Chicago Sun-Times

GOOGLE FEUD:

How to have an opinion and still keep your job

- Charisse Jones and Elizabeth Weise @ charissejo­nes, @eweise USA TODAY

The firing of a Google engineer who sent a controvers­ial anti- diversity memo begs the question: What exactly can you say at work?

The answer? Only what your individual employer allows.

“When you go to work for a private employer, you forgo your rights to express yourself,” says Roy Gutterman, a lawyer and communicat­ion law professor at Syracuse University in New York. “It’s perhaps ironic, but within a private workplace your rights to express yourself are pretty limited.”

James Damore was fired in the wake of writing an essay that asserted that it wasn’t sexism keeping women from making up half of the company’s tech and leadership positions, but women’s preference­s and biological difference­s from men.

First reported by Bloomberg, a person familiar with the matter confirmed to USA TODAY that Damore was fired.

On Tuesday, Damore appears to have filed an official complaint against Google with the National Labor Relations Board alleging “coercive statements,” though the substance of the charge is not publicly available.

Conservati­ve groups have condemned what they say is Google’s trampling of Damore’s right to free speech. But within the workplace, only federal and state government workers have protection­s under the First Amendment, and then only to a limited extent, says Elizabeth Owens Bille, general counsel for the Society for Human Resource Management.

And while the National Labor Relations Act generally protects privately employed workers from being punished for political expression related to the workplace — like forming a union — or from being singled out for a particular political point of view, employers can clamp down on pretty much any other form of speech they deem unacceptab­le.

“In most states, employers can maintain civility policies,” says Catherine Fisk, a labor and employment law professor at the University of California­Berkeley, “so certainly the employer can enforce a policy prohibitin­g offensive speech, and offensive is in the judgment of the employers.’’

In a company- wide memo, Google CEO Sundar Pichai said that Google is strongly in favor of employees being able to express themselves, “and much of what was in that memo is fair to debate, regardless of whether a vast majority of Googlers disagree with it,” Pichai wrote.

But Google’s Code of Conduct states that the company “strictly” prohibits unlawful discrimina­tion or harassment on the basis of race, color and sex among other characteri­stics.

And Pichai said that parts of the engineer’s manifesto violate the code by advancing harmful gender stereotype­s. Whether or not an employee has recently read the company’s policy on conduct, decisions on what to say in the office sometimes boil down to common sense.

“Certainly circulatin­g a memo suggesting that women are innately as a group less able to do certain kinds of jobs than men, most people would recognize that while a perfectly acceptable view to express privately or outside the workplace, it’s not wise to express it in the workplace,” Fisk says.

California is an at- will work state, meaning that employers can terminate a worker for any reason, at any time, unless there is a contract or public policy that allows for an exception.

Damore, according to his LinkedIn page, had been a software engineer at Google for just shy of four years.

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