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Has
management given union members proper
notice of layoffs?
Review advance notification contractual
provisions.
Review federal notification regulations
including Worker
Adjustment and Retraining Notification
Act (WARN), which requires a 60-day
notice for mass layoffs of 500 or more
workers at a site or at sites of 50-499
employees where 33 percent or more are
affected.
Review applicability of Trade Adjustment
Act and NAFTA/TAA in cases of job loss
due to increased directly competitive
imports or as a result of trade with Mexico
or Canada.
Has
the union been fully informed and involved?
Insist that state or local layoff Rapid
Response staff work closely with the
union leadership to assist the workers
and companies facing layoffs.
Ensure that the public Rapid Response
effort does not interfere with the requirement
that an employer negotiate the effects
of a closure with the union.
Insist that any on-site meeting or contact
with workers upon receipt of information
about a potential layoff or closure includes
union representation.
Require that layoff aversion strategies
such as employee buyout and other opportunities
receive full consideration.
Create workforce adjustment committees
with full union participation to develop
a comprehensive plan for assisting workers.
Union participation should begin with
the early presentation of the committee
concept.
Has
the union taken steps to respond quickly
to assist members?
Implement existing benefit provisions
within contract, e.g., advance notice,
health/COBRA, severance, supplemental
unemployment, pension, workers comp, etc.
Negotiate additional benefits such as
supplemental unemployment, training, and
other services that can be integrated
with the public resources available.
Identify workers who are off due to occupational
injury or illness and ensure they receive
proper notification of status, benefits,
and services.
Identify outstanding issues surrounding
workplace safety and health and obtain
individual and plant-wide exposure records.
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Seek early intervention services prior
to layoff to recruit and enroll workers
into benefits and services as soon as
possible.
Seek to create easy access to services,
either on-site, near job sites, or at
union hall, to facilitate intake and enrollment
activities.
Demand union members receive public benefits
in a timely manner and be sensitive to
the concerns/needs of documented and undocumented
immigrant workers.
Demand that all services are accessible
to workers with disabilities, other special
needs, and in languages spoken by the
workforce.
Demand confidentiality of the information
workers provide.
How
can unions develop systems to promote
program delivery?
Seek to create a worker adjustment committee
as soon as layoff notices arrive and begin
designing a displaced-worker program.
Seek to establish a peer advisor program
to train union members to work with Rapid
Response staff in helping laid-off union
members enroll in local programs and services
and in holding providers accountable for
the provision of timely early intervention
services.
Seek adequate funding (both negotiated
and public) to provide a full array of
services and benefits.
Create a plan and procedure to ensure
private-public cooperation so that workers
have access to all the benefits and services
that they are eligible for.
How
can local unions connect with labor-friendly
experts on developing programs or finding
the resources available through private
and public systems?
Contact your CLC and State Federation.
A number of state federations operate
dislocated worker programs.
Contact the AFL-CIO Community Services
staff representative in your area. Your
CLC can help you reach the one in your
area or you can use the AFL-CIO
Community Services internet directory.
Contact the labor representatives on your
state and local Workforce Investment Board.
Your state federation and CLC can help
direct you.
Contact the AFL-CIO Working for America
Institute Regional Coordinator. Call WAI's
main number at 202-974-8100 for the coordinator
in your region or see the staff
directory on WAI's Web site at www.
workingforamerica.org.
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