The assigned HR Case Manager ... claims a huge backlog of appeals is the reason for the outlandish delay.
You know what they say, "Where there's smoke, there's usually fire."
I wonder why there's a huge backlog of appeals? Could it be that the vast majority of people LR'd were over 40?
BTW, why should HR work fast for you? You're no longer an employee. They're not Cisco employees either. They work for Xerox and are outsourced to fulfill a job function for Cisco.
My severance paperwork only included the stats for my BU instead of the entire company. I can only assume that other BU's had similar numbers.
Out of 271 employees in the BU, 25 people total were let go. 2 out of 25 were under age 35. 23 were over 40. On the surface, that looks like age discrimination.
2 were over age 55.
5 were between 50-55.
8 were between 45-50.
8 were between 40-45.
None were between 35-40.
2 were under the age of 35.
In my BU, for my pay grade, they let go 2 people in the 45-50 age group and 1 from the 40-45 age group and 1 under age 35. 3 out of 4 were over age 40.
As to who they kept, lets look at those numbers:
There is no one over age 55.
2 are between 50-55.
2 are between 45-50.
1 is between 40-45.
5 are between 35-40.
8 are under the age of 35.
Out of 18 people, 11 are under 40 and 7 are over 40. It's more heavily weighted towards people under 40 yet 3 out of 4 people LR'd were over 40. As the song writer said "Things that make you go hmm."
I figured that Cisco's lawyers were prepped for any lawsuits and better paid than any I could afford, and the better the lawyer I got, the more I'd have to pay them thus eating up any payment awarded in a lawsuit so it was cheaper/better to take the money and run to the bank with it.
At least within the US, it appears that the severance packages are getting smaller and smaller over time. I recall when they did the "Workforce Reduction" or "WFR" back in 2011, they told everyone (in the US/Canada anyway) exactly what the severance package was nearly two months before the impacted employees were informed. They announced the reduction in June and notified the affected employees in Aug. Now, Chucky-boy announces it on a Wed, the affected employees (for the most part) are told the next morning, and only those impacted are told what the package is. This package was 17% less than the one in 2011.
If you're over 40, look for a new job and get out on your schedule instead of at Cisco's convenience because the packages are getting smaller and you don't know if next fall will be a good time to look for a job or not.