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New York’s Impending WARN Notice Requirement for Artificial Intelligence Related Layoffs Highlights Proliferating Nationwide Requirements
Thursday, January 23, 2025

During her 2025 State of the State Address on January 14, 2025, New York Governor Kathy Hochul announced a plan to support workers displaced by Artificial Intelligence (AI) by requiring employers who engage in mass layoffs or closings subject to New York’s state Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification law (“NY WARN”) to disclose whether AI automation played a role in the layoffs. Governor Hochul stated that the goal of these disclosures is to understand “the potential impact of new technologies through real data.” 

The Governor’s announcement states that she is directing the New York Department of Labor to impose this requirement, so presumably the change will be imposed without the need for legislative action. Specific details about the scope of the new disclosure requirement are not yet available.

The rise of AI in the workplace has been a matter of concern to many state lawmakers across the nation, as well as federal regulators. In New York, for example, New York City’s 2021 Local Law 144 placed guardrails on employers utilizing AI and other Automated Employment Decision Tools (“AEDTs”) in employment related decisions by requiring bias audits of AEDT tools and employer notice to employees and candidates of their use. Similarly, California nearly passed a law in 2024, SB 1047, requiring notice to employees when an AI system is used in employment decisions. While the bill was stalled out at the end of the 2024 California legislative session, California is expected to propose more AI safety legislation in 2025. Colorado will also impose a new requirement in 2026 for developers and users of employment-related AI to “use reasonable care to protect consumers from any known or reasonably foreseeable risks of algorithmic discrimination in the high-risk system.”

At the federal level, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) issued two guidance documents in 2023 concerning the issues of adverse impact and disability accommodations in the use of AI and machine learning tools in making workplace decisions.

These proliferating laws show the need for employers to be intentional about their use of AI tools in making employment decisions. Legal and human resources leaders should familiarize themselves with how their organizations are using AI tools in the employment context, and design policies to ensure that the rapidly proliferating state and local requirements around AI usage are met. 

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