OPINION BY
Laureen M. Boles appeals from an order of the Court of Common Pleas for the First Judicial District (trial court) sustaining a demotion by her employer, the City of Philadelphia. In doing so, the trial court reversed the order of the Civil Service Commission of the City of Philadelphia (the Commission) restoring Boles to her former position as a Sanitary Engineer III with the City's Water Department. Concluding that the City's evidence demonstrated just cause to demote Boles, we affirm the trial court.
Boles, who has been employed by the City for 19 years, was out of work due to illness for approximately one year. She returned to work in June 2004, and was assigned to the Watershed Protection Office (Office) as a Sanitary Engineer III. Effective January 8, 2005, Boles was demoted to Sanitary Engineer II for the stated reason that she did not complete a project in accordance with the directions of her supervisor. Boles appealed her demotion, and the Commission conducted a hearing.
At the hearing, Boles’ immediate supervisor, Christopher Crockett, testified to the events surrounding her demotion. Boles joined the Office on June 28, 2004, and the next day, Crockett, the manager of the Office, met with Boles. He assigned her the project of planning the Watershed Technology Center, which was being established to provide technical watershed information to developers and regulators, as well as to the general public. Although a Sanitary Engineer III should be able to handle multiple projects simultaneously, Crockett explained that he assigned Boles this single project as a “warm up” assignment, one easily within the ability of a Sanitary Engineer III. The day after their meeting, Crockett e-mailed Boles a time-line for completing certain tasks.
On July 22, 2004, Crockett met with Boles to discuss her progress on the time-line and discovered that Boles had not yet interviewed staff members, which was the critical first step he had identified in his timeline. Boles gave Crockett some PowerPoint slides, consisting of bullet points taken out of a 1997 document that were, in Crockett’s view, vague. It became apparent to Crockett that Boles was taking a very minor part of the project, ie., finding a physical location for the center, and turning it into her principal focus. Crockett coached Boles to redirect her efforts so that the project could be completed in a timely manner.
Crockett met with Boles again in August. At that point, Boles still had not interviewed the Office staff, as had been directed. Again, Boles gave Crockett the same PowerPoint slides she had produced in July but in a new format. Crockett again explained to Boles what she had to do. He found himself “thoroughly confused as to ... why these things were not being done.” Reproduced Record at 67a (R.R._). Crockett gave Boles an extension to August 19, 2004, to meet with Office staff. Boles did not meet this deadline.
On August 20, 2004, Crockett gave Boles a “special performance report,” giving her an unsatisfactory performance rating “to alert her to the seriousness of the situation” and to explain, in writing, what she *391needed to do to achieve satisfactory performance. R.R. 67a-68a. The report stated, inter alia, that Boles “has missed critical project deadlines,” “has not shown acceptable initiative,” and “is not engaging [Office] staff regarding her tasks as directed in progress meetings.” R.R. 151a. Boles was given until September 2, 2004, to complete an initial comprehensive conceptual design and to lead a brainstorming session with the entire Office staff. She was also given until September 27, 2004, to complete a final draft of a plan for the center. Boles did not appeal Crockett’s performance report.
Crockett testified that Boles told him that she had tried to set up a meeting with staff on August 26, 2004. Boles did not invite Office staff, as directed, but instead requested the Office managers to invite their staffs. However, the invitations, sent by e-mail, did not reach all Office managers. In any event, it was not the managers’ responsibility to help Boles set up this meeting, according to Crockett. Further, Boles did no follow up to find out which staff members would attend. Because the meeting did not take place on August 26, 2004, Crockett revised the timelines for the project, pushing everything back. Again, Crockett met with Boles to re-explain the tasks to be completed. Crockett testified that “I asked her if she was okay with those [tasks], what changes needed to be made, if I was asking for too much, what else needed to be communicated— she said, no, this is clear.” R.R. 69a.
On August 30, 2004, Crockett produced a new timeline for Boles’ project. Boles missed a September 3, 2004, deadline. Crockett concluded that Boles was not trying to improve her performance and that she was not keeping him informed. On September 17, 2004, Crockett sent Boles a memorandum stating that she needed “to really start performing like an Engineer III and to just demonstrate some basic abilities.” R.R. 71a.
On September 23, 2004, Crockett and another manager met with Boles. Boles gave them the same material she provided Crockett in August but in a larger font. Crockett told Boles that there were major items to be undertaken before the upcoming October 6, 2004, staff presentation on the plan for the Watershed Technology Center. At that point, Boles requested a week off and threatened to call in sick on October 6, 2004, and miss the meeting if she were not granted vacation time. Crockett acquiesced to Boles’ vacation demand because the time he had been spending with Boles was beginning to impact his other duties. Crockett also spoke to Human Resource staff about disciplinary action.
