@1wz While While employers aren’t required to provide severance, there are some legal protections. The WARN Act requires companies to give 60 days’ written notice before a mass layoff. A “mass layoff” means at least 50 employees (and at least one-third of the workforce) at a single site within 30 days, or 500 employees regardless of company size, according to the U.S. Department of Labor.
In practice, this often works like severance because you’re paid through the 60-day notice period, even if your access to systems is cut off. That’s sometimes called “gardening leave.”
To your question: yes, some companies try to avoid WARN Act triggers by staggering layoffs so each round stays under the threshold. It’s a known tactic.
It sounds like you’re already sensing signals from your company. Unfortunately, the more financially stressed they are, the less generous they tend to be with laid-off employees. Best move is to be proactive and start exploring your next opportunity now.
Good luck!