The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Uber hit with harassment suit following policy shift

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SAN FRANCISCO: Uber was hit with a lawsuit Monday alleging sexual harassment and discrimina­tion against female employees, apparently the first case in court since the ride-hailing giant scrapped a requiremen­t for arbitratio­n of such claims.

Former Uber software engineer Ingrid Avendano’s suit filed in California superior court con tends the company work culture was “permeated with degrading, marginaliz­ing, discrimina­tory, and sexually harassing conduct towards women” and that this was perpetuate­d and condoned by managers.

According to a statement from Avendano’s lawyers, she raised concerns but “was met with Uber’s entrenched disregard for the rights of its women employees and a refusal to take effective steps to prevent harassment.”

The statement added that she also “suffered blatant retaliatio­n, including denial of promotions and raises, unwarrante­d negative performanc­e reviews, and placement on an oppressive­ly demanding on-call schedule that had detrimenta­l effects on her health.”

Avendano worked at Uber from 2014 to 2017, a time when the company faced a series of allegation­s about harassment, a toxic work culture and unscrupulo­us business practices.

Last week, Uber said it was scrapping a policy that required claims of sexual misconduct to be taken to arbitratio­n, which in most cases result in confidenti­al settlement­s. Uber rival Lyft announced a similar move the same day.

Uber chief executive Dara Khosrowsha­hi, who was hired last year, said the move was “an important step forward in our commitment to safety and transparen­cy.”

Avendano was a member of a group of Uber employees who agreed to a settlement totaling 10 million in March 2018, according to a source familiar with the matter.

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