Jacksonville Public Library

Fired, laid off or forced out, a complete guide to severance, benefits, and your rights when you're starting over, Richard C. Busse

Label
Fired, laid off or forced out, a complete guide to severance, benefits, and your rights when you're starting over, Richard C. Busse
Language
eng
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Fired, laid off or forced out
Oclc number
56913437
Responsibility statement
Richard C. Busse
Sub title
a complete guide to severance, benefits, and your rights when you're starting over
Table Of Contents
Posttermination filings to protect your rights. The effect of termination on your receipt of benefits. Termination tips -- Immediately after your termination. Remain calm. Ask probing questions. Remove all personal belongings at your earliest opportunity. Relinquish all keys and ID badges when requested. Record what was said in the termination meeting. Request a copy of your personnel file. Let your family and friends take care of you. If you need it, seek emotional counseling. Seek legal advice only from a knowledgeable lawyer. As soon as you are able, look for other work. Do not start cutting your own deal. Do not release your employer without consulting a lawyer. Do not write a letter of protest to the company. Do not start writing letters to your congressional delegation. Do not engage in physical harm. Do not remove anything that does not belong to you. Do not refuse to return property belonging to the employer. Do not immediately file an internal, nonunion grievance. Do not sign a confession. Do not try to handle it alone. Termination tips -- Negotiating a severance agreement. How to get more severanceThe contents of your severance agreement. Severance tips list -- All about lawyers. How to find a lawyer. Engaging your lawyer -- Unlawful terminations. Public policy wrongful discharge. Wrongful constructive discharge. State statutory solutions. Discrimination laws. Opposition and retaliation statutes. Employment contracts -- Other legal claims. Intentional infliction of severe emotional distress. intentional interference with economic relations. Invasion of privacy. Defamation. Misrepresentation -- Termination of special group members. Termination of union workers. Termination of government employees -- Evaluating your termination case. Evaluating whether you have a case. Evaluating the problem of your case. Evaluating your case when the employer covers its tracks. Factors affecting your case. Other factors that can help -- Mistakes employers make. Top ten complaints -- Deciding whether to pursue your case. Your need for litigation. Your support from others for litigation. Your health. The effect on your marketability -- What to expect during litigation. Prefiling stage. Trial stage. Appeal stage --Things you can do to help your lawyer win. Provide requested information in a timely manner. Stay in communication with your lawyer. Treat your lawyer as a member of your team. Be flexible with your schedule. Follow your lawyer's advice. Do not shoot the messenger. Try to control your relatives. Do not fall in love with your case. Do not pull any surprises. Keep the faith. Ways to help your lawyer win -- Common questions about case settlement -- Special rights and benefits legislation. Unemployment compensation. Health insurance legislation : Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (COBRA). The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPPA). Retirement legislation (ERISA). Notice of plant closure legislation. Employee leave legislation. Basic provisions. FMLA and the ADA -- Steps to build your workplace powerDischarge as an at will employee. What is a wrongful termination? Debunking myths about your employment rights -- Strategies to survive a disciplinary action. Are you really on a termination track? How employee discipline works. How to survive employee discipline -- How to diffuse potentially volatile situations. Strategies for executives. Strategies for mid-level managers. Strategies for first line non-union supervisors. Strategies for non-management employees -- How to use human resources to survive an abusive work environment. Your need to report. Using judgment in reporting harassment. Your objective : to change the subject -- Strategies to preempt or prevent an anticipated termination. Preempt it by proposing that you resign. Demonstrate submission to authority. Enlist third party assistance. Assume a legal posture. Engage in a political war -- Managing an imminent termination. Ten things to do. Ten things to avoid doing -- Handling the termination itself. The termination meeting. Post-termination winding up. The exit interview. Your "final check" and benefits. Post-termination filings to protect your rights. The effect of termination on your receipt of benefits -- Ten more "do's" and "don'ts" if you have been terminated. Ten "do's" if you have been terminated. Ten "don'ts" if you have been terminated -- Negotiating a severance agreement. How to get more severance. What should your severance agreement contain? -- All about lawyers. How to find a lawyer. Engaging your lawyer -- What makes a termination unlawful? How our legal system works. Public policy "wrongful discharge." Statutory "wrongful discharge." Employment contracts -- Other legal claims available to terminated workers. Intentional infliction of severe emotional distress. intentional interference with economic relations. Invasion of privacy. Defamation. Misrepresentation -- Termination of special group members. Termination of union workers. Termination of government employees -- Evaluating your termination case. How can I tell if I have a case? What if my case has problems? Is there any chance something could happen to help my case? Are there any other factors that can help? -- Top ten mistakes employers make during employment that lead to liability for wrongful discharge -- Deciding whether to pursue your case. Your need for litigation. Your support from others for litigation. Your health. The effect on your marketability -- What to expect during litigation. The prefiling stage. The trial stage. The appeal stage -- Things you can do to help your lawyer win -- Common questions about case settlement -- Special rights and benefits legislation of interest to terminated employees. Unemployment compensation. Health insurance legislation (COBRA and HIPPA). Retirement legislation (ERISA). Notice of plant closure legislation (Warn Act). Employee leave legislation (FMLA) -- Twelve steps to build your workplace power
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