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scblock
686 days ago
A semantic difference only. They were "made redundant", "let go", "laid off", "fired", "terminated", and any other set of convenient choices.
2 comments
dgfitz
686 days ago
The first 3 give severance, the last two do not.
There is an enormous difference.
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AceyMan
686 days ago
Not so. Being included in a RIF (reduction in force) is legally different than getting fired. Ask anyone who knows anything about corporate HR.
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xnx
686 days ago
I'm not finding any legal difference in the US. What difference do you know of?
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dgfitz
686 days ago
If you're fired with cause, no severance, else, severance. It is quite common knowledge.
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xnx
686 days ago
This may be convention, but it is not law. No federal or state law requires severance pay in the US.
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dgfitz
686 days ago
I didn't say it was law.
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datavirtue
686 days ago
Unemployment insurance.
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There is an enormous difference.