To avoid potential legal exposure, the key is to ensure that proper compensation is provided
As New Hampshire businesses continue to navigate the evolving Covid-19 landscape, it is important for them to be well prepared for employee separations, whether voluntary or involuntary.
Former employees are ambassadors of a company’s name and brand — therefore, the goal is to have a positive departure (or as much as is possible). Key to this goal is ensuring that departing employees are properly compensated. Doing so not only avoids potential legal exposure, but can reinforce a professional, amicable separation.
Employment agreements
When contemplating a potential separation, employers should first look to the applicable employment agreement with an employee. Is the employee employed “at will” (in other words, can the employment relationship be terminated at any time, with or without notice)? Or is the employee employed for an established period of time? Separately, is the employee entitled to severance upon separation? The answers to these questions are crucial in understanding legal obligations to separated employees.
Under New Hampshire law, if an employee quits, resigns or is laid off, the employer must pay the employee on the next scheduled payday. If, however, a resigning employee provides the employer with at least one pay period’s notice, or if the employer does not let the employee work the notice period, the employer must pay all wages owed within 72 hours of the employee’s final day. Similarly, if an employer terminates an employee, the employer must pay all wages to the employee within 72 hours.
New Hampshire law may also obligate employers to pay involuntarily terminated salaried employees for a full pay period, even if the employee worked only a portion of that period. There are some exceptions to this mandate, such as when the salaried employee is terminated for cause. Nevertheless, employers should use discretion in terminating salaried employees — more often than not, that employee will be entitled compensation for a full pay period.
An employer that willfully or without good cause fails to timely pay final wages may be liable for 10% of the unpaid wages for each day overdue (excluding Sundays and holidays). The employer may also be obligated to pay attorneys’ fees. It is therefore critical that employers understand their financial obligations to employees prior to termination.
Policies and benefits
When preparing for a separation, employers should also understand what benefits, if any, are due to the departing employee. In large part, such benefits are guided by an employer’s own
policies. For example, are employees entitled to unused vacation time
upon separation? Similarly, are employees due unused sick or personal
time? Employers should look to their employee handbook (and update it,
if needed) to understand their obligations. Whatever is owed should be
paid in a consistent manner as the wages due.
Employers
should also understand their obligations for health insurance under the
Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (COBRA), as well as the
recently enacted American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 (ARPA). Under ARPA,
employers are required to pay 100% of the premiums required under COBRA
for
former employees who are enrolled, or will enroll, in COBRA continuation
coverage through September 30, 2021. Employers may be reimbursed for
the premium through a payroll tax credit. Employers should contact their
benefits administrator for how their plans are impacted by this new,
yet temporary, mandate.
Severance
One
misconception many employers make is that they must pay severance to
departing employees. Unless an employment agreement with a particular
employee requires severance upon termination, there generally is no
requirement to provide severance pay.
Nonetheless,
severance and release agreements, if well drafted, give employers
valuable opportunities to avoid costly litigation. These agreements
should include protections, such as a release of claims and
non-disparagement and confidentiality duties. To avoid unwelcome
challenges, employers should update their agreements to ensure they
comply with all applicable New Hampshire and federal laws.
Parting
ways can be stressful and uncertain for all parties involved. A
business’s best tool to manage these pressures is to be prepared.
Brian Garrett, of counsel at McLane Middleton in the firm’s Education and Employment Law Practice Groups, can be reached at brian.garrett@mclane.com.