Deborah Norville
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Your Rights When You Leave A Job


Airdate: 05/11/09

Tips on severance packages, health insurance, unemployment insurance, and final paychecks.

Whether you leave your job voluntarily or through a termination or lay off, there are a number of loose ends you will want to tie up before you walk out the door.

Severance Pay

Most employers are not required to provide severance pay to employees who are terminated or laid off. (A few states require employers who close a plant or lay off a large number of workers to provide salary or benefits continuation for a limited time, but most do not.) Nevertheless, many employers may offer one or two months' salary to employees who are forced to leave their jobs through no fault of their own. Some employers may be more generous to long-term employees by basing severance pay on the length of the employee's service to the company; a typical formula is one or two weeks of pay for every year of employment.

While no law requires severance pay, an employer may be legally obligated to give you severance pay if it promised to do so -- for example, through:

  • a written contract stating that the employer will pay you severance
  • a promise of severance pay in an employee handbook or manual
  • a long history of the company's paying severance to other employees in your position, or
  • an oral promise to pay you severance -- although you may run into difficulties proving the promise existed.

A severance package can include more than just money. If you are in a position to negotiate a package (perhaps your termination is questionable and your employer wants to keep you from going to court), consider asking for these other benefits:

  • Insurance benefits. Health insurance continuation laws allow you to keep the same health care you had with your employer but may require you to pay the full cost of the premiums for continued coverage. (If your employment was terminated involuntarily from September 1, 2008, through December 31, 2009, you may be eligible for a subsidy that pays 65% of the premium cost; for more information, see New COBRA Rules: Stimulus Package Subsidizes Continued Health Insurance.) However, nothing in these laws prevents your employer from picking up the tab if it agrees to do so as part of a severance package.
  • Uncontested unemployment compensation. Sometimes, employers will try to contest the unemployment claim of a terminated worker. Ask your employer to agree not to do so. It will make getting unemployment benefits a lot easier.
  • Outplacement services. Outplacement firms help employees find new jobs. They may offer counseling, job skills training, tips on résumé and cover letter writing, and leads on potential jobs. In addition, they may give you a place where you can use a computer, receive faxes, and have a receptionist answer the phone.
  • References. If you are leaving your job under less-than-pleasant circumstances, you might work with your employer to come up with a mutually agreeable letter of reference.

Final Paycheck

Many states have laws that specify when departing employees must be given their final paycheck. Often, the outcome depends on whether you are leaving because you quit or because you were fired or laid off.

For example, in some states, employees must be given their final paycheck immediately or within a certain number of hours if they are terminated or laid off, but not until the next scheduled payday if they quit. Some of these state laws also specify whether your accrued, but unused, vacation pay must be included in your final paycheck. For more information, see Chart: Final Paychecks for Departing Employees, and contact your state's labor department.

Health Insurance

A 1986 federal law -- the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (COBRA) -- and similar state laws provide for health insurance continuation when an employee quits, is laid off, or is fired for any reason other than gross misconduct.

Under COBRA, employers with 20 or more employees must offer them the option of continuing to be covered by the company's group health insurance plan for a specific period -- often 18 months -- after employment ends. Continued coverage is also available for the worker's spouse and dependent children. However, the worker must pay the full premium cost for continued coverage unless the worker is eligible for a partial subsidy.

Workers whose employment is terminated involuntarily from September 1, 2008, through December 31, 2009 may qualify for a subsidy of 65% of the cost of COBRA premiums, for up to nine months of coverage. However, workers who are eligible for COBRA for other reasons -- for example, because they quit -- can't get the subsidy. For more information on the subsidy, see New COBRA Rules: Stimulus Package Subsidizes Continued Health Insurance. To learn more about COBRA, refer to the U.S. Department of Labor website at www.dol.gov.

Your state might have its own health care continuation law that provides better or broader coverage than the federal COBRA. This means it may cover smaller employers and/or provide more benefits. Your employer must follow whichever law is most beneficial to you. To find out more about your state's law, contact your state insurance office or labor department.

Unemployment Insurance

Unemployment insurance benefits may provide some financial help if you lose your job, temporarily or permanently. Benefits will be less than your former pay and generally last for only about 26 weeks. (Depending on your circumstances and state, you may be able to get extended benefits for an additional 13 to 20 weeks.) However, not all out-of-work individuals are entitled to unemployment benefits: You will be eligible only if you lose your job through no fault of your own.

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