[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 29, Volume 4]
[Revised as of July 1, 2007]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 29CFR1625.22]

[Page 337-343]
 
                             TITLE 29--LABOR
 
          CHAPTER XIV--EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION
 
PART 1625_AGE DISCRIMINATION IN EMPLOYMENT ACT--Table of Contents
 
                    Subpart B_Substantive Regulations
 
Sec.  1625.22  Waivers of rights and claims under the ADEA.

    (a) Introduction. (1) Congress amended the ADEA in 1990 to clarify 
the prohibitions against discrimination on the basis of age. In Title II 
of OWBPA, Congress addressed waivers of rights and claims under the 
ADEA, amending section 7 of the ADEA by adding a new subsection (f).
    (2) Section 7(f)(1) of the ADEA expressly provides that waivers may 
be valid and enforceable under the ADEA only if the waiver is ``knowing 
and voluntary''. Sections 7(f)(1) and 7(f)(2) of the ADEA set out the 
minimum requirements for determining whether a waiver is knowing and 
voluntary.
    (3) Other facts and circumstances may bear on the question of 
whether the waiver is knowing and voluntary, as, for example, if there 
is a material mistake, omission, or misstatement in the information 
furnished by the employer to an employee in connection with the waiver.
    (4) The rules in this section apply to all waivers of ADEA rights 
and claims, regardless of whether the employee is employed in the 
private or public sector, including employment by the United States 
Government.
    (b) Wording of Waiver Agreements. (1) Section 7(f)(1)(A) of the ADEA 
provides, as part of the minimum requirements for a knowing and 
voluntary waiver, that:

    The waiver is part of an agreement between the individual and the 
employer that is written in a manner calculated to be understood by such 
individual, or by the average individual eligible to participate.

    (2) The entire waiver agreement must be in writing.
    (3) Waiver agreements must be drafted in plain language geared to 
the level of understanding of the individual party to the agreement or 
individuals eligible to participate. Employers should take into account 
such factors as the level of comprehension and education of typical 
participants. Consideration of these factors usually will require the 
limitation or elimination of technical jargon and of long, complex 
sentences.
    (4) The waiver agreement must not have the effect of misleading, 
misinforming, or failing to inform participants and affected 
individuals. Any advantages or disadvantages described shall be 
presented without either exaggerating the benefits or minimizing the 
limitations.
    (5) Section 7(f)(1)(H) of the ADEA, relating to exit incentive or 
other employment termination programs offered to a group or class of 
employees, also contains a requirement that information be conveyed ``in 
writing in a manner calculated to be understood by the average 
participant.'' The same standards applicable to the similar language in 
section 7(f)(1)(A) of the ADEA apply here as well.
    (6) Section 7(f)(1)(B) of the ADEA provides, as part of the minimum 
requirements for a knowing and voluntary waiver, that ``the waiver 
specifically refers to rights or claims under this Act.'' Pursuant to 
this subsection, the waiver agreement must refer to the Age 
Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA) by name in connection with the 
waiver.
    (7) Section 7(f)(1)(E) of the ADEA requires that an individual must 
be ``advised in writing to consult with an attorney prior to executing 
the agreement.''
    (c) Waiver of future rights. (1) Section 7(f)(1)(C) of the ADEA 
provides that:

    A waiver may not be considered knowing and voluntary unless at a 
minimum . . . the individual does not waive rights or claims

[[Page 338]]

that may arise after the date the waiver is executed.

    (2) The waiver of rights or claims that arise following the 
execution of a waiver is prohibited. However, section 7(f)(1)(C) of the 
ADEA does not bar, in a waiver that otherwise is consistent with 
statutory requirements, the enforcement of agreements to perform future 
employment-related actions such as the employee's agreement to retire or 
otherwise terminate employment at a future date.
    (d) Consideration. (1) Section 7(f)(1)(D) of the ADEA states that:

    A waiver may not be considered knowing and voluntary unless at a 
minimum * * * the individual waives rights or claims only in exchange 
for consideration in addition to anything of value to which the 
individual already is entitled.

