Unless Activision settles, the Los Angeles-based regional
director of the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) will issue
a complaint, a spokesperson of the NLRB said in a statement.
The NLRB had been looking into allegations brought to the agency
last September by labor union Communications Workers of America
(CWA).
The announcement came on the same day that a small group of
Activision employees at a Wisconsin studio that works on the
popular "Call of Duty" franchise voted to join the CWA.
The union has increasingly focused in recent years on organizing
non-union workers in the tech and video game industries.
The "Call of Duty" videogame maker said on Monday the
allegations were false.
"These allegations are false. Employees may and do talk freely
about these workplace issues without retaliation, and our social
media policy expressly incorporates employees' NLRA rights," a
company spokesperson said.
"Our social media policy explicitly says that it ‘does not
restrict employees from engaging in the communication of
information protected by law, including for example, rights of
employees in the United States protected by the National Labor
Relations Act,'" the spokesperson said.
In recent months, Activision Blizzard workers have banded
together to try to influence the company's future, including
staging a walkout and circulating a petition calling for the
removal of Chief Executive Officer Bobby Kotick. Microsoft Corp
announced plans to acquire Activision in January.
The company's labor issues come as it also faces claims from a
California civil rights agency of widespread discrimination
against female employees. Activision has denied wrongdoing and
said the agency did not thoroughly investigate workers'
discrimination complaints before suing.
Activision had faced similar claims from the U.S. Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission, which it settled in March for
$18 million.
Workers at 'Call of Duty' creator Activision Blizzard vote to
join unionActivision sex bias settlement would derail state's
lawsuit, says Calif. agencyU.S. labor board judge orders union
vote at Activision studioANALYSIS-Microsoft faces challenge
cleaning up Activision Blizzard’s culture
(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Washington and Daniel Wiessner
in New York; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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