GOP Sens. McCain and Graham tell contractors to issue layoff notices
Sens. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) and John McCain (R-Ariz.) have
a message for defense contractors: ignore the Obama administration and send out mass layoff notices.
Graham and McCain sent letters to 15 defense firms Friday warning that they would block any payments from the federal government to
contractors covering the costs associated with not following the law
requiring 60 days’ notice for mass layoffs.
{mosads}The Office of Management and Budget issued guidance last
week that said contractors should not send notices of potential layoffs over the
threat of sequestration, and that the federal government would cover any legal
costs if contracts were canceled and layoffs did in fact occur.
The guidance prompted Lockheed Martin and other defense firms to drop plans to send the notices to employees this
year before the across-the-board sequestration cuts are scheduled to take effect.
But Graham and McCain told the contractors that compliance
with the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) Act was not
optional.
“The law clearly states that workers must be notified at
least 60 days in advance of a potential mass layoff or plant closure, and it is
unclear to us, in light of the Administration’s refusal to plan for
sequestration, how the Administration can guarantee that no sequester-related
budget cuts or contract actions will occur on January 2 or shortly thereafter,”
the senators wrote.
“Despite the Administration’s guidance not to issue WARN
notices now, it is our fear that, should you rely on that guidance and fail to
comply with the WARN Act requirements, you will be setting your company up for
serious legal and financial repercussions,” they said. “The Congress should not
put the taxpayers on the hook if a private company fails to follow the law.”
Lockheed Martin said in a statement responding to the letter that it will “adhere to the law” in the event that it has to lay off workers and provide the notice required by the WARN Act.
“Our decision to delay sending sequestration-related WARN notices to our employees was based on new information that clarified the timeline for implementing sequestration budget cuts,” Lockheed spokeswoman Jennifer Allen said in a statement to The Hill. “If sequestration occurs, we will adhere to the law and provide affected employees the full notice period required by the WARN Act at the appropriate time.”
Republicans have accused the Obama administration of making the promise to cover defense firms’ layoff costs for political gain and to hide job losses before the election. Some defense
firms had threatened to send the notices just four days before the election, which
is 60 days before sequestration potentially takes effect on Jan. 2. Congress is working on a deal to block the automatic cuts to spending.
Graham told The Hill the OMB guidance was “patently illegal,”
and Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.) said the administration was “bribing” defense
contractors not to send notices.
White House press secretary Jay Carney said this week that
the administration was “absolutely” not putting pressure on contractors to hold
off on issuing the layoff notices.
The Obama administration has said that contracts will not be
canceled on Jan. 2 if sequestration occurs, and so it is not necessary for
contractors to send the layoff notices.
Updated at 1:59 p.m.
Copyright 2023 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.