I am a Tableau employee and we had an all hands call Monday. On that call they stated the next layoff will provide you with 9 weeks of pay and 3 weeks for every year you were employed. Benioff said minimum of 5 months. Does anyone know what is going on here?
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I can only assume Benioff was a bit ahead of himself and was reminded of the cost of "generous" severance packages by some shareholders.
What I have observed at other employers is that with each successive wave of layoffs the severance packages become less generous.
This is due to federal law called the WARN Act.
The WARN Act is complicated. It is based on percentages for work locations. Just because your employer has a mass layoff doesn't mean you are covered. Also, many employers will often subtract WARN benefits from the severance package offered, so it can end up being a wash.
California has its own version of the WARN Act, and theirs is more generous than the Federal one.
For non US regions, wonder if anyone negotiated their severance package?
Yes they get full pay/benefits until March 24 when the severance will be paid out. This is due to federal law called the WARN Act.
So does it mean employees are on payroll for three full months from the day of their last active work day?
It's five months of pay. Employees are on payroll until March 24th. After that the severance package kicks in. Minimum total pay is about five months. I think max for employees under 60 is nine months/
Don’t believe the NOhana hype…
I can only assume Benioff was a bit ahead of himself and was reminded of the cost of "generous" severance packages by some shareholders.