no advance notice of termination or resignation is required
if advance notice of resignation is given, it can be accepted, rejected, or modified by the employer
if a notice period is rejected, the employer does not have to pay for the time not worked by the employee, since the duty to pay ends on the date the work separation becomes effective
in general, an employer does not have to explain why it is letting an employee go - an employer can say as little or as much as it deems appropriate - an exception is in the situation of an employee who is discharged as the result of a background check covered under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (i.e., a background check performed by an outside, for-profit firm) - in that case, the employer must explain to the employee that the discharge is the result of the unfavorable report, give the employee a copy of the report, and furnish contact information for the firm that issued the report
depending upon the circumstances, the following may need to be done at or near the time of work separation:
the employer needs to make a final wage payment within six calendar days for a layoff or discharge, or by the next regularly scheduled payday for a resignation
if the employee had health insurance, the employer should give notice under state or federal COBRA laws
in case of a mass layoff, the employer should give a WARN notice to affected employees and the state
if the employee was subject to a wage garnishment order for child support or alimony, the employer must notify the New Hire division of the Attorney General’s office within seven days of the work separation
in case of certain lump-sum payments of severance pay, bonuses, commissions, accrued leave, or similar post-termination payments, any child support or alimony amounts must be taken out of such payments