Business Standard

Women confront Microsoft’s worker-friendly image

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Microsoft counts itself as a leader with policies promoting gender equality and balancing work and life. But whatever progress the tech giant has made with equal-pay and family-friendly initiative­s, it’ s still fighting a lawsuit by women engineers and informatio­n technology specialist­s who claim they were treated for years like second-class-citizens.

The women allege the company paid them less than men, stalled career advancemen­t and froze them out following maternity leave. While Microsoft has denied any discrimina­tion, the women assert that the effects of systemic practices are continuing. A federal judge in Seattle will hear arguments Monday on whether the women can band together as a group of more than 8,630 high-level technical specialist­s to pursue their bias suit. Class-action status is considered crucial to the success of the lawsuit, allowing the women to pool resources and giving them leverage to force a settlement.

Microsoft has made “significan­t progress ’’ in recent years in ensuring a diverse and inclusive workplace, the company said inane mailed statement .“But even as we work on these broader issues, it is clear we don’ t discrimina­te on pay and promotions .’’

Weighing heavily over the class action argument will be the 2011 decision by the US Supreme Court in a gender-bias case against Walmart. The high court said the plaintiffs failed to show their experience­s were similar enough or that the company had a corporate policy that led to gender discrimina­tion at thousands of Walmart and Sam’ s Club stores nationally.

Like nearly all defendants facing class action certificat­ion, Microsoft cites the W al mart decision as areas onto deny it .“Plaintiffs’ claims are simply not the stuff of which class actions are made ,’’ Microsoft lawyers said in court papers, critic is ing what it called the “extraordin­ary breadth ’’ of the proposed class.

 ??  ?? Microsoft faces a class action suit involving 8,630 high-level technical specialist­s
Microsoft faces a class action suit involving 8,630 high-level technical specialist­s

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