Lodi News-Sentinel

Lawsuit over Google’s pay to women dismissed

- By Ethan Baron

A lawsuit by three female former Google employees claiming that the company paid women less than men has been dismissed, but may reappear in a different form.

The women — Kelly Ellis, Holly Pease and Kelli Wisuri — sued in September, alleging that Google had a "sexist culture" and systematic­ally discrimina­ted against women by segregatin­g them into lowerpayin­g jobs and career tracks, while men with equivalent qualificat­ions leaped ahead.

Google, which is also facing a federal investigat­ion of its pay to women, has denied paying women less than men, and says its own annual analysis shows no gap in pay between the genders.

A California state court judge threw out the lawsuit because in seeking class-action status, it cast too wide a net, Reuters reported.

The plaintiffs had sought to include in the suit all women employed by Google in the previous four years.

Wiss gave the three women 30 days to file a new complaint "on behalf of only those women who faced pay discrimina­tion," Reuters reported

James Finberg, lawyer for the women, said they would file a new complaint by early January that "makes clear that Google violates the California Equal Pay Act ... by paying women less than men for substantia­lly equal work in nearly every job classifica­tion," according to Reuters.

For plaintiff Ellis, a former senior software engineer, the lawsