Total Workers Affected
222
Across all WARN notices
Employer · WARN Act history · Other Services
222 workers across 1 WARN notice, primarily in WA — every mass-layoff and plant-closing filing on record.
The verdict
Washington State Employment Security Department put 222 workers on WARN notice across 1 filing — the 496th-largest WARN footprint of 4,023 tracked employers.
Total Workers Affected
222
Across all WARN notices
Number of Notices
1
WARN Act filings on record
Latest Event Date
Oct 2011
Most recent filing
222 workers across all events
Statewide, WA · Other Services
Effective: Jan 16, 2012
222
workers
Filed Oct 21, 2011
| # | Employer | Workers cut | Notices | Lead state |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | David's Bridal | 9,266 | 1 | WA |
| 2 | Haliburton Energy Services-N. Sam Houston | 4,484 | 2 | TX |
| 3 | Zachry Industrial, Inc. (Sabine Pass) | 4,072 | 1 | TX |
| 4 | RaterLabs | 3,657 | 1 | WA |
| 5 | YMCA of Greater Seattle | 3,623 | 4 | WA |
| 6 | Gebbers Farms, Etal | 3,465 | 1 | WA |
| 7 | Tesla | 2,688 | 1 | TX |
| 8 | Century Blvd., Hillsboro | 2,568 | 3 | OR |
| 9 | Washington State Employment Security Department (this page) | 222 | 1 | WA |
Federal WARN Act filings place Washington State Employment Security Department on record with 1 notice covering 222 workers, spanning Oct 21, 2011 through Oct 21, 2011. Because the WARN Act only captures events that affect 50 or more workers at sites of 100+ employees, this count sits at the upper band of the employer's layoff activity — smaller reductions, contractor non-renewals, and voluntary separations are invisible to this dataset. The geographic footprint of 1 state, anchored in WA, in the Other Services sector, shapes which state workforce agencies received the filings and which state-level "mini-WARN" thresholds applied.
Averaging 222 workers per notice, Washington State Employment Security Department's filings fall into a pattern that is consistent with site-level consolidation or a multi-department reduction in force. This single notice marks a discrete restructuring event rather than a sustained pattern, though workforce changes below the 50-worker WARN floor may have occurred without disclosure.
For workers, the practical layer under these numbers is time: the WARN Act's 60-day notification window triggers eligibility for state unemployment insurance, COBRA health-coverage continuation, and rapid-response services from the state workforce agency that received the filing. Workers on WA-based Washington State Employment Security Department notices should contact the WA workforce agency directly — response teams, severance negotiation guidance, and TAA (Trade Adjustment Assistance) screening move fastest in the days immediately following a notice. The record above reflects filed notices only; subsequent hiring, rescinded closures, or facility reopenings are not tracked by WARN disclosures.
Washington State Employment Security Department has one WARN Act filing on record. A single notice may reflect an isolated restructuring event, facility closure, or response to changing market conditions.
Each notice has affected an average of 222 workers, representing moderately sized workforce reductions. WARN Act notices only capture layoffs meeting federal thresholds (50+ workers) and may not represent all workforce changes.
Washington State Employment Security Department has filed 1 WARN Act notice affecting 222 workers across 1 state. The most recent notice was filed on Oct 21, 2011.
According to WARN Act filings, Washington State Employment Security Department has affected 222 workers total, averaging 222 workers per notice.
Washington State Employment Security Department has filed WARN notices in 1 state: WA.
The Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) Act requires employers with 100+ employees to provide 60 days advance notice of plant closings and mass layoffs affecting 50 or more workers. Not all layoffs require WARN notice.
Workers affected by a WARN-notified layoff may be eligible for unemployment insurance, COBRA health coverage continuation, job retraining through the Trade Adjustment Assistance program, and severance packages if offered by the employer. State workforce agencies often provide additional rapid response services.
Washington State Employment Security Department has affected 222 workers across 1 WARN filing in the Other Services sector. The federal WARN Act only captures layoffs affecting 50 or more workers, so actual workforce changes may be larger.
Disclaimer: This information is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional advice. Data is sourced from state WARN Act filings. Consult a qualified professional before making decisions based on this data.
Read our methodology — how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.
| Publisher | PlainLayoffs |
| Sources | Public state WARN-Act layoff registries |