Oklahoma Code § 40-2-422

Title 40. Labor: Seasonal workers and employers
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A.  Unemployment benefits based on services by a seasonal worker
performed in seasonal employment are payable only for weeks of
unemployment that occur during the normal seasonal work period.
Benefits shall not be paid based on services performed in seasonal
employment for any week of unemployment that begins during the
period between two (2) successive normal seasonal work periods to
any individual if that individual performs the service in the first
of the normal seasonal work periods and if there is a reasonable
assurance that the individual will perform the service for a
seasonal employer in the second of the normal seasonal work periods.
The notice of reasonable assurance shall be given by the employer to
the employee in writing on or before the last day of work in the
season.  If benefits are denied to an individual for any week solely
as a result of this section and the individual is not offered an
opportunity to perform in the second normal seasonal work period for
which reasonable assurance of employment had been given, the
individual is entitled to a retroactive payment of benefits under
this section for each week that the individual previously filed a
timely claim for benefits.  An individual may apply for any
retroactive benefits under this section in accordance with the
provisions of Article 2 of the Employment Security Act of 1980.
B.  If an individual has been employed by a nonseasonal employer
during the base period of the individual's benefit year, the
individual may become eligible for benefits during that between-
season denial period based only on the wages of the nonseasonal
employment.
C.  Not less than twenty (20) days before the estimated
beginning date of a normal seasonal work period, an employer may
apply to the Commission in writing for designation as a seasonal
employer.  At the time of application, the employer shall
conspicuously display a copy of the application on the employer's
premises.  Within ninety (90) days after receipt of the application,
the Commission shall determine if the employer is a seasonal
employer.  The employer may appeal this decision pursuant to the
provisions of Section 3-115 of this title.  A determination of the
Commission concerning the status of an employer as a seasonal
employer, or the decision of the Assessment Board or a court of this
state through the administrative appeal process, which has become
final, may be introduced in any proceeding involving a claim for
benefits, and the facts found and decision issued in the
determination or decision shall be conclusive unless substantial

evidence to the contrary is introduced by or on behalf of the
claimant.
D.  If the employer is determined to be a seasonal employer, the
employer shall give notice to each employee of the employer's status
as a seasonal employer and the beginning and ending dates of the
employer's normal seasonal work periods, and this notice shall be
given to the employee within the first seven (7) days of employment.
On or before the last day of work in the season, if the employer
intends to issue a notice of reasonable assurance of employment for
the next season, the employer shall also give notice to each
employee advising that the employee shall timely file an initial
application for unemployment benefits at the end of the current
seasonal work period and file timely weekly continued claims
thereafter to preserve the employee's right to receive retroactive
unemployment benefits if such employee is not reemployed by the
seasonal employer in the subsequent normal seasonal work period.
The notice must be on a separate document written in clear and
concise language that states these provisions.  Failure of the
employer to give adequate notice as required by this subsection will
result in the termination of the employer as a seasonal employer
under subsection E of this section and the allowance of any claim in
which the claimant did not receive the required notice.
E.  The Commission may issue a determination terminating an
employer's status as a seasonal employer on the Commission's own
motion for good cause, or upon the written request of the employer.
The effective date of a termination determination under this
subsection shall be set by the Commission.  A determination under
this subsection may be appealed pursuant to the provisions of
Section 3-115 of this title.
F.  An employer whose status as a seasonal employer is
terminated under subsection E of this section shall not reapply for
a seasonal employer status determination until after a regularly
recurring normal seasonal work period has begun and ended.
G.  If a seasonal employer informs an employee who received
assurance of being rehired that, despite the assurance, the employee
will not be rehired at the beginning of the employer's next normal
seasonal work period, this section does not prevent the employee
from receiving unemployment benefits in the same manner and to the
same extent he or she would receive benefits under the Employment
Security Act of 1980 from an employer who has not been determined to
be a seasonal employer.
H.  A successor of a seasonal employer is considered to be a
seasonal employer unless the successor provides the Commission,
within one hundred twenty (120) days after the transfer, with a
written request for termination of its status as a seasonal employer
in accordance with subsection E of this section.

I.  At the time an employee is hired by a seasonal employer, the
employer shall notify the employee in writing if the employee will
be a seasonal worker.  The employer shall provide the worker with
written notice of any subsequent change in the employee's status as
a seasonal worker.  If an employee of a seasonal employer is denied
benefits because that employee is a seasonal worker, the employee
may contest that designation by filing an appeal pursuant to the
provisions of Part 6 of Article 2 of the Employment Security Act of
1980.
J.  As used in this section:
1.  "Construction industry" means the work activity designated
in Sector Group 23 – Construction of the North American Industrial
Classification System (NAICS) published by the Executive Office of
the President, Office of Management and Budget, 2017 edition;
2.  "Normal seasonal work period" means that period, or those
periods, of time during which an individual is employed in seasonal
employment, as determined by the Commission;
3.  "Seasonal employment" means the employment of one or more
individuals primarily hired to perform services during regularly
recurring periods of twenty-six (26) weeks or less in any fifty-two-
week period other than services in the construction industry;
4.  "Seasonal employer" means an employer, other than an
employer in the construction industry, who applies to the Commission
for designation as a seasonal employer and whom the Commission
determines to be an employer whose operations and business require
employees engaged in seasonal employment; and
5.  "Seasonal worker" means a worker who has been paid wages by
a seasonal employer for work performed only during the normal
seasonal work period.

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