Be our Friend    

   
Text Size
Login Newsletter Sign-up

Keyword Search HCX for your Favorite Author / Content

How to find out if your company is about to lay you off

Digg it!Share in FacebookTweet it!
AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Kudos to my pal Karen Mattonen for not only being cited by Inc. Magazine, but also for letting me know about an AWESOME resource that I know will be of interest to employed workers everywhere. What is it? Its called WARN. WARN is an acronym for Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification.


 Here is some legalese around that:

 The Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act of 1988 (WARN Act) is a United States labor law which protects employees, their families, and communities by requiring most employers with 100 or more employees to provide sixty- (60) calendar-day advance notification of plant closings and mass layoffs of employees. It became law in August 1988 and took effect in 1989. In 2001, there were about 2,000 mass layoffs and plant closures which were subject to WARN advance notice requirements and which affected about 660,000 employees.

 Employees entitled to notice under the WARN Act include managers and supervisors, hourly wage, and salaried workers. The WARN Act requires that notice also be given to employees' representatives (i.e. a labor union), the local chief elected official (i.e. the mayor), and the state dislocated worker unit.

The advance notice gives workers and their families transition time to adjust to the prospective loss of employment, to seek and obtain other employment, and, if necessary, to enter skill training or re-training programs that will allow these workers to successfully compete in the job market.

 There are a few exceptions to the rule from what I have found:

§  Closes a facility or operating unit because of a strike or a worker lock-out, and the closing is not intended to evade the purposes of the WARN Act.

§  If a plant closing or a mass layoff results in fewer than 50 workers losing their jobs at a single employment site;

§  If 50 to 499 workers lose their jobs and that number is less than 33 percent of the employer’s total, active workforce at a single employment site;

§  If a layoff is for 6 months or less; or

§  If work hours are not reduced 50 percent in each month of any 6-month period.


I am not a labor lawyer, so if you think your employer is violating (or has violated) this act, talk to an employment lawyer. Karen can probably refer some to you. (She knows plenty of folks like that.) Long story short, if a large company is going to make some mass layoffs, they have to report it to Uncle Sam. As such, you can look it up. Here are a few examples of reports you can download ( for free ) courtesy of your tax dollars.

To find WARN notices for your state, contact the Department of Labor for your state.

 Click here for full details on WARN from U.S. Department of Labor.

-----------------------------------

Biography

Jim Stroud is a “Searchologist” with an expertise in the full life-cycle placement of Executive and Technical personnel, Recruitment Research and Competitive Intelligence. He has consulted for such companies as Google, Siemens, MCI and a host of start-up companies. During his 3-year tenure with Microsoft, he served as a Technical Sourcing Consultant and was a regular contributor to Microsoft’s Technical Careers Blog. He is presently a Social Media Development Manager for EnglishCafe – the premier English learning community for global professionals which has English quizzes, online classes and more.

Jim Stroud is also the Chief Blogger at  The Searchologist where he publishes a website, magazine and online video series dedicated to lead generation strategies for Recruiters.



Comments:

blog comments powered by Disqus
Author of this article: Jim Stroud
More articles :

» Fired for Eating a bag of potato chips

Walgreens Sued By EEOC For Disability DiscriminationStore Fired Worker with Diabetes for Eating Chips to Stop Hypoglycemia Attack, Federal Agency ChargesSAN FRANCISCO — Drugstore giant Walgreens violated federal law  by firing a worker with...

» Are You Needlessly over-qualifying candidates? Need help to legally identify better skills?

Unintentionally H.R and Managers will frequently create and demand excessive experience and requirements within their open job reqs. They generally base these requirements upon their own personal subjective beliefs and opinions; Their Personal...

» Denied jobs, 6000 blacks in Iowa test new bias theory

After years of litigation, a judge will soon decide whether to grant thousands of black employees and job applicants monetary damages for hiring practices used by every agency of Iowa state government that they say has disadvantaged them for decades.

» 5 signs that you'll lose your sexual harassment case

Last week, I was pretty hard on . Since then, two women have come forward publicly, and all I can do is quote from my partner :*shrugs shoulders and sighs* "Well, you don't get your witnesses from Central Casting." Both women appear to be, how you...

» 5 rules for feedback that work

When we talk about communication in the form of feedback at work, both managers and employees tend to get anxious and basic conversations quickly become burdensome and uncomfortable.In my post,  I wrote about how we communicate and the...