Not Just Any Release Will Do: Drafting Valid Releases for a Reduction-in-Force

As hopes for a quick economic recovery have sagged, many employers have been left with little choice but to reduce the size of their workforces. In some instances, laid-off employees are being offered severance in exchange for their release of all claims against their employer. Indeed, obtaining such a release is an indispensable component of a well designed severance package. And if a release is properly drafted, it generally does protect the employer from a subsequent lawsuit brought by the departing employee.

Too often though, the details of the release language are an afterthought. Unsuspecting employers, unaware of the applicable legal authorities, recycle old releases on the assumption that a generic release is as effective in a layoff as when a single employee is being discharged. Other employers have at least some awareness that the Older Workers Benefit Protection Act (“OWBPA”) requires additional language in a release in order to obtain a valid waiver of federal age discrimination claims. Yet not all such employers know that OWBPA may impose additional requirements when the release is requested in connection with a layoff.
 

In the ordinary situation, the requirements of OWBPA are relatively straightforward. As a general matter, the statute provides that, in order to release age discrimination claims under the federal Age Discrimination in Employment Act (“ADEA”), the written release must be drafted in such a way that the employee’s waiver of rights under the ADEA is “knowing and voluntary.” To that end, OWBPA sets forth several specific requirements:

1. The release must be written so that it may be understood by an average individual;

2. The release must specifically refer to the age discrimination claims being released;

3. The release cannot cover claims that may arise sometime in the future;

4. The employee must receive consideration (i.e., a payment or some other benefit) above and beyond that to which he or she is already entitled;

5. The employee must be advised, in writing, to consult with an attorney;

6. The employee must be offered at least 21 days to consider the release; and

7. The employee must be given a seven-day period to revoke the release.

Many employers have incorporated these requirements into their standard release language. There is, however, considerably less awareness of OWBPA’s additional requirements for releases issued in connection with an “exit incentive” or “other employment termination program offered to a group or class of employees.” The additional requirements apply, for example, when an employer offers an early retirement package or when employees are being offered severance during a layoff. In such situations, employers must be certain that, in addition to the requirements discussed above, the release includes the following:

1. The employee must be given at least 45 days (as opposed to 21 days) to consider the release; and

2. The employee must be provided with specific information concerning the group of employees affected by the layoff, including: (1) the factors used to determine whether employees were eligible for the termination program; (2) any time limits applicable to the termination program; (3) the identity of any “class, unit, or group of individuals covered by such programs;” (4) the job titles and ages of all individuals either eligible for or selected for the termination program; and (5) the ages of all individuals in the same job classification or organizational unit who were not eligible or selected for the termination program.

Assembling this information is often not a simple task. It requires close analysis of the workforce and is usually guided by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s governing regulations and guidance documents. Despite the potential difficulty of the task, it is important that the information is properly presented. More than the effectiveness of the release may hang in the balance. If an employee decides to pursue an age discrimination claim, the information is likely to draw considerable attention during the litigation.

Employers must be careful to ensure that the provisions of OWBPA are fully satisfied. In Oubre v. Entergy Operations, Inc., the United States Supreme Court held that the release requirements of OWBPA must be strictly adhered to in order for the release of the ADEA claims to be valid and enforceable. Thus, the federal courts in New York and elsewhere have consistently held that substantial compliance with OWBPA is not enough. The release must contain all of the necessary components prescribed by the statute.
 

COBRA Subsidy Available for Reduction in Hours Followed by Involuntary Termination

There is a second bite at the COBRA apple for employees who initially lost group health plan coverage as a result of a reduction in hours of employment during the period beginning September 1, 2008, which is followed by an involuntary termination of employment on or after March 2, 2010. These individuals (and their affected family members) would normally not be eligible for COBRA continuation of coverage because they were not covered by the health plan on the day before the termination of employment. However, the Temporary Extension Act of 2010 extends the availability of COBRA continuation of coverage, and the 65% COBRA subsidy, where there is a reduction in hours (resulting in a loss of coverage) followed by an involuntary termination of employment.

If the employee did not make a COBRA election when eligible as a result of the reduction in hours, or made the election and later dropped coverage, the involuntary termination of employment is treated as a qualifying event. However, the 18 month period of COBRA continuation is considered to have begun at the reduction in hours qualifying event. Therefore, the COBRA subsidy for involuntary terminations is only available for the difference between 18 months and the number of months of COBRA available after the loss of coverage due to reduction in hours.

For example, if a reduction in hours qualifying event occurred on 11/30/2009, COBRA would have begun on 12/1/2009 and would end on 5/31/2011. If that individual had an involuntary termination on 3/9/2010 (with the loss of coverage at the end of the month in which the termination occurred, 3/31/2010), the post-termination COBRA continuation would be offered from 4/1/2010 through 5/31/2011 (18 months – 4 months of reduction-of-hours COBRA = 14 months). Because the entire post-termination COBRA period is less than 15 months, the 65% COBRA subsidy will be available for the entire 14-month period.

The COBRA administrator must provide a notice describing this new right to elect subsidized COBRA to qualified beneficiaries who lost group health plan coverage as a result of reduction in hours on or after 9/1/2008 and who are terminated between 3/2/2009 and 3/31/2009 (proposals in Congress would extend this date to 12/31/2009). The notice must be provided within 60 days following the involuntary termination of employment.