    (2) ``Consideration in addition'' means anything of value in 
addition to that to which the individual is already entitled in the 
absence of a waiver.
    (3) If a benefit or other thing of value was eliminated in 
contravention of law or contract, express or implied, the subsequent 
offer of such benefit or thing of value in connection with a waiver will 
not constitute ``consideration'' for purposes of section 7(f)(1) of the 
ADEA. Whether such elimination as to one employee or group of employees 
is in contravention of law or contract as to other employees, or to that 
individual employee at some later time, may vary depending on the facts 
and circumstances of each case.
    (4) An employer is not required to give a person age 40 or older a 
greater amount of consideration than is given to a person under the age 
of 40, solely because of that person's membership in the protected class 
under the ADEA.
    (e) Time periods. (1) Section 7(f)(1)(F) of the ADEA states that:

    A waiver may not be considered knowing and voluntary unless at a 
minimum * * *
    (i) The individual is given a period of at least 21 days within 
which to consider the agreement; or
    (ii) If a waiver is requested in connection with an exit incentive 
or other employment termination program offered to a group or class of 
employees, the individual is given a period of at least 45 days within 
which to consider the agreement.

    (2) Section 7(f)(1)(G) of the ADEA states:

    A waiver may not be considered knowing and voluntary unless at a 
minimum . . . the agreement provides that for a period of at least 7 
days following the execution of such agreement, the individual may 
revoke the agreement, and the agreement shall not become effective or 
enforceable until the revocation period has expired.

    (3) The term ``exit incentive or other employment termination 
program'' includes both voluntary and involuntary programs.
    (4) The 21 or 45 day period runs from the date of the employer's 
final offer. Material changes to the final offer restart the running of 
the 21 or 45 day period; changes made to the final offer that are not 
material do not restart the running of the 21 or 45 day period. The 
parties may agree that changes, whether material or immaterial, do not 
restart the running of the 21 or 45 day period.
    (5) The 7 day revocation period cannot be shortened by the parties, 
by agreement or otherwise.
    (6) An employee may sign a release prior to the end of the 21 or 45 
day time period, thereby commencing the mandatory 7 day revocation 
period. This is permissible as long as the employee's decision to accept 
such shortening of time is knowing and voluntary and is not induced by 
the employer through fraud, misrepresentation, a threat to withdraw or 
alter the offer prior to the expiration of the 21 or 45 day time period, 
or by providing different terms to employees who sign the release prior 
to the expiration of such time period. However, if an employee signs a 
release before the expiration of the 21 or 45 day time period, the 
employer may expedite the processing of the consideration provided in 
exchange for the waiver.
    (f) Informational requirements. (1) Introduction. (i) Section 
7(f)(1)(H) of the ADEA provides that:

    A waiver may not be considered knowing and voluntary unless at a 
minimum . . . if a waiver is requested in connection with an exit 
incentive or other employment termination program offered to a group or 
class of employees, the employer (at the commencement of the period 
specified in subparagraph (F)) [which provides time periods for 
employees to consider the waiver] informs the individual in writing in a 
manner calculated to

[[Page 339]]

be understood by the average individual eligible to participate, as to--
    (i) Any class, unit, or group of individuals covered by such 
program, any eligibility factors for such program, and any time limits 
applicable to such program; and
    (ii) The job titles and ages of all individuals eligible or selected 
for the program, and the ages of all individuals in the same job 
classification or organizational unit who are not eligible or selected 
for the program.

