§ 860-c. Exceptions. 1. In the case of a plant closing, an employer is not required to comply with the notice requirement in subdivision one of section eight hundred sixty-b of this article if:

Ask a legal question, get an answer ASAP!
Click here to chat with a lawyer about your rights.

Terms Used In N.Y. Labor Law 860-C

  • Affected employees: means employees who may reasonably be expected to experience an employment loss as a consequence of a proposed plant closing or mass layoff by their employer. See N.Y. Labor Law 860-A
  • Employer: means any business enterprise that employs fifty or more employees, excluding part-time employees, or fifty or more employees that work in the aggregate at least two thousand hours per week. See N.Y. Labor Law 860-A
  • Mass layoff: means a reduction in force which:

    (a) is not the result of a plant closing; and

    (b) results in an employment loss at a single site of employment during any thirty-day period for:

    (i) at least thirty-three percent of the employees (excluding part-time employees); and

    (ii) at least twenty-five employees (excluding part-time employees); or

    (iii) at least two hundred fifty employees (excluding part-time employees). See N.Y. Labor Law 860-A
  • Plant closing: means the permanent or temporary shutdown of a single site of employment, or one or more facilities or operating units within a single site of employment, if the shutdown results in an employment loss at the single site of employment during any thirty-day period for twenty-five or more employees (other than part-time employees). See N.Y. Labor Law 860-A
  • Relocation: means the removal of all or substantially all of the industrial or commercial operations of an employer to a different location fifty miles or more away. See N.Y. Labor Law 860-A

(a)(i) at the time the notice would have been required, the employer was actively seeking capital or business; and

(ii) the capital or business sought, if obtained, would have enabled the employer to avoid or postpone the relocation or termination; and

(iii) the employer reasonably and in good faith believed that giving the notice required by subdivision one of section eight hundred sixty-b of this article would have precluded the employer from obtaining the needed capital or business;

(b) the need for a notice was not reasonably foreseeable at the time the notice would have been required;

(c) the plant closing is of a temporary facility or the plant closing or mass 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 project or undertaking;

(d) the plant closing or mass layoff is due to any form of natural disaster, such as a flood, earthquake, or drought; or

(e) the closing or mass layoff constitutes a strike or constitutes a lockout not intended to evade the requirements of this article. Nothing in this article shall require an employer to serve written notice when permanently replacing a person who is deemed to be an economic striker under the National Labor Relations Act (29 U.S.C. § 151 et seq.). Nothing in this article shall be deemed to validate or invalidate any judicial or administrative ruling relating to the hiring of permanent replacements for economic strikers under the National Labor Relations Act.

2. An employer unable to provide the notice otherwise required by this article in a timely fashion as a result of circumstances described in subdivision one of this section, shall provide as much notice as is practicable and at that time shall provide a brief statement of the basis for reducing the notification period.