Termination
If you've lost your job, you have certain rights, such as the right to continue your health care coverage and, in some cases, the right to unemployment compensation.
Job Loss and Health Care Benefits
- Upon termination of employment, some workers and their families who might otherwise lose their health benefits have the right to choose to continue group health benefits provided by their group health plan for limited periods of time.
- Employers may be required to provide certain notices to their employees
- Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (COBRA)
- Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA).
Unemployment Benefits
- Workers who are unemployed through no fault of their own (as determined under state law), and meet other eligibility requirements, may be eligible to receive unemployment benefits.
- Unemployment insurance payments (benefits) are intended to provide temporary financial assistance to unemployed workers who meet the requirements of state law.
- Under the Federal-State Unemployment Insurance Program, each state administers a separate unemployment insurance program within guidelines established by federal law. See Unemployment Insurance.
Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO)
- Prohibits specific types of employment discrimination. Collectively, these laws prohibit discrimination in most workplaces on the basis ofage, race, color, religion, sex, ethnic/national origin, disability, and veteran status.
- In general, if the reason for termination is not because of discrimination on these bases, or because of the employee's protected status as a whistleblower, or because they were involved in a complaint filed under one of the laws enforced by the Department of Labor (see Whistleblower and Non-Retaliation Protections), then the termination is subject only to any private contract between the employer and employee or a labor contract between the employer and those covered by the labor contract.
Veterans' Employment and Training Service (VETS)
- Protecting the employment rights of veterans is a responsibility of DOL's VETS. VETS protects service members' reemployment rights when they are returning from a period of service through its administration of the Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act of 1994 (USERRA).
Related Topics
- Discrimination
- Health Benefits/COBRA
- Last Paycheck
- Severance Pay
- Unemployment Insurance
- Veterans' Reemployment Rights