Disclaimer: We are not attorneys. This article is not legal advice. This article only reflects our findings and understanding after extensive research and work in this space and is intended to be a starting resource for persons who are trying to understand the overall context of federal and state WARN Acts.
What is the WARN Act?
The WARN Act (Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act of 1988) outlines requirements for employers who are performing large layoffs or office closures (referred to as plant closures) to notify employees as well as state government officials of these job losses at least 60 days in advance.
Before we get started, there are a few important points to make:The WARN Act is a federal law which was passed in 1988 by a bipartisan supermajority. Since its ratification, many states have passed their own “mini-WARN Acts” which impose additional requirements and thresholds on employers.
The purpose of the law is to ensure that workers are provided with sufficient notice before job loss to enable them to pursue new employment, and for states to be able to deploy rapid response personnel to assist affected employees.
The Federal WARN Act
The federal WARN Act requires employers to file notices when performing mass layoffs or plant closings that affect a sufficient number of employees (excluding part-time employees).
Important definitions under the federal WARN Act
Full-time employee: Employees who work 20 or more hours per week AND have been employed for at least 6 of the past 12 months by the company
Eligible employer: The federal WARN Act applies to employers who employ either:Plant Closing: An office or plant is being closed down, resulting in employment loss of 50 or more full-time employees at a single site during any 30-day period.
Mass Layoff: The employer is performing a reduction in force which will result in job loss for either:
For employers who trigger the federal WARN Act, a notice is required to be filed with the state government at least 60 days prior to the plant closing or mass layoff. These notices are generally made available by most states on their government websites.
WARNTracker collects these records from those state government websites and publishes them on our homepage, as well as our twitter feed.
Some Mini-WARN Acts (State-specific)
Here are some of the highlights of a few state-specific WARN acts. This list is not exhaustive.California WARN Act
Hawaii WARN Act
Illinois WARN Act
New York WARN Act
New Jersey WARN Act
Exceptions to WARN
The WARN Act carves out three exceptions in which employers are not beholden to the normal requirements.
Faltering CompanyThis exception applies only to plant closings. It is very specific in its application: it is meant for employers who were seeking new capital, and for whom giving notice of a plant closing would have ruined the chances of them securing the additional capital necessary to continue operations.
Unforeseeable Business CircumstancesThis exception applies to plant closings and mass layoffs which are the result of business circumstances which could not have been reasonably foreseen or predicted in advance.
Natural Disaster Plant closings or mass layoffs that are the result of floods, fires, earthquakes, etc are exempted.Enforcement and Penalties
Employers who are found to be in violation of the WARN Act can be held liable for civil penalties. The maximum penalty is 60 days’ back pay and benefits for any affected employees.
However, some employers prefer to essentially pay this penalty preemptively by providing employees with 60 or more days’ severance pay. Doing so effectively seems to make compliance with the WARN Act voluntary, since there is no additional penalty which can be applied.
According to the Department of Labor’s website:WARN requires 60 calendar days' written notice. The law makes no provision for any alternative such as pay in place of a notice. While an employer who pays workers for 60 calendar days instead of giving them proper notice technically has violated WARN, the provision of pay and benefits in place of a notice is a possible option. Because WARN provides for back pay and benefits for the period of the violation, up to 60 days, generally this approach by an employer
WARN In Practice: Meta’s Layoff Timeline
Many times, WARN notices will be the first public announcement of a layoff. However, many large companies with enough cash will choose instead to preemptively pay the maximum WARN penalty to their employees as severance so that they can more closely control the public narrative around their layoffs. One of many examples of this is Meta’s round of layoffs performed in April 2023. Here’s what that timeline looked like in practice:
In this case, we can see that Meta announced the upcoming layoffs in their “Year of Efficiency” press release 100 days before the WARN notice was published on California’s EDD website.
(Note: you can check out WARNTracker’s breakdown of Meta layoffs here)The COVID-19 pandemic made WARN Act compliance particularly complicated. Many employers were forced to shut down for an unknowable length of time, and had to perform emergency reductions in force which were unforeseeable. WARN Acts were not drafted with this type of circumstance in mind. Thus, two notable things happened.
First, the courts were asked to ascertain whether the COVID-19 pandemic qualified as a natural disaster. After several rounds of appeals, the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the pandemic does not qualify as a natural disaster, and thus does not exempt employers from the WARN Act.
However, some states altered or lifted their own WARN Acts’ requirements. For example, Gavin Newsom suspended the notice requirements of California’s WARN Act (source).
The WARN Act was written before the proliferation of work-from-home, so its application to remote employees is unsurprisingly vague. However, the following clause is most often used to decipher these cases:
For workers whose primary duties require travel from point-to-point, who are outstationed, or whose primary duties involve work outside any of the employer's regular work sites (including railroad workers, bus drivers and salespersons and teleworkers), the single site of employment for WARN purposes is whichever of the following is applicable to the worker's situation: 1. The location to which workers are assigned as their home base; 2. The location from which workers are assigned duties; or 3. The location to which they report.
We have anecdotally heard that employers determine jurisdiction by looking up through the affected employee’s reporting chain until they find someone who is based in an office. So a fully remote employee who lives in Utah and reports to a manager in California might be treated like a California employee. However, the law was drafted well before the proliferation of remote work, so the proper handling in these cases seem to be somewhat ambiguous.
WARN Acts are complicated to begin with, and the interplay between state and federal WARN acts makes this an even more complex space. If you are an employee who believes your employer may have violated the WARN Act, we would recommend that you get in contact with an attorney who has expertise in this area. If you would be interested in getting in contact with an attorney, feel free to reach out to the WARNTracker team and we would be happy to put you in contact with exceptional attorneys we’ve interacted with.
This article was written by the WARNTracker team and published on May 24, 2023. We are not attorneys, and this article is not legal advice. It may not be perfectly up-to-date or exhaustive, so you should contact an attorney if you have any questions about your own situation. Additionally, we are not attorneys. This article was written to provide a helpful resource for workers and employers who have been affected by layoffs, but we strongly encourage you to seek out legal guidance for your own situation if you are affected by a layoff, or are seeking guidance on how to perform a layoff in compliance with your local and federal laws.