D.C. Act 23-605. Displaced Workers Right to Reinstatement and Retention Emergency Amendment Act of 2020.
AN ACT
To amend, on an emergency basis, the Displaced Workers Protection Act of 1994 to add a new Title II to provide eligible workers who have been displaced by COVID-19 the opportunity to be reinstated once their employer starts rehiring after the pandemic, and to allow eligible employees to be reinstated and retained employees employed if there is a change in the ownership, controlling interest, or identify of their employer.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE COUNCIL OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, That this act may be cited as the "Displaced Workers Right to Reinstatement and Retention Emergency Amendment Act of 2020".
Sec. 2. The Displaced Workers Protection Act of 1994, effective April 26, 1994 (D.C. Law 10-105; D.C. Official Code § 32-101 et seq.), is amended as follows:
(a) A new title heading is added to read as follows:
Title
I
Displaced Workers Protection
(b) Existing sections 2, 3, and 4 (D.C. Official Code §§ 32-101 through 32-103) are designated as Title I.
(c) A new Title II is added to read as follows:
"Title II. Protections for Workers Displaced by COVID-19
"Sec. 201. Definitions.
" For the purposes of
"(1) "Change in controlling interest or identity of an employer" includes any combination of the following events that causes either a change in the entity or entities holding a controlling interest in an employer, or a change in the identity of an employer, after February 29, 2020; provided, that the business operations conducted by the new employer consist of the same or similar operations as those conducted by the employer existing on or before February 29, 2020:
"(A) Any sale, assignment, transfer, contribution, or other disposition of a controlling interest in an employer by consolidation, merger, or reorganization of the employer, or of any entity or entities that maintains any ownership interest in the employer; or
"(B) Any purchase, sale, lease, reorganization or restructuring, or relocation of the operation of an employer.
"(2) "Contractor" means an individual or company, other than an employer, that employs 25 or more individuals and who has hired individuals to work as:
"(A) Food service workers in a hotel, restaurant, cafeteria, apartment building, hospital, nursing care facility, or similar establishment;
"(B) Persons to perform janitorial or building maintenance services in an office building, institution, or similar establishment;
"(C) Nonprofessional employees to perform health care or related services in a hospital, nursing care facility, or similar establishment; or
"(D) Persons to perform security services in an office building, institution, or similar establishment; provided that special police officers who are armed, and employees hired to perform security services for District of Columbia Public Schools or a public charter school shall not be included.
"(3) "Covered establishment" means any of the following businesses in the District, a:
"(A) Hotel;
"(B) Restaurant, as defined in
"(C) Tavern, as defined in
"(D) Brew pub, as defined in
"(E) Nightclub, as defined in
"(F) Club, as defined in
"(G) Event or entertainment establishment or venue at which live performing arts, sporting events, or other entertainment events are held; or
"(H) Business engaged in the sale of goods to consumers, but not including wholesalers.
"(4)(A) "Eligible employee" means an individual who was employed to work at a covered establishment or for a contractor, and who ceased working at the covered establishment or for the contractor for reasons other than voluntary resignation or termination for cause, and
"(i) If the individual was a hotel worker, the individual's last date of employment for the employer was between December 1, 2019, and the last day of the public health emergency declared by Mayor's Order in response to the COVID-19 pandemic; or
"(ii) If the individual was not a hotel worker, the individual's last date of employment for the contractor or employer was between March 1, 2020, and the last day of the public health emergency declared by Mayor's Order in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
"(B) The term "eligible employee" does not include an individual:
"(i) Employed in an executive, administrative, or professional capacity as defined by the Secretary of Labor under section 13(a)(1) of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, approved June 25, 1938 (52 Stat. 1067; 29 U.S.C. § 213(a)(1));
"(ii) Who received severance from the individual's employer or contractor when the individual's employment ceased and whose employer or contractor has written, verifiable proof of the severance; or
"(iii) Whose employer or contractor could have terminated the individual for demonstrable just cause when the individual previously worked for the employer or contractor.
