The Borneo Post

Google employees - and investors - speak out about its workplace

- By Rachel Siegel

GOOGLE employees and Alphabet investors want Alphabet’s sustainabi­lity and diversity metrics to be tied to how much company executives make.

That’s what they presented in a proposal at Alphabet’s shareholde­r meeting on Wednesday, along with broader calls to improve workplace culture and protect worker safety. The proposal was voted down, but only after employees voiced concerns over what they described at as inadequate executive leadership that leaves workers “feeling unsafe and unable to do our work.”

“The chilling effect of harassment and doxxing has impaired productivi­ty and company culture,” said Irene Knapp, a Google engineer who spoke on the proposal at the shareholde­r meeting. “Responses from HR have been inadequate, leaving minority communitie­s unprotecte­d.”

In a statement opposing the proposal, Alphabet’s board of directors said the requests were not in the best interests of the company and its stockholde­rs.

The statement also said that since 2004, Alphabet’s chief executive Larry Page “has received a base salary of US$ 1 per year and declined any additional compensati­on,” meaning the proposal would do little to “enhance Alphabet’s existing commitment to corporate sustainabi­lity.”

“Alphabet has long supported corporate sustainabi­lity, including environmen­tal, social and diversity considerat­ions,” the statement said. “We are committed to incorporat­ing these values in our business and have promoted them in our practices.”

Still, investors and Google employees behind the proposal said it would also apply to a group of senior executives beyond Page.

Alphabet executives did not directly respond to the proposal when it was presented at the meeting. But later, Eileen Naughton, head of Google’s HR operations, answered a separate question about diversity by saying the company has a “stated objective” to improve the representa­tion of minorities and women and to develop and retain talent among underrepre­sented groups.

The proposal sought to link diversity and inclusion metrics to executive pay and called attention to the lack of gender and racial diversity within company ranks. The proposal said that over the past four years, Alphabet’s Google division had improved representa­tion of women in its workforce by only one percentage point - from 30 per cent to 31 per cent. In the same period, positions for all underrepre­sented people of colour at Google increased from nine to 10 per cent.

“It’s this lack of diversity at the office and in leadership that perpetuate­s the myth that only certain kinds of people deserve a spot in the tech world,” said Amr Gaber, a Google software engineer. “This is why we need policies and actions that close the gaps between our values and our employees’ lived experience­s, and upend the racism and misogyny entrenched in the industry.”

The proposal suggested that Alphabet take additional steps to enforce policies against harassment, formalise procedures for human resource investigat­ions and boost transparen­cy around those processes. The proposal was backed by Zevin Asset Management, which describes itself as a socially responsibl­e investment firm.

Last year, an engineer at Google wrote a memo charging that “genetic difference­s” might explain “why we don’t see equal representa­tion of women in tech and leadership.”

The memo went viral, and its author, James Damore, was fired. The memo renewed debates around diversity in the workplace and throughout Silicon Valley. And some workers at Google who discussed the memo internally had their identities and questions leaked online.

Speaking at the meeting, Knapp referenced fears among employees about reaching out to one another in times of crisis. And Gaber said he and his colleagues want Alphabet to “crack down on malicious leaks that have intimidate­d individual­s.”

“Now we are forced to weigh the risks to ourselves before giving each other support,” Knapp said at the meeting. — Washington Post.

 ??  ?? A pedestrian walks past signage at Google headquarte­rs in Mountain View. - Bloomberg photo by David Paul Morris
A pedestrian walks past signage at Google headquarte­rs in Mountain View. - Bloomberg photo by David Paul Morris

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