With the Federal Trade Commission’s Noncompete ban essentially dead, state legislatures, as expected, are taking restrictive covenant lawmaking into their own hands. We previously reported that in 2023, while the FTC Noncompete ban was pending, New York Governor Kathy Hochul vetoed a bill that sought to ban all noncompetes in the State of New York, stating that a “balance” was needed instead of a strict ban on all noncompetes. On January 9, 2025, the New York State Assembly introduced NY A01361 (the “Bill”) to the Assembly Labor Committee that, if passed, would allow “employers to request or require a prospective or current employee to execute a restrictive covenant not to engage in specified acts in competition with the employer after termination of the employment relationship as a condition of employment, continued employment, or with respect to severance pay,” but only subject to certain requirements (discussed below).
The Bill would amend New York Labor Law to add Section 191-d: “Restrictive covenants.” Under this section, an Employee is defined as “any person employed for hire by an employer in any employment,” including “in a supervisory, managerial, or confidential position.” An Employer includes “any person, corporation, limited liability company, or association” as well as “the state[,] . . . political subdivisions, governmental agencies, public corporations, and charitable organizations.” The Bill also defines restrictive covenant as an agreement between an employee and an employer concerning existing or prospective employment, or an agreement between employee and employer with respect to severance pay.
The Bill outlines that for a restrictive covenant to be enforceable it must meet the following requirements:
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Recent Updates
- Health Care Non-Competes: 2025
- Wyoming Joins the List of States Banning Some Noncompete Agreements
- Arkansas Prohibits Noncompetes for Physicians
- New York State Proposes Bill to Ban Noncompetes Except for Highly Compensated Workers and in Sales of Businesses
- Texas Joins List of Legislatures Seeking to Ban Noncompete Agreements