Apple worker says she was fired after leading movement against
harassment
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[October 16, 2021]
By Julia Love
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - An Apple employee
who led fellow workers in publicly sharing instances of what they called
harassment and discrimination at the company said on Thursday that she
had been fired.
Janneke Parrish, an Apple program manager, said the iPhone maker
informed her on Thursday that she had been terminated for deleting
material on company equipment while she was under investigation over the
leaking of a company town hall to media. She told Reuters she denies
leaking.
Parrish said she deleted apps that contained details of her finances and
other personal information before handing her devices in to Apple as
part of the probe.
Parrish said she believes she was fired for her activism in the
workplace.
"To me, this seems clearly retaliatory for the fact that I was speaking
out about abuses that have happened at my employer, pay equity and,
generally, about our workplace conditions," she said.
Apple said Friday it does not discuss specific employee matters.
Apple has recently experienced other examples of employee unrest. Last
month, two Apple employees told Reuters they had filed charges against
the company with the National Labor Relations Board. The workers accused
Apple of retaliation and halting discussion of pay among employees,
among other allegations.
Apple has said that it is "deeply committed to
creating and maintaining a positive and inclusive workplace" and that it
takes "all concerns" from employees seriously.
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The Apple Inc logo is shown outside the company's 2016 Worldwide
Developers Conference in San Francisco, California, U.S. June 13,
2016. REUTERS/Stephen Lam/File Photo
U.S. law protects the right of employees to openly discuss certain
topics, including working conditions, discrimination and equal pay.
Over the summer, current and former Apple employees began detailing
on social media what they said were experiences of harassment and
discrimination. Parrish and some colleagues began publishing the
stories on social media and a publishing platform in a weekly digest
titled '#AppleToo.'
Parrish said she was careful to respect company rules and never
shared information that she believed to be confidential. She said
she continued to publish the '#AppleToo' digest after coming under
investigation at the end of September.
"If anything, it's made the importance of that work clearer than
ever, when Apple's response to criticism is to start internal
investigations into those that it wants to see gone," she said.
"It's easier for them to terminate people than it is for them to
actually listen."
(Reporting by Julia Love; editing by Peter Henderson and Rosalba
O'Brien)
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