Google is accused in lawsuit of systemic bias against Black employees
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[March 19, 2022] By
Jonathan Stempel
(Reuters) - A lawsuit filed on Friday
accuses Google of systemic racial bias against Black employees, saying
the search engine company steers them to lower-level jobs, pays them
less and denies them opportunities to advance because of their race.
According to a complaint seeking class-action status, Google maintains a
"racially biased corporate culture" that favors white men, where Black
people comprise only 4.4% of employees and about 3% of leadership and
its technology workforce.
The plaintiff, April Curley, also said the Alphabet Inc unit subjected
Blacks to a hostile work environment, including by often requiring they
show identification or be questioned by security at its Mountain View,
California campus.
Google did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The complaint was filed in the federal court in San Jose, California.
It came after that state's civil rights regulator, the Department of
Fair Employment and Housing, began investigating Google's treatment of
Black female workers and possible discrimination in their workplace.
Curley said Google hired her in 2014 to design an outreach program to
historically Black colleges.
She said her hiring proved to be a "marketing ploy," as supervisors
began denigrating her work, stereotyping her as an "angry" Black woman
and passing her over for promotions.
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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
Curley said Google fired her in September 2020 after she and her colleagues
began working on a list of desired reforms.
"While Google claims that they were looking to increase diversity, they were
actually undervaluing, underpaying and mistreating their Black employees,"
Curley's lawyer Ben Crump said in a statement.
Crump is a civil rights lawyer who also represented the family of George Floyd
after he was killed in May 2020 by former Minneapolis police officer Derek
Chauvin.
Curley's lawsuit seeks to recoup compensatory and punitive damages and lost
compensation for current and former Black employees at Google, and to restore
them to their appropriate positions and seniority.
The case is Curley v Google LLC, U.S. District Court, Northern District of
California, No. 22-01735.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
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