What is the WARN Act?
Under the New York Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) Act, if you employ 50 or more individuals, 90 days’ written notice is required if at least 25 employees will experience certain types of employment losses, including more than a 50% reduction in hours per month for a 6-month period or a furlough/layoff lasting more than 6 months. Notice must also be given to the affected employees and/or their representatives, the New York Department of Labor, and the Local Workforce Investment Board. Failing to comply with the WARN Act can result in liability for back wages and lost benefits, as well as civil penalties.
The WARN Act does not apply if the reduction in hours or furlough/layoff is carried out as part of a Shared Work Program through the NY Department of Labor, in which the employees receive unemployment benefits to partially compensate for their reduced wages. However, the WARN Act will apply if the wage reductions or furloughs/layoffs persist after the Shared Work Program ends. There is also a limited exception to the 90-day notice requirement for unforeseeable business circumstances. An unforeseeable circumstance must not have been reasonably foreseeable when the 90-day notice would have been required (for example, if the clinic’s major funding source collapses suddenly and without warning). Even in these situations, employers are still required to provide as much notice as practicable.
For our out-of-state readers, the Federal WARN Act which applies to employers with 100 or more employees and requires 60 days’ written notice.
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