On October 6, 2004, Boles was reassigned to another manager. The Watershed Technology Center project was removed from Boles, who had spent 440 hours on the project and never completed Phase 1 of the three project phases. The project was reassigned to a consultant with a similar professional background to Boles, and this consultant completed the project in 170 hours.2
Crockett’s supervisor, Howard Neukrug, testified that he met with Boles on August 26, 2004, to discuss the special performance report. Boles stated that she thought her work was good and that she had not spoken to Neukrug about the performance evaluation earlier because she was busy working on a report. However, *392when Neukrug asked for a copy of that report, Boles replied that she was too busy to make copies and never supplied one to Neukrug. Neukrug testified that the Watershed Technology Center project was appropriate for a Sanitary Engineer III and was “a perfect assignment” for Boles. R.R. 92a.
Francis Meiers, the Department’s Assistant Personnel Officer, confirmed that Boles never appealed her special performance report. Meiers reassigned Boles to another supervisor in October. After a hearing he conducted on November 9, 2004, Meiers recommended to the City Water Commissioner that Boles be demoted. The recommendation was accepted, and Boles was demoted to Sanitary Engineer II effective January 8, 2005.
In response to the City’s case, Boles testified that she performed most of the tasks that Crockett assigned to her in June 2004. Boles acknowledged that she was instructed to meet with Office staff by July 21, 2004, and that she did not do so. Boles explained that, instead, she conferred with people outside the Office and spent her time trying to find a location for the center. Boles felt that she “had shown quite a bit of initiative” on the project and disagreed with Crockett’s assessment that her performance was unsatisfactory. R.R. 108a. Boles pointed to an e-mail from Crockett in which he stated that she had made good progress.3 This e-mail was sent two days after she received the assignment. Boles testified that she sent invitations to managers for a staff meeting on August 26, 2004, but some managers did not receive it. She acknowledged that the managers who did receive the invitation did not invite their staffs, as Boles had requested. Boles did not know why this was so. Boles felt that, in any case, she did not need to meet with Office staff because her real goal was to gather information, which she obtained from websites and from persons outside the Office. Boles testified that she was working on the goals assigned by Crockett and thought everything was going well with the project.
The Commission sustained Boles’ appeal, concluding that the City failed to prove that it had just cause to demote Boles. The Commission explained as follows:
The Commission concludes that [Boles] performed her job duties even if in a manner different than what Crockett would have liked. As an Engineer III, [Boles] had some discretion as to how to complete her tasks. [Boles] chose to speak with persons outside the Department to get her information after she had no success meeting with persons within the Department. The Department’s complaints about [Boles’] use or lack of use of e-mail and her failure to sign in are not persuasive in its decision to demote. Even if the Commission were to conclude that there are some stylistic issues that need to be worked out between [Boles] and management, [Boles] was not given sufficient time to perform her tasks and to achieve success. The evidence in the case shows that [Boles] was micro-managed following her return from leave, which led to her demotion. After more than twenty years of service to the City and several years as an Engineer III, the Commission believes that the Department has not shown that [Boles’] performance over a three to four month period warrants demotion.
*393Commission opinion, February 10, 2006, at (emphasis in original).
The City appealed, and the trial court reversed the Commission’s decision. In doing so, the trial court determined that the Commission’s findings were not supported by substantial evidence and that there was just cause to demote Boles. The trial court pointed to the evidence that Boles failed to complete several assignments and that her supervisor met with her numerous times to discuss her substandard work and to set goals to improve performance. The trial court explained that Boles
did not present evidence to refute the allegations contained in her notice of [demotion]. She asserted only that she performed her duties despite her superi- or’s characterization of her performance. As Engineer III, Ms. Boles possessed discretion in how to perform her job duties, but that does not negate the fact that she worked under the direction of a higher level manager and she repeatedly failed to meet performance standards.
Trial court opinion, February 18, 2008, at 3. The matter is now before this Court.
On appeal,4 Boles raises one issue for our consideration. She argues that the Commission’s decision sustaining her appeal must be affirmed because its factual findings are supported by substantial evidence. Specifically, Boles asserts that the evidence supports the Commission’s findings that Boles performed her job duties, albeit in a manner different from what Crockett desired; that Boles had discretion as to how to complete her tasks and exercised that discretion reasonably; that Boles was not given sufficient time to perform her tasks successfully; and that Boles was micro-managed, the true cause of the demotion.5
The City counters that Boles’ inability to manage one project and comply with the basic requirements of her job, despite repeated requests that she do so, constituted just cause for her demotion, and that the Commission erred in concluding otherwise. The City contends that the Commission abused its discretion because it does not have the power to substitute its discretion for that of the City’s management. Further, it argues that the Commission’s findings are not supported by substantial evidence.