"(5) "Employer" means any entity, including a for-profit or nonprofit firm, partnership, proprietorship, sole proprietorship, limited liability company, association, corporation, or any receiver or trustee of an entity, including the legal representative of a deceased individual or receiver or trustee of an individual, who directly or indirectly or through an agent or any other person, including through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity:
"(A) Employs or exercises control over the wages, hours, or working conditions of an employee at a covered establishment;
"(B) Is not a contractor;
"(C) If the entity operates a hotel, the entity employed 50 or more individuals at a hotel on December 1, 2019; and
"(D) If the entity does not operate a hotel, the entity employed 50 or more individuals at a covered establishment other than a hotel on March 1, 2020.
"(6) "Hotel" means a hotel, motel, or similar establishment in the District, which provides lodging to transient guests.
"(7) "Hotel worker" means an individual who is employed by an employer to work at a hotel.
"(8) "New employer" means an employer created as a consequence of a change in controlling interest or identity of an employer.
"(9) "Retained employee" means any individual, except individuals employed in an executive, administrative, or professional capacity as defined by the Secretary of Labor under section 13(a)(1) of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, approved June 25, 1938 (52 Stat. 1067; 29 U.S.C. § 213(a)(1)), who was working for an employer at a covered establishment when a change in controlling interest or identity of an employer occurred or when an employer was required to give notice of a change in controlling interest or the identity of the employer pursuant to
"Sec. 202. Right to reinstatement.
"(a)(1) Beginning February 1, 2021, as positions become available with the contractor or in the employer's operation at a covered establishment, the contractor or employer shall offer each eligible employee reinstatement to the employee's previous position or to a position performing the same or substantially similar duties, and that requires essentially the same skills, as those performed by the eligible employee before the eligible employee ceased working for the contractor or at the covered establishment.
"(2)(A) A contractor or an employer shall make the offer of reinstatement in writing, to the employee's last known address by registered mail, or by email, text, or other method that is documented and retained.
"(B) If the offer of reinstatement is made by email, text, or other same-day delivery, a contractor or employer shall give a deadline that is no less than 3 calendar days from the date the offer of reinstatement is sent for an eligible employee to accept or decline the offer.
"(C) If the offer of reinstatement is made by registered mail, non-registered mail, or some other method that does not provide for a same-day delivery, a contractor or employer shall give a deadline that is no less than 3 calendar days from the date the offer of reinstatement is received for an eligible employee to accept or decline the offer.
"(D) If the eligible employee accepts the offer of reinstatement, the eligible employee shall report to work no later than 7 days, or later if requested by the employer, from the date the offer of reinstatement is received.
"(3) If more than one eligible employee is entitled to reinstatement to a particular position, the contractor or employer may make simultaneous, conditional offers of reinstatement to eligible employees for the same position; provided, that the contractor or employer makes offers of reinstatement based on seniority within job classifications, unless the employer is offering reinstatement to positions at a restaurant, tavern, brew pub, nightclub, or club.
"(4) A contractor or employer shall not hire a new employee for a position until all eligible employees have either not responded to an offer of reinstatement by the deadline indicated in the offer or have declined the offer of reinstatement.
"Sec. 203. Changes in controlling interest or employer.
"(a) This section shall not apply to:
"(1) Eligible employees otherwise covered by
"(2) Eligible or retained employees who work at restaurants, taverns, brew pubs, nightclubs, or clubs unless the change in controlling interest or identity of an employer would have no demonstrable change to its operations.
"(b) Except as provided in subsection (a) of this section, the requirements of
"(c)(1) A new employer shall retain any:
"(A) Eligible employee reinstated pursuant to
"(B) Retained employee who agrees to remain employed by the new employer for a 90-day transition period beginning on the date of the change in controlling interest or identity of the employer.
