https://www.forbes.com/advisor/personal-finance/what-is-the-warn-act/
What You Need To Know if Your Employer Violates the WARN Act
If you’re laid off and didn’t get proper WARN Act notice, you may be entitled to compensation of 60 days at your regular rate of pay plus any benefits you were eligible to receive during your employment.
Employers could be fined up to $500 for each day of their violation. However, employers can avoid the fine if they compensate the employee with back pay, the full 60-day pay they would usually receive, and benefits they were previously entitled to within three weeks of the layoffs.
Even if an employer disburses 60 days’ worth of pay, it still violates the WARN Act if it didn’t give a 60-day notice. However, employers likely won’t be penalized for violating the law if they offer severance (as well as the benefits the employee would normally receive during their tenure) because the severance may be equal to the penalty the employer would incur by breaching the WARN Act.
If your employer violates the WARN Act or if you receive pay in place of notice, you can contact an attorney; you can also contact a local American Job Center—free, multipurpose centers for employment-related needs, organized by the Department of Labor—by using the online locator or calling 1-877-US-2JOBS.
Exceptions to the WARN Act
Like with all rules, there are exceptions, and the WARN Act has three of them. Employers enduring the following hardships are not bound by WARN laws:
Natural disaster: This includes floods, earthquakes, droughts and storms that may inhibit companies from doing business.
Unforeseeable business circumstances: Any situation that the organization had no control over or knowledge of during the time of the layoffs, such as an economic downturn or a government shutdown that impacts business. Covid-19, in this instance, might qualify as an unforeseeable business interruption.
Faltering company: If a company is dependent on new capital investments to keep running, for example, and it’s not able to get the money, the business may be exempt.