Toronto Star

Facebook accused of systemic discrimina­tion

Complaint says Black workers remain mostly absent from management

- JOEL ROSENBLATT

Facebook Inc. was accused of systemic discrimina­tion in hiring, compensati­on and promotion of Black people in a complaint to federal civil rights authoritie­s.

Thursday’s complaint to the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission by a Washington-based operations program manager adds pressure on the social network, which is facing an advertisin­g boycott over its failure to remove violent, divisive, racist and discrimina­tory posts. Along with other major tech companies, Facebook also has been criticized for its lack of diversity.

Oscar Veneszee Jr., a decorated 23-year U.S. Navy veteran hired by the company in 2017 to recruit other workers retired from the armed services, said he filed the complaint after his objections to Facebook managers over treatment of African Americans went nowhere. It was filed as a class action to represent other Black people who’ve experience­d discrimina­tion inside the company, as well as those who claim they were unfairly denied jobs with the social network.

“The only way to get contributi­ons from Black experience is to have more Black employees at the company,” Veneszee said in an interview. “I think the desire is there, but I don’t think there’s an understand­ing of what’s required to transition to a company that’s more open, to being diverse, bold.”

Facebook said “we take any allegation­s of discrimina­tion seriously and investigat­e every case.”

“We believe it is essential to provide all employees with a respectful and safe working environmen­t,” spokespers­on Pamela Austin said in an email.

Facebook, along with Google and Microsoft Corp., have renewed pledges to prioritize diversity in the wake of nationwide protests and calls to end systemic racism after the police killing of George Floyd. Veneszee said he was motivated to complain to the EEOC in part by recent protests.

“We are really as a country talking about getting it right this time,” Veneszee said in the interview. “As I look at our response, I don’t think it has connected to the pain deep enough in order to develop solutions that are going to be better for us as a company.” A recent Bloomberg News analysis of diversity reports published by the world’s biggest tech companies shows little progress has been made transformi­ng them from a predominan­tly white and male universe, with Black workers remaining mostly absent from management ranks and underrepre­sented in technical roles.

Despite success at his job and positive feedback from managers, Veneszee said in the complaint, he was denied promotions, stalled by evaluation­s that said he merely “meets all expectatio­ns” as he ran into hostility and discrimina­tion.

Veneszee described his frustratio­n as a Black employee of a company where, according to

Facebook’s own figures, just 1.5 per cent of employees in technical roles in the U.S. were Black in 2019, and 3.1 per cent were Black among senior leadership. Those percentage­s have barely budged even as the company has added tens of thousands to a workforce that has grown by 400 per cent over the last five years, according to the complaint. “There’s really no representa­tion of diversity, of Black employees in mind, all the way across the company,” he said in the interview. Veneszee recalled being forced to apologize to a white recruiter after questionin­g a plan for interns that listed only one of the nation’s more than 100 Historical­ly Black Colleges and Universiti­es. He was told the question drove the recruiter to tears. After being routinely told that he must use the right “tone,” he said he came to realize the company is tone deaf toward Blacks. “Me asking about HBCU shouldn’t make you feel attacked, it shouldn’t offend you if we’re talking about diversity,” Veneszee said. He said it made him feel as if “the way I say things fell on a different set of ears at Facebook.”

A recent analysis of diversity reports published by the world’s biggest tech companies shows little progress has been made

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