    (ii) Section 7(f)(1)(H) of the ADEA addresses two principal issues: 
to whom information must be provided, and what information must be 
disclosed to such individuals.
    (iii)(A) Section 7(f)(1)(H) of the ADEA references two types of 
``programs'' under which employers seeking waivers must make written 
disclosures: ``exit incentive programs'' and ``other employment 
termination programs.'' Usually an ``exit incentive program'' is a 
voluntary program offered to a group or class of employees where such 
employees are offered consideration in addition to anything of value to 
which the individuals are already entitled (hereinafter in this section, 
``additional consideration'') in exchange for their decision to resign 
voluntarily and sign a waiver. Usually ``other employment termination 
program'' refers to a group or class of employees who were involuntarily 
terminated and who are offered additional consideration in return for 
their decision to sign a waiver.
    (B) The question of the existence of a ``program'' will be decided 
based upon the facts and circumstances of each case. A ``program'' 
exists when an employer offers additional consideration for the signing 
of a waiver pursuant to an exit incentive or other employment 
termination (e.g., a reduction in force) to two or more employees. 
Typically, an involuntary termination program is a standardized formula 
or package of benefits that is available to two or more employees, while 
an exit incentive program typically is a standardized formula or package 
of benefits designed to induce employees to sever their employment 
voluntarily. In both cases, the terms of the programs generally are not 
subject to negotiation between the parties.
    (C) Regardless of the type of program, the scope of the terms 
``class,'' ``unit,'' ``group,'' ``job classification,'' and 
``organizational unit'' is determined by examining the ``decisional 
unit'' at issue. (See paragraph (f)(3) of this section, ``The Decisional 
Unit.'')
    (D) A ``program'' for purposes of the ADEA need not constitute an 
``employee benefit plan'' for purposes of the Employee Retirement Income 
Security Act of 1974 (ERISA). An employer may or may not have an ERISA 
severance plan in connection with its OWBPA program.
    (iv) The purpose of the informational requirements is to provide an 
employee with enough information regarding the program to allow the 
employee to make an informed choice whether or not to sign a waiver 
agreement.
    (2) To whom must the information be given. The required information 
must be given to each person in the decisional unit who is asked to sign 
a waiver agreement.
    (3) The decisional unit. (i)(A) The terms ``class,'' ``unit,'' or 
``group'' in section 7(f)(1)(H)(i) of the ADEA and ``job classification 
or organizational unit'' in section 7(f)(1)(H)(ii) of the ADEA refer to 
examples of categories or groupings of employees affected by a program 
within an employer's particular organizational structure. The terms are 
not meant to be an exclusive list of characterizations of an employer's 
organization.
    (B) When identifying the scope of the ``class, unit, or group,'' and 
``job classification or organizational unit,'' an employer should 
consider its organizational structure and decision-making process. A 
``decisional unit'' is that portion of the employer's organizational 
structure from which the employer chose the persons who would be offered 
consideration for the signing of a waiver and those who would not be 
offered consideration for the signing of a waiver. The term ``decisional 
unit'' has been developed to reflect the process by which an employer 
chose certain employees for a program and ruled out others from that 
program.
    (ii)(A) The variety of terms used in section 7(f)(1)(H) of the ADEA 
demonstrates that employers often use differing terminology to describe 
their organizational structures. When identifying the population of the 
decisional unit, the employer acts on a case-by-

[[Page 340]]

case basis, and thus the determination of the appropriate class, unit, 
or group, and job classification or organizational unit for purposes of 
section 7(f)(1)(H) of the ADEA also must be made on a case-by-case 
basis.
    (B) The examples in paragraph (f)(3)(iii), of this section 
demonstrate that in appropriate cases some subgroup of a facility's work 
force may be the decisional unit. In other situations, it may be 
appropriate for the decisional unit to comprise several facilities. 
However, as the decisional unit is typically no broader than the 
facility, in general the disclosure need be no broader than the 
facility. ``Facility'' as it is used throughout this section generally 
refers to place or location. However, in some circumstances terms such 
as ``school,'' ``plant,'' or ``complex'' may be more appropriate.
    (C) Often, when utilizing a program an employer is attempting to 
reduce its workforce at a particular facility in an effort to eliminate 
what it deems to be excessive overhead, expenses, or costs from its 
organization at that facility. If the employer's goal is the reduction 
of its workforce at a particular facility and that employer undertakes a 
decision-making process by which certain employees of the facility are 
selected for a program, and others are not selected for a program, then 
that facility generally will be the decisional unit for purposes of 
section 7(f)(1)(H) of the ADEA.
    (D) However, if an employer seeks to terminate employees by 
exclusively considering a particular portion or subgroup of its 
operations at a specific facility, then that subgroup or portion of the 
workforce at that facility will be considered the decisional unit.
    (E) Likewise, if the employer analyzes its operations at several 
facilities, specifically considers and compares ages, seniority rosters, 
or similar factors at differing facilities, and determines to focus its 
workforce reduction at a particular facility, then by the nature of that 
employer's decision-making process the decisional unit would include all 
considered facilities and not just the facility selected for the 
reductions.
    (iii) The following examples are not all-inclusive and are meant 
only to assist employers and employees in determining the appropriate 
decisional unit. Involuntary reductions in force typically are 
structured along one or more of the following lines:
    (A) Facility-wide: Ten percent of the employees in the Springfield 
facility will be terminated within the next ten days;
    (B) Division-wide: Fifteen of the employees in the Computer Division 
will be terminated in December;
    (C) Department-wide: One-half of the workers in the Keyboard 
Department of the Computer Division will be terminated in December;
    (D) Reporting: Ten percent of the employees who report to the Vice 
President for Sales, wherever the employees are located, will be 
terminated immediately;
    (E) Job Category: Ten percent of all accountants, wherever the 
employees are located, will be terminated next week.
    (iv) In the examples in paragraph (f)(3)(iii) of this section, the 
decisional units are, respectively:
    (A) The Springfield facility;
    (B) The Computer Division;
    (C) The Keyboard Department;
    (D) All employees reporting to the Vice President for Sales; and
    (E) All accountants.
    (v) While the particular circumstances of each termination program 
will determine the decisional unit, the following examples also may 
assist in determining when the decisional unit is other than the entire 
facility:
    (A) A number of small facilities with interrelated functions and 
employees in a specific geographic area may comprise a single decisional 
unit;
    (B) If a company utilizes personnel for a common function at more 
than one facility, the decisional unit for that function (i.e., 
accounting) may be broader than the one facility;
    (C) A large facility with several distinct functions may comprise a 
number of decisional units; for example, if a single facility has 
distinct internal functions with no employee overlap (i.e., 
manufacturing, accounting, human resources), and the program is confined 
to a distinct function, a