"(2) Except as provided in paragraph (5) of this subsection, the new employer shall not discharge a retained employee or an eligible employee reinstated pursuant to
"(3) At the end of the 90-day transition period, the new employer shall perform a written performance evaluation for each retained employee and each eligible employee reinstated pursuant to
"(4)(A) Beginning on February 1, 2021, an employer that anticipates a change in controlling interest or the identity of the employer, shall, no later than 15 calendar days before the anticipated date of the change in controlling interest or the identity of the employer, provide the following notice:
"(i) To all parties to the transaction that results in the change in controlling interest or the identity of the employer, notice of the name, last known address, date of hire, position, and text or telephone contact information of each eligible employee;
"(ii) To retained employees and eligible employees, notice that the employer is experiencing or anticipates a change in controlling interest or identity of the employer and of an employee's right to reinstatement or retention under this section; and
"(iii) To any labor organization that represents the employer's retained employees or eligible employees, the notices specified in sub-subparagraphs (i) and (ii) of this subparagraph.
"(B) The new employer shall provide the notice required pursuant to subparagraph (A)(ii) of this paragraph by:
"(i) Posting the notice on the premises of the covered establishment in the same place and manner as other statutorily-required notices, unless the covered establishment is no longer operating; and
"(ii) By texting, emailing, or mailing to the last known address the notice to all eligible employees.
"(5) If at any time, a new employer determines that fewer employees are required to work at the covered establishment than the number required before the change in controlling interest or identity of the employer, the new employer shall retain employees by seniority within job classification; provided, that if the new employer is a restaurant, tavern, brew pub, nightclub, or club, the new employer shall not be required to utilize seniority.
"Sec. 204. Retaliation prohibited.
"(a) No contractor or employer may terminate, refuse to reinstate or employ, or otherwise take an adverse action against any eligible employee or retained employee because the eligible employee or retained employee asserted rights under or participated in proceedings related to
"(b) If it is established that an employee engaged in conduct protected by subsection (a) of this section, and the contractor or employer thereafter terminated, refused to reinstate or employ, or otherwise took adverse action against such person within 60 days after such protected activity, then a rebuttable presumption shall arise that the contractor or employer's action was taken in violation of subsection (a) of this section. In such a case, the contractor or employer may rebut the presumption by producing credible evidence that the sole reason for the adverse action was a legitimate business reason. The contractor or employer's asserted business reason may be rebutted by a showing of pretext.
"Sec. 205. Enforcement.
" An eligible employee or retained employee may, on their own behalf or on behalf of other eligible employees or retained employees similarly situated, bring an action to enforce
"(1) Back pay for each day the violation continues at a rate of compensation not less than the higher of:
"(A) The average regular rate of pay received by the eligible employee or retained employee during the last 3 years of the eligible employee or retained employee's employment in the same occupation classification, or
"(B) The final regular rate received by the eligible employee or retained employee;
"(2) The costs of benefits the employer would have incurred for the eligible employee or retained employee under the employer's benefit plan;
"(3) If it is established that a contractor or employer violated
"(4) Reasonable attorney fees and costs of the suit, including expert witness fees.
"Sec. 206. Relationship to employment contracts and agreements.
"The requirements of
"Sec. 207. Applicability.
"(a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section,
"(b) Sections
Sec. 3. Fiscal impact statement.
The Council adopts the fiscal impact statement of the Budget Director as the fiscal impact statement required by section 4a of the General Legislative Procedures Act of 1975, approved October 16, 2006 (120 Stat. 2038; D.C. Official Code § 1-301.47a).
Sec. 4. Effective date.
This act shall take effect following approval by the Mayor (or in the event of veto by the Mayor, action by the Council to override the veto), and shall remain in effect for no longer than 90 days, as provided for emergency acts of the Council of the District of Columbia in section 412(a) of the District of Columbia Home Rule Act, approved December 24, 1973 (87 Stat. 788; D.C. Official Code § 1-204.12(a)).