[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 20, Volume 3]
[Revised as of April 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 20CFR639.5]

[Page 357-359]
 
                      TITLE 20--EMPLOYEES' BENEFITS
 
 CHAPTER V--EMPLOYMENT AND TRAINING ADMINISTRATION, DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
 
PART 639--WORKER ADJUSTMENT AND RETRAINING NOTIFICATION--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 639.5  When must notice be given?

    (a) General rule. (1) With certain exceptions discussed in 
paragraphs (b), (c) and (d) of this section and in Sec. 639.9 of this 
part, notice must be given at least 60 calendar days prior to any 
planned plant closing or mass layoff, as defined in these regulations. 
When all employees are not terminated on the same date, the date of the 
first individual termination within the statutory 30-day or 90-day 
period triggers the 60-day notice requirement. A worker's last day of 
employment is considered the date of that worker's layoff. The first and 
each subsequent group of terminees are entitled to a full 60 days' 
notice. In order for an employer to decide whether issuing notice is 
required, the employer should--
    (i) Look ahead 30 days and behind 30 days to determine whether 
employment actions both taken and planned will, in the aggregate for any 
30-day period, reach the minimum numbers for a plant closing or a mass 
layoff and thus trigger the notice requirement; and
    (ii) Look ahead 90 days and behind 90 days to determine whether 
employment actions both taken and planned each of which separately is 
not of sufficient size to trigger WARN coverage will, in the aggregate 
for any 90-day period, reach the minimum numbers for a plant closing or 
a mass layoff and thus trigger the notice requirement. An employer is 
not, however, required under

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section 3(d) to give notice if the employer demonstrates that the 
separate employment losses are the result of separate and distinct 
actions and causes, and are not an attempt to evade the requirements of 
WARN.
    (2) The point in time at which the number of employees is to be 
measured for the purpose of determining coverage is the date the first 
notice is required to be given. If this ``snapshot'' of the number of 
employees employed on that date is clearly unrepresentative of the 
ordinary or average employment level, then a more representative number 
can be used to determine coverage. Examples of unrepresentative 
employment levels include cases when the level is near the peak or 
trough of an employment cycle or when large upward or downward shifts in 
the number of employees occur around the time notice is to be given. A 
more representative number may be an average number of employees over a 
recent period of time or the number of employees on an alternative date 
which is more representative of normal employment levels. Alternative 
methods cannot be used to evade the purpose of WARN, and should only be 
used in unusual circumstances.
    (b) Transfers. (1) Notice is not required in certain cases involving 
transfers, as described under the definition of ``employment loss'' at 
Sec. 639.3(f) of this part.
    (2) An offer of reassignment to a different site of employment 
should not be deemed to be a ``transfer'' if the new job constitutes a 
constructive discharge.
    (3) The meaning of the term ``reasonable commuting distance'' will 
vary with local and industry conditions. In determining what is a 
``reasonable commuting distance'', consideration should be given to the 
following factors: geographic accessibility of the place of work, the 
quality of the roads, customarily available transportation, and the 
usual travel time.
    (4) In cases where the transfer is beyond reasonable commuting 
distance, the employer may become liable for failure to give notice if 
an offer to transfer is not accepted within 30 days of the offer or of 
the closing or layoff (whichever is later). Depending upon when the 
offer of transfer was made by the employer, the normal 60-day notice 
period may have expired and the plant closing or mass layoff may have 
occurred. An employer is, therefore, well advised to provide 60-day 
advance notice as part of the transfer offer.
    (c) Temporary employment. (1) No notice is required if the closing 
is of a temporary facility, or if the closing or layoff is the result of 
the completion of a particular project or undertaking, and the affected 
employees were hired with the understanding that their employment was 
limited to the duration of the facility or the project or undertaking.
    (2) Employees must clearly understand at the time of hire that their 
employment is temporary. When such understandings exist will be 
determined by reference to employment contracts, collective bargaining 
agreements, or employment practices of an industry or a locality, but 
the burden of proof will lie with the employer to show that the 
temporary nature of the project or facility was clearly communicated 
should questions arise regarding the temporary employment 
understandings.
    (3) Employers in agriculture and construction frequently hire 
workers for harvesting, processing, or for work on a particular building 
or project. Such work may be seasonal but recurring. Such work falls 
under this exemption if the workers understood at the time they were 
hired that their work was temporary. In uncertain situations, it may be 
prudent for employers to clarify temporary work understandings in 
writing when workers are hired. The same employers may also have 
permanent employees who work on a variety of jobs and tasks continuously 
through most of the calendar year. Such employees are not included under 
this exemption. Giving written notice that a project is temporary will 
not convert permanent employment into temporary work, making jobs exempt 
from WARN.
    (4) Certain jobs may be related to a specific contract or order. 
Whether such jobs are temporary depends on whether the contract or order 
is part of a long-term relationship. For example, an aircraft 
manufacturer hires workers

[[Page 359]]

to produce a standard airplane for the U.S. fleet under a contract with 
the U.S. Air Force with the expectation that its contract will continue 
to be renewed during the foreseeable future. The employees of this 
manufacturer would not be considered temporary.
    (d) Strikes or lockouts. The statute provides an exemption for 
strikes and lockouts which are not intended to evade the requirements of 
the Act. A lockout occurs when, for tactical or defensive reasons during 
the course of collective bargaining or during a labor dispute, an 
employer lawfully refuses to utilize some or all of its employees for 
the performance of available work. A lockout not related to collective 
bargaining which is intended as a subterfuge to evade the Act does not 
qualify for this exemption. A plant closing or mass layoff at a site of 
employment where a strike or lockout is taking place, which occurs for 
reasons unrelated to a strike or lockout, is not covered by this 
exemption. An employer need not give notice when permanently replacing a 
person who is deemed to be an economic striker under the National Labor 
Relations Act. Non-striking employees at the same single site of 
employment who experience a covered employment loss as a result of a 
strike are entitled to notice; however, situations in which a strike or 
lockout affects non-striking employees at the same plant may constitute 
an unforeseeable business circumstance, as discussed in Sec. 639.9, and 
reduced notice may apply. Similarly, the ``faltering company'' 
exception, also discussed in Sec. 639.9 may apply in strike situations. 
Where a union which is on strike represents more than one bargaining 
unit at the single site, non-strikers includes the non-striking 
bargaining unit(s). Notice also is due to those workers who are not a 
part of the bargaining unit(s) which is involved in the labor 
negotiations that led to the lockout. Employees at other plants which 
have not been struck, but at which covered plant closings or mass 
layoffs occur as a direct or indirect result of a strike or lockout are 
not covered by the strike/lockout exemption. The unforeseeable business 
circumstances exception to 60 days' notice also may apply to these 
closings or layoffs at other plants.