[[Page 341]]

smaller decisional unit may be appropriate.
    (vi)(A) For purposes of this section, higher level review of 
termination decisions generally will not change the size of the 
decisional unit unless the reviewing process alters its scope. For 
example, review by the Human Resources Department to monitor compliance 
with discrimination laws does not affect the decisional unit. Similarly, 
when a regional manager in charge of more than one facility reviews the 
termination decisions regarding one of those facilities, the review does 
not alter the decisional unit, which remains the one facility under 
consideration.
    (B) However, if the regional manager in the course of review 
determines that persons in other facilities should also be considered 
for termination, the decisional unit becomes the population of all 
facilities considered. Further, if, for example, the regional manager 
and his three immediate subordinates jointly review the termination 
decisions, taking into account more than one facility, the decisional 
unit becomes the populations of all facilities considered.
    (vii) This regulatory section is limited to the requirements of 
section 7(f)(1)(H) and is not intended to affect the scope of discovery 
or of substantive proceedings in the processing of charges of violation 
of the ADEA or in litigation involving such charges.
    (4) Presentation of information. (i) The information provided must 
be in writing and must be written in a manner calculated to be 
understood by the average individual eligible to participate.
    (ii) Information regarding ages should be broken down according to 
the age of each person eligible or selected for the program and each 
person not eligible or selected for the program. The use of age bands 
broader than one year (such as ``age 20-30'') does not satisfy this 
requirement.
    (iii) In a termination of persons in several established grade 
levels and/or other established subcategories within a job category or 
job title, the information shall be broken down by grade level or other 
subcategory.
    (iv) If an employer in its disclosure combines information 
concerning both voluntary and involuntary terminations, the employer 
shall present the information in a manner that distinguishes between 
voluntary and involuntary terminations.
    (v) If the terminees are selected from a subset of a decisional 
unit, the employer must still disclose information for the entire 
population of the decisional unit. For example, if the employer decides 
that a 10% RIF in the Accounting Department will come from the 
accountants whose performance is in the bottom one-third of the 
Division, the employer still must disclose information for all employees 
in the Accounting Department, even those who are the highest rated.
    (vi) An involuntary termination program in a decisional unit may 
take place in successive increments over a period of time. Special rules 
apply to this situation. Specifically, information supplied with regard 
to the involuntary termination program should be cumulative, so that 
later terminees are provided ages and job titles or job categories, as 
appropriate, for all persons in the decisional unit at the beginning of 
the program and all persons terminated to date. There is no duty to 
supplement the information given to earlier terminees so long as the 
disclosure, at the time it is given, conforms to the requirements of 
this section.
    (vii) The following example demonstrates one way in which the 
required information could be presented to the employees. (This example 
is not presented as a prototype notification agreement that 
automatically will comply with the ADEA. Each information disclosure 
must be structured based upon the individual case, taking into account 
the corporate structure, the population of the decisional unit, and the 
requirements of section 7(f)(1)(H) of the ADEA): Example: Y Corporation 
lost a major construction contract and determined that it must terminate 
10% of the employees in the Construction Division. Y decided to offer 
all terminees $20,000 in severance pay in exchange for a waiver of all 
rights. The waiver provides the section 7(f)(1)(H) of the ADEA 
information as follows:

[[Page 342]]

    (A) The decisional unit is the Construction Division.
    (B) All persons in the Construction Division are eligible for the 
program. All persons who are being terminated in our November RIF are 
selected for the program.
    (C) All persons who are being offered consideration under a waiver 
agreement must sign the agreement and return it to the Personnel Office 
within 45 days after receiving the waiver. Once the signed waiver is 
returned to the Personnel Office, the employee has 7 days to revoke the 
waiver agreement.
    (D) The following is a listing of the ages and job titles of persons 
in the Construction Division who were and were not selected for 
termination and the offer of consideration for signing a waiver:

