Ariz. Admin. Code § R6-3-5604 - Termination of the Labor Dispute Disqualification
A. Discharge During Dispute
1. When, during an ongoing labor dispute, the
employer discharges a worker who is unemployed due to a labor dispute, the
Department shall not end the labor dispute disqualification until the employer
establishes that the employer took positive and affirmative action to sever the
employer-employee relationship, or the worker establishes that the worker:
a. Has been permanently replaced,
b. Abandoned the strike or dispute,
and
c. Unconditionally offered to
return to work.
2.
Positive and affirmative action by the employer to sever the employer-employee
relationship includes:
a. Resumption of
operations,
b. Permanent
replacement of the discharged worker,
c. Discontinuance of company
benefits,
d. Transfer of the
employer's location, or
e. Sale of
the business.
3.
Notwithstanding subsection (A)(1), the Department shall end the labor dispute
disqualification and shall determine the worker's eligibility for benefits in
accordance with the provisions of A.R.S. §
23-775(2) and Article 51 of this Chapter when the
employer severs the employer-employee relationship because the worker:
a. Participates in a strike in violation of a
no-strike clause in a collective bargaining agreement; or
b. Commits violence or unlawful conduct
during picketing activities on, adjacent to, or directed at the employer's
premises, property, operations, or personnel.
B. Quit During Dispute. The Department shall
end the labor dispute disqualification if the Department determines the worker
quit employment with a labor-dispute employer and does not intend to return to
work at the end of the dispute,
C.
New Employment During the Dispute. The Department shall end a labor dispute
disqualification when the worker involved in an ongoing dispute has had new
employment that began after the start of the labor dispute and the worker
establishes the following:
1. The worker
accepted the employment in good faith. Good faith means that the worker, in
accepting the new work, intended to continue in the job and not return to the
former employer at the end of the labor dispute.
2. The worker was employed by the new
employer for at least 8 weeks, and in each week the worker earned an amount
equal to or exceeding the worker's weekly benefit amount. One or more periods
of employment, not necessarily consecutive, with 1 or more employers meets the
duration test if the total duration is at least 8 weeks.
D. Termination of Dispute. A labor dispute no
longer exists at the time the disputants agree it has ended and are willing to
resume operations and return to work.
1. If
there is no agreement as to the date a dispute has ended, the Department shall
establish an ending date from the dates of the following events:
a. The return to normal business
operations,
b. The end of
bargaining meetings, and
c. The
striking unions' notice of a desire to return to work.
2. When a labor dispute ends, the worker is
no longer directly interested in, financing, or participating in a labor
dispute. The labor-dispute disqualification ends with the last week in which
the labor-dispute disqualification is applicable for any portion of a day
within the employer's regular work week.
E. Employer's Chargeability. The Department
shall determine chargeability for the claimant's base-period employers during
and upon termination of the dispute as prescribed in
R6-3-1708(D).
Notes
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