Under the Philadelphia Home Rule Charter, “[a]ny dismissal or demotion after the completion of the required probationary period of service, or suspension of any employe in the civil service shall be for just cause only.” 351 Pa.Code § 7.7-303. The term “just cause” is not defined therein, but Pennsylvania courts have explained:
What constitutes ample [just] cause for removal ... must necessarily be largely a matter of discretion on the part of the head of the department. To be sufficient, however, the cause should be per*394sonal to the employee and such as to render him unfit for the position he occupies, thus making his dismissal justifiable and for the good of the service. ... All that the law requires is that the cause be not religious or political, but concerned solely with the inefficiency, delinquency or misconduct of the employe. A wide latitude must be left to the superior officer — in fact a discretion conditioned only on its exercise in good faith and not as a screen for some reason not based upon the fitness of the employe to fill the position.
Benvignati v. Civil Service Commission, 106 Pa.Cmwlth. 643, 527 A.2d 1074, 1075 (1987) (quoting O’Gorman Appeal, 409 Pa. 571, 576-577, 187 A.2d 581, 583-584 (1963)). Therefore, the Commission must “defer to the discretion of the agency head on what was required ‘for the good of the service.’ ” City of Philadelphia, Department of Human Services v. Philadelphia Civil Service Commission (Steve Carter), 895 A.2d 87, 94 (Pa.Cmwlth.2006). Whether an employee’s behavior constitutes just cause for demotion is a question of law. Pinkney v. Civil Service Commission, 688 A.2d 1252, 1257 (Pa.Cmwlth.1997). If just cause exists, the Commission is not permitted to modify or reverse the sanction imposed by the employer. Id.
In accordance with these above-recited principles, we conclude that the Commission erred in holding that the City did not have good cause to demote Boles. The uncontroverted evidence shows that Boles was assigned one project and despite the fact that a Sanitary Engineer III should be able to handle multiple projects at one time, she failed to complete her single assignment.
Crockett provided detailed testimony regarding numerous instances between July 21, 2004, and October 6, 2004, where Boles missed critical project deadlines and gave him inadequate work that was incomplete, vague or a repackaging of her prior work product in a different font. Crockett was not disbelieved by the Commission. Further, as noted by the trial court, Boles did not specifically rebut the City’s version of the events. Rather, she merely insisted, in conclusory fashion, that she had shown initiative and that she had done a good job. However, Boles admitted that she never met with Office staff, which was the crucial first step for the project. Boles also acknowledged that she made no attempt whatsoever to meet with Office staff, despite repeated requests from her supervisor that she do so, until August 26, 2004. At that point, she did so in an inappropriate and ineffectual manner.
The Commission excused Boles by reasoning that she had discretion as to how to complete her tasks and that she “performed her job duties even if in a manner different than what Crockett would have liked.” Commission opinion at 3. The Commission found that Boles had chosen to speak with persons outside the Office after she had no success meeting with persons within the Office. However, there is no substantial evidence to support the Commission’s finding that Boles had the discretion to do her job in a manner contrary to Crockett’s directives. As observed by the trial court, refusing to meet with Office staff, after repeatedly being instructed to do so, is insubordination. Further, Boles spoke with people outside the Office after she failed to set up a meeting with Office staff, and she did so without any authority or approval from Crockett.
Insubordination and failure to meet performance standards with respect to a project that Boles should have easily been able to complete, and which was, in fact, successfully completed by another person with similar skills in less than half the *395time, provides just cause for demotion. See Ming Wei v. State Civil Service Commission (Department of Health), 961 A.2d 254 (Pa.Cmwlth.2008) (holding that insubordination and unsatisfactory work performance in failing to complete a project amounted to just cause for removal because it directly impacted on the employee’s job performance).
The Commission committed further error when it concluded that there was not just cause for demotion because Boles “was not given sufficient time to perform her tasks and to achieve success” and that she was “micro-managed.” Commission opinion at 4. These excuses for Boles’ poor performance are likewise not supported by substantial evidence. Boles never complained at the hearing about micro-management, and Crockett testified that the reason he had to meet with Boles on a regular basis was to coach her because she was not completing her tasks. Further, there is not one iota of evidence that Boles was not given enough time to successfully complete the project. Crockett testified that, on the contrary, he pushed back deadlines more than once but it did not help. Boles herself never stated that she was not given enough time.
In short, the Commission’s findings regarding Boles’ performance of her work duties and the excuses for her poor performance are not supported by substantial evidence. The uncontroverted testimony of Crockett, which was not rejected by the Commission, supports the legal conclusion that the City had just cause to demote Boles. The Commission erred in substituting its judgment for that of Crockett, Neukrug, Meiers and the Water Commissioner that a demotion was warranted for the good of the Office.
For these reasons, we affirm the order of the trial court.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 9th day of February, 2009, the order of the Court of Common Pleas of the First Judicial District in the above-captioned case, dated October 3, 2007, is hereby AFFIRMED.