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                            No.        No. not
                 Job Title                                      Age                       Selected     selected
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Mechanical Engineers, I................  25.......................................           21           48
                                             26.......................................           11           73
                                             63.......................................            4           18
                                             64.......................................            3           11
(2) Mechanical Engineers, II...............  28.......................................            3           10
                                             29.......................................           11           17
                                             Etc., for all ages
(3) Structural Engineers, I................  21.......................................            5            8
                                             Etc., for all ages
(4) Structural Engineers, II...............  23.......................................            2            4
                                             Etc., for all ages
(5) Purchasing Agents......................  26.......................................           10           11
                                             Etc., for all ages
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (g) Waivers settling charges and lawsuits. (1) Section 7(f)(2) of 
the ADEA provides that:

    A waiver in settlement of a charge filed with the Equal Employment 
Opportunity Commission, or an action filed in court by the individual or 
the individual's representative, alleging age discrimination of a kind 
prohibited under section 4 or 15 may not be considered knowing and 
voluntary unless at a minimum--
    (A) Subparagraphs (A) through (E) of paragraph (1) have been met; 
and
    (B) The individual is given a reasonable period of time within which 
to consider the settlement agreement.

    (2) The language in section 7(f)(2) of the ADEA, ``discrimination of 
a kind prohibited under section 4 or 15'' refers to allegations of age 
discrimination of the type prohibited by the ADEA.
    (3) The standards set out in paragraph (f) of this section for 
complying with the provisions of section 7(f)(1) (A)-(E) of the ADEA 
also will apply for purposes of complying with the provisions of section 
7(f)(2)(A) of the ADEA.
    (4) The term ``reasonable time within which to consider the 
settlement agreement'' means reasonable under all the circumstances, 
including whether the individual is represented by counsel or has the 
assistance of counsel.
    (5) However, while the time periods under section 7(f)(1) of the 
ADEA do not apply to subsection 7(f)(2) of the ADEA, a waiver agreement 
under this subsection that provides an employee the time periods 
specified in section 7(f)(1) of the ADEA will be considered 
``reasonable'' for purposes of section 7(f)(2)(B) of the ADEA.
    (6) A waiver agreement in compliance with this section that is in 
settlement of an EEOC charge does not require the participation or 
supervision of EEOC.
    (h) Burden of proof. In any dispute that may arise over whether any 
of the requirements, conditions, and circumstances set forth in section 
7(f) of the ADEA, subparagraph (A), (B), (C), (D), (E), (F), (G), or (H) 
of paragraph (1), or subparagraph (A) or (B) of paragraph (2), have been 
met, the party asserting the validity of a waiver shall have the burden 
of proving in a court of competent jurisdiction that a waiver was 
knowing and voluntary pursuant to paragraph (1) or (2) of section 7(f) 
of the ADEA.
    (i) EEOC's enforcement powers. (1) Section 7(f)(4) of the ADEA 
states:

    No waiver agreement may affect the Commission's rights and 
responsibilities to enforce [the ADEA]. No waiver may be used to

[[Page 343]]

justify interfering with the protected right of an employee to file a 
charge or participate in an investigation or proceeding conducted by the 
Commission.

    (2) No waiver agreement may include any provision prohibiting any 
individual from:
    (i) Filing a charge or complaint, including a challenge to the 
validity of the waiver agreement, with EEOC, or
    (ii) Participating in any investigation or proceeding conducted by 
EEOC.
    (3) No waiver agreement may include any provision imposing any 
condition precedent, any penalty, or any other limitation adversely 
affecting any individual's right to:
    (i) File a charge or complaint, including a challenge to the 
validity of the waiver agreement, with EEOC, or
    (ii) Participate in any investigation or proceeding conducted by 
EEOC.
    (j) Effective date of this section. (1) This section is effective 
July 6, 1998.
    (2) This section applies to waivers offered by employers on or after 
the effective date specified in paragraph (j)(1) of this section.
    (3) No inference is to be drawn from this section regarding the 
validity of waivers offered prior to the effective date.
    (k) Statutory authority. The regulations in this section are 
legislative regulations issued pursuant to section 9 of the ADEA and 
Title II of OWBPA.

[63 FR 30628, June 5, 1998]