William Shakespeare once wrote that “parting is such sweet sorrow.” In this case, which requires us to mull the circumstances under which an employee’s “early retirement” can be considered a “constructive discharge,” plaintiffs’ parting with their longtime employer proved more sorrowful than sweet. When plaintiffs sued, the district court added to their pain, granting the employer’s motion for summary judgment.
I
BACKGROUND
Consistent with the method of Fed.R.Civ.P. 56, we draw upon the undisputed facts to set the stage for what transpired.
Defendant-appellee Kodak Caribbean, Ltd. (Kodak) decided to downsize its operations in Puerto Rico. To this end, it announced the availability of a voluntary separation program (the VSP). 1 Qn September 15, 1989, Kodak held a meeting to explain the VSP to its local work force. The company distributed descriptive documents to virtually all Kodak employees, save only for certain managerial and human resources personnel, regardless of age or years of service. The written materials spelled out the benefits afforded, the method of calculating severance pay, and how the program would be implemented.
Kodak encouraged workers to participate in the VSP, but did not require them to do so. Withal, the company informed all its employees that if substantially fewer than twenty-six individuals opted to enter the VSP, others would be reassigned or furloughed in order to reach the desired staffing level.
Two veteran employees, Jorge Vega and Eusebio Leon, were among those who chose to participate in the VSP. After signing an election form on October 4, 1989, Leon received a lump-sum severance payment of $28,163.16 plus other benefits. Vega followed suit on October 10, 1989, executing a similar form and receiving a $52,671.00 severance payment. The men retired on the dates designated in their respective election forms. At no time did either man ask to revoke his election or offer to refund his severance payment.
In 1990, Vega and Leon brought separate suits against Kodak, each alleging discrimination on the basis of age. Their complaints, which invoked the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 621-634 (1988 & Supp. III 1991), and certain Puerto Rico statutes, charged that Kodak’s implementation of the VSP violated the law. The district court consolidated the two cases and, on December 10, 1992, granted Kodak’s motion for brevis disposition. 2 This appeal ensued.
II
The Legal Framework
In a wrongful discharge case under the ADEA, the plaintiff bears the ultimate “burden of proving that ... he would not have been fired but for his age.”
Freeman v. Package Mach. Co.,
Establishing a prima facie case creates a presumption that the employer unlawfully discriminated and shifts the burden of production to the defendant.
See Hebert,
The intersection at which the burden-shifting framework meets Rule 56 is also well mapped. To survive summary judgment, “a plaintiff must establish at least a genuine issue of material fact on every element essential to his case in chief.”
Mesnick,
On appeal, we afford plenary review to a grant of summary judgment and possess the power to affirm on any independently sufficient ground made manifest by the record.
See Mesnick,
*480 III
Analysis
On this record, appellants fall prey to Rule 56 at square one, for they have failed to adduce evidence sufficient to establish their prima facie case. We explain briefly.
To satisfy the third element in the prima facie case, ADEA suitors who claim to have been wrongfully ousted from their jobs must demonstrate that they were actually or constructively discharged. Here, appellants concede that they were not cashiered. They maintain, however, that Kodak’s sponsorship of the VSP effected their constructive discharges by forcing them into an unpalatable (and unwarranted) choice between early retirement and dismissal. 3 The facts of record, fused with the appropriate legal standard, belie the charge.
Mere offers for early retirement, even those that include attractive incentives designed to induce employees who might otherwise stay on the job to separate from the employer’s service, do not transgress the ADEA.
See Hem v. National Geographic Soc’y,
Kodak’s promulgation of the VSP cannot be said to have presented Vega and Leon with this sort of Hobson’s choice. The offer was cast as one to be accepted or rejected at an employee’s will. The contract and explanatory memorandum contained numerous words and phrases alerting the reader to its voluntary nature. Moreover, the circumstances of the offer were not coercive: employees had six weeks to mull the offer’s ramifications before making a decision; they were encouraged to gather information and ask questions; and they retained the right to revoke the election for a period of time. An employer’s effort to construct a pressure-free environment conducive to calm decisionmak-ing in the employee’s enlightened self-interest often constitutes the hallmark of a real offer as opposed to an ultimatum.
See Henn,
Finally, nothing in the record indicates that, for any particular employee, refusing early retirement meant either discharge or the imposition of working conditions so abhorrent as to justify resignation. To be sure, Kodak said that it would likely furlough a number of employees if not enough workers elected to depart voluntarily. But, three things palliate the inference that appellants seek to draw from this statement: (1) the company simultaneously announced, both *481 orally and in writing, that if a sufficient complement participated in the VSP, the need to thin the ranks unilaterally would never arise; (2) it did not directly or indirectly indicate which particular individuals would be tapped should layoffs prove to be necessary; and (3) it never threatened that persons ultimately selected for involuntary separation would be treated harshly. 4
Notwithstanding the formidable array of circumstances weighing in favor of a finding that appellants resigned voluntarily, appellants assert that they were constructively discharged because they
believed
that rejecting the VSP was tantamount to forfeiting their jobs. We discern no genuine issue of material fact; assuming that appellants’ mindset was as stated, their conclusion does not follow. An employee’s perceptions cannot govern a claim of constructive discharge if, and to the extent that, the perceptions are unreasonable.
See Calhoun,
In an attempt to coat their subjective beliefs with a patina of plausibility, appellants ignore the fact that no firings or layoffs ever materialized, and, instead, tout a supervisor’s statement that Kodak shelters “no sacred cows.” This statement, directed not toward Vega and Leon in particular but toward Kodak’s entire work force, articulated an unfor-tanate but hardly remarkable condition of working life: broad-based subjugation to the risk of future termination is common fare in a depressed economic climate. It, alone, is insufficient to constitute constructive discharge.
See Bodnar v. Synpol, Inc.,
In fine, the record is barren of evidence competent to support an inference that Kodak placed appellants “between the Scylla of forced retirement [and] the Charybdis of discharge.”
Hebert,
IV
Conclusion
We need go no further. Although Kodak has assembled an armada of additional assev-erations in support of the decision below, addressing those points would serve no useful purpose. It suffices to say that, since appellants failed to limn a prima facie ease of age discrimination, 5 the district court appro *482 priately entered summary judgment in the defendant’s favor.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The record reflects that Kodak's parent company decided to slash costs by reorganizing its operations throughout the United States and, consequently, promulgated the VSP on a nationwide basis. The Puerto Rico reduction in force was part and parcel of this larger reorganization.
. Appellants' suits triggered the district court's federal question jurisdiction.
See
28 U.S.C. § 1331 (1988). However, when the district court disposed of the ADEA claims, the pendent claims became subject to dismissal for want of subject matter jurisdiction.
See United Mine Workers v. Gibbs,
. We use the euphemism “early retirement" in its broad, nontechnical sense to include any employer-sponsored plan that provides a special benefit to an employee in return for a voluntary decision to withdraw from active employment at an earlier-than-anticipated time. The VSP is such a plan.
. For example, Kodak never warned that involuntarily separated employees would be stripped of severance benefits or treated less favorably than those persons who chose to enter the VSP. And, moreover, the company suggested that attempts would be made to offer involuntarily separated employees comparable positions elsewhere in the Kodak organization, as opposed to simply cutting them loose.
. Because appellants had the burden of adducing evidence on each of the four elements of their prima facie case, the deficiency we have described is fatal to their suits. Thus, although we note in passing that their prima facie case flounders in another respect as well — the record does not support their assertions that Kodak failed to treat age neutrally in its authorship and *482 implementation of the VSP — we do not pause to elucidate the point.
