Exclusive-California probes Google's treatment of Black female workers
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[December 17, 2021] By
Paresh Dave
(Reuters) - California's civil rights
regulator is investigating Google's treatment of Black female workers
following alleged incidents of harassment and discrimination, according
to two people familiar with the matter and emails from the agency seen
by Reuters.
Attorneys and analysts at the California Department of Fair Employment
and Housing (DFEH) have repeatedly interviewed several Black women who
have worked at the Alphabet Inc company about their experiences there,
according to the documents and the sources. The sources spoke on the
condition of anonymity to avoid jeopardizing the work.
Questions have centered on alleged harassment and discrimination in the
workplace, according to the emails. Conversations have taken place as
recently as last month, one of the sources said.
The DFEH declined to comment.
Google said it is focused on "building sustainable equity" for its Black
workers and that 2020 was its largest year for hiring what it calls
"Black+" workers, a designation inclusive of people belonging to
multiple races.
"Our goal is to ensure that every employee experiences Google as an
inclusive workplace," it said. "We’ll continue to focus on this
important work and thoroughly investigate any concerns, to make sure our
workplace is representative and equitable."
The DFEH has interviewed workers who have filed formal complaints and
those who have not, the people said, showing that the regulator has
sought more examples of potential mistreatment.
The agency is involved in ongoing lawsuits against video game companies
Tencent Holdings' Riot Games and Activision Blizzard Inc alleging
widespread discrimination and harassment.
But its cases do not always result in charges.
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A sign is pictured outside a Google office near the company's
headquarters in Mountain View, California, U.S., May 8, 2019.
REUTERS/Paresh Dave//File Photo
For years Black men in the tech industry have said they have faced disparaging
comments and discouraging experiences, such as being shut out of offices because
security guards and colleagues questioned whether they actually worked there.
As more Black women have joined the workforce, such complaints have increased.
Seven current and former Google employees told Reuters this year about being
marginalized on projects as Black women and not taken as seriously as colleagues
with different backgrounds.
Artificial intelligence researcher Timnit Gebru has said Google fired her a year
ago https://www.reuters.com/article/alphabet-google-research-idINKBN28E07T for
criticizing its lack of workforce diversity and for fighting managers who
objected to publishing a critical paper she co-wrote. Erika Munro Kennerly, who
oversaw diversity and strategy teams at Google before resigning last year, told
magazine Corporate Counsel in January that "there's an overall tone of being
undervalued" as a Black woman at Google.
Workers identifying as "Black+ female" left Google at the highest rate of any
racial-gender group other than "Native "American+ female" last year, according
to company data. Google last year said it planned to boost retention by
increasing support staffing and programs.
(Reporting by Paresh Dave in Oakland, Calif.; Editing by Kenneth Li and Stephen
Coates)
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