Three Sacramento-area employers have quietly filed new WARN notices that will wipe out about 185 jobs across the four-county region, hitting everyone from cannabis trimmers to tanker-truck drivers to charter-school staff.
Who’s Getting Hit
Federal WARN records show the latest filings affect 185 workers in the regional labor market. Cannabis grower DASH Industries is behind the largest single action: a full closure that will eliminate roughly 80 jobs, including 22 cultivation technicians and 44 trimmers. Those totals were reported by Abridged PBS KVIE.
Truck Hauler And Charter School Jobs On The Line
Sentinel Transportation’s WARN filing shows the tank-truck hauler plans to cut 126 workers across California, with 37 of those jobs in the Sacramento four-county region. The company set May 31, 2026, as the separation date and wrote that it is “transitioning a division of its business to another entity within our parent company.”
At John Adams Academy, a network of charter schools, WARN notices detail 68 job losses tied to planned campus closures: 49 positions in Roseville, 13 in Lincoln and six in El Dorado Hills, according to WARN documents compiled by WARNact.
Layoffs Keep Stacking Up In The Region
These latest moves drop into a regional layoff tally that is already running ahead of last year’s pace. Abridged PBS KVIE reports that employers in the four-county area have logged 4,505 layoffs so far this fiscal year, up from 3,905 through June 30, 2025. Since Jan. 1, there have been 992 layoffs, compared with 778 over the same stretch in 2025.
What Comes Next For Workers
Under California’s WARN law, employers are required to give affected workers at least 60 days’ notice and to coordinate with local workforce boards so Rapid Response teams can step in with help on unemployment claims, retraining options and job-search support…