Qimonda Faces Class-Action Lawsuit from Former Employees
pFor the troubled memory maker Qimonda things may get even tougher as the company is facing a class-action lawsuit from the former employees of its plant based in Richmond, Virginia./ppQimondarsquo;s U.S. business unit has been slammed with a putative class action filed by former fab employees who claim the manufacturer of dynamic random access memory violated the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act by failing to give them correct notice before shutting down its Virginia plant, reports Law360 web-site./ppLead plaintiffs Lakita Blair, Linda Frazier and Bonnie Wright lodged the suit Monday in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia (Blair et al. v. Qimonda North America Corp. et al., case number 09-cv-00073), alleging that Qimonda knew it would close down the fab about two months before the formal announcement that caught employees completely uninformed. Qimonda AG of Germany as well as Qimonda North American Corp. and Qimonda Richmond LLC were named as defendants./ppQimonda officially said in a statement that it did not have money to upgrade the Richmond, Virginia-based plant in order to make chips using the companyrsquo;s much-discussed Buried Wordline technology and leading-edge fabrication processes. Moreover, the company said it was no longer in a financial position to provide for severance benefits to the employees./ppThe former workers of Qimondarsquo;s Virginia plant demand damages equal to the sum of unpaid wages, salary, commissions, bonuses, accrued holiday and vacation pay, and pension and 401(k)contributions for 60 working days./ppQimonda, which filed for insolvency protectionnbsp;in January, did not comment on the news-story./p br

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