Houston Chronicle

Diversity programs now under fire

Some companies scale back efforts amid lawsuits and complaints by conservati­ves

- By Jeff Green and Kelsey Butler BLOOMBERG

The same conservati­ve activists who helped gut race-related college admissions at the U.S. Supreme Court have now set their sights on corporate diversity programs, barraging airlines, tech giants and law firms with lawsuits and complaints. And they’re already having an effect.

The court’s landmark June ruling against affirmativ­e action on campus didn’t cover businesses, many of which launched diversity, equity and inclusion programs after George Floyd’s 2020 murder by a White Minneapoli­s police officer. But as the conservati­ve movement targets DEI, some companies have scaled back their efforts.

Law firms Morrison & Foerster LLP and Perkins Coie LLP have eliminated their diversity requiremen­ts for fellowship programs, a common tool for recruiting from underrepre­sented groups. The changes were disclosed after both firms were sued by legal activist Edward Blum, a longtime affirmativ­e action foe who brought the successful Supreme Court suit. Pharmaceut­ical giant Pfizer Inc. removed race-related requiremen­ts from a similar fellowship program after a suit challengin­g it had been dismissed.

America First Legal — founded by Stephen Miller, a former senior adviser to President Donald Trump — has lodged complaints with the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission against more than 20 companies, including American Airlines Group Inc., Macy’s Inc., McDonald’s Corp. and Salesforce Inc., arguing that their efforts to hire and promote more women and people of color amount to discrimina­tion. It’s part of a broader conservati­ve-led movement against what some Republican politician­s have dubbed “woke capitalism” — corporate policies focused on topics such as diversity, climate change and worker rights.

“Organizati­ons have to ask themselves, ‘What is my risk calculus?’” said Samia Kirmani, a co-leader of the corporate diver

sity practice for employer law firm Jackson Lewis PC. “There is a risk of challenge, risk of liability, the risk of reputation­al harm.”

The biggest companies that were already committed to diversity initiative­s prior to 2020 are more likely to be sticking with their programs, according to interviews with employment lawyers, consultant­s and diversity executives. Employers that are newer to DEI or haven’t really started are more likely to pull back, they said.

“You should do it because it’s good for your businesses,” said Karen Horne, a former DEI executive at Warner Bros. Discovery Inc. “If you’re doing it just because you want to feel good and check a box, then you’re going to have a reason to not do it when people get ‘fatigued’ from it.”

More than 80% of executives with a role in corporate responsibi­lity have changed the language they use to talk about their work or cut down on external communicat­ions about their efforts, according to a survey released last month by the Associatio­n of Corporate Citizenshi­p Profession­als. At the same time, 10% said there has been a decrease in their companies’ programs.

Companies have spent less time talking about diversity topics such as race or LGBTQ rights on corporate calls in the wake of the backlash, a Bloomberg analysis has shown. Still, the number of S&P 100 companies that have publicly stated a diversity goal — about half — has remained roughly the same

as in October 2020, shortly after renewed Black Lives Matter protests, according to reports from research firm DiversIQ and Bloomberg News.

Morrison & Foerster says it remains committed to diversity and inclusion. The firm said it had begun the process of revising its fellowship program before being sued by Blum’s American Alliance for Equal Rights. The group has since dropped its suit, saying it’s satisfied the firm’s new fellowship will include all law students regardless of race or ethnicity. Perkins Coie, which dropped the diversity requiremen­t from its fellowship after being sued, said it too has a longstandi­ng commitment to building an inclusive workplace.

Blum said in an emailed statement that he has urged other law firms with “similar racially discrimina­tory programs” to “open their programs to all law students before they are sued in federal court.” His group has sent letters to at least three other firms and sued one of them, Winston & Strawn LLP, over diversity

fellowship­s. Winston & Strawn declined to comment.

“We are in the right legally and morally, and this entire cottage industry of discrimina­tion under the guise of ‘equity’ has created substantia­l liability for countless major corporatio­ns across the United States,” Gene Hamilton, general counsel for America First Legal, said in an emailed statement. “No American should suffer from race or sex based discrimina­tion.”

Some of the companies sued are not backing down. Houston-based Hello Alice, which helps small businesses get equitable access to capital, has been named in a lawsuit by America First Legal over a program with Progressiv­e Insurance Co. that provides grants to Blackowned commercial vehicle companies. Hello Alice cofounder Elizabeth Gore says her company is not breaking the law and doesn’t intend to change its program.

For real estate company Hines Interests LP, the possibilit­y of getting sued is still worth it, said Crystal Castille-Cromedy, senior vice president of talent and chief diversity officer. The Houston-based company doesn’t plan to alter its Skyline Scholars program, launched last year to help college freshmen and sophomores from underrepre­sented groups learn more about commercial real estate, she said. Those students are guaranteed a first-round interview for the company’s summer internship program.

“I’ve not been put in a position to feel as though I’m taking a risk, let alone an undue risk,” CastilleCr­omedy said. “We at this organizati­on believe first and foremost in meritocrac­y, but we also know that we have to broaden our reach to understand and to appreciate where talent comes from.”

The risk is that in the current environmen­t, with many companies cutting jobs, some executives will want to rely on people they already know and have worked with in the past, and that makes it less likely those people will be diverse, said Horne, the former Warner Bros. executive.

She lost her job at the entertainm­ent studio in June as part of a reorganiza­tion, but she doesn’t consider her layoff a sign that Warner no longer values DEI. Still, she warns that without a firm commitment, companies risk growing “fatigued” with DEI and turning away.

“I actually believe it’s a privilege to be able to say that there’s fatigue, because as a Black woman, I don’t get the opportunit­y to have fatigue,” she said. “You have to point back to the business benefit of this.”

 ?? Contributo­r file photo ?? Houston-based Hello Alice, co-founded by Elizabeth Gore, shown in 2017, says it doesn’t intend to change its program that provides grants to Black-owned commercial vehicle companies.
Contributo­r file photo Houston-based Hello Alice, co-founded by Elizabeth Gore, shown in 2017, says it doesn’t intend to change its program that provides grants to Black-owned commercial vehicle companies.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States