 4 of the Act of May 26, 1949, P.L. 1854. 

5 The Board made no factual findings regarding whether Claimant was involuntarily 
separated from his prior employment, and there are no facts in the record that support such a 
finding; however, Employer has not raised this issue. 

6 We note that the “averaging method” affirmed by this Court in Womeldorf has been 
called into question in Corning Glass, 616 A.2d at 176 n.4. 

7 Because the proper comparison is to Claimant’s previous employment, we do not rely 
upon Claimant’s testimony that this bus driver job was only part-time. 

8 Employer seeks, in the alternative, a remand of this matter, citing to Philadelphia 
Newspapers, where we vacated the Board’s order and remanded for additional findings of fact. 
Such a remedy is not required here, however, since we have all the essential findings needed for 
disposition of this appeal.