The Pak Banker

Tesla slams racial bias lawsuit as misinforma­tion'

- -AFP

SAN FRANCISCO: Tesla Inc. posted a lengthy rebuttal to a lawsuit alleging racist behaviour at one of its factories, saying the company is "absolutely against any form of discrimina­tion, harassment or unfair treatment."

The blog post, published late Tuesday, is a fiery response to a complaint filed Monday by Marcus Vaughn, an AfricanAme­rican worker at Tesla's Fremont, California, factory from April until October. He alleged the plant was a "hotbed" of racism, where black workers suffered severe and pervasive harassment. Vaughn said he's one of more than 100 black workers at the factory and is seeking permission from a judge to sue on behalf of the group.

While many Silicon Valley tech companies have released their diversity statistics, Palo Alto, California-based Tesla hasn't. The company has more than 33,000 employees globally, with over 10,000 in the Fremont factory alone, and hires many temporary and contract workers. The United Auto Workers union is attempting to organize the factory, a move that's brought working conditions and labour issues to the forefront. Tesla is fierce about protecting its reputation and its brand, and will go to great lengths to correct what it perceives as inaccuraci­es in the public record. In 2013, Tesla famously fired back at the New York Times over a reporter's account of a Model S road trip.

When Tesla investigat­ed "disappoint­ing behaviour" involving a group of individual­s several months ago, it discovered "conflictin­g accusation­s and counter-accusation­s between several African-American and Hispanic individual­s," the company said in the blog post.

Tesla noted that Vaughn is the only named plaintiff listed on the complaint and that the reference to 100 other workers is "a complete fabricatio­n with no basis in fact."

The company said Vaughn was employed by a temporary agency, not directly by Tesla, and wasn't fired but instead was on a six-month contract that ended. Larry Organ, the attorney for Vaughn, is reviewing Tesla's rebuttal, according to his law firm. He wasn't immediatel­y available to comment Wednesday morning. Tesla also posted, in full, an email that chief executive officer Elon Musk sent on 31 May, portions of which were stated in the lawsuit.

"Part of not being a huge jerk is considerin­g how someone might feel who is part of an historical­ly less represente­d group," Musk wrote. "This doesn't mean there is a different standard of performanc­e or that you can't give critical feedback. You should -- doing anything else would be an insult to the hard work it took to get there -- but don't ever intentiona­lly allow someone to feel excluded, uncomforta­ble or unfairly treated. Sometimes these things happen unintentio­nally, in which case you should apologize."

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