Nassau County does not impose its own hotel worker retention ordinance like New York City or Los Angeles. Hotel labor relations remain governed by federal NLRA standards and any applicable collective-bargaining agreements.
Unlike New York City, which requires hotel buyers to retain existing workers for a transition period, Nassau County has no such local ordinance. Hotel workers in Nassau are protected by federal labor law (the National Labor Relations Act), New York State labor standards including minimum wage and paid leave, and any union contracts. The Hotel Trades Council represents some Nassau properties, but coverage varies. Workers facing termination on a sale are generally entitled only to standard NY WARN Act notice for mass layoffs (NY Lab Β§860 et seq.) and any rights under their CBA. Nassau has not signaled interest in adopting NYC-style retention rules.
Failing to provide WARN notice for qualifying mass layoffs, or violating an applicable collective-bargaining agreement, can lead to back-pay liability, civil penalties, and labor-board complaints.
Nassau County, NY
Nassau County may not set a local minimum wage above the state floor; New York preempts the field. The downstate minimum wage applicable in Nassau is $16.50 ...
Nassau County, NY
Nassau County has no hotel-specific living wage law. Hotel workers are covered by New York State's downstate minimum wage of $16.50, plus state paid family l...
See how Nassau County's hotel worker retention rules stack up against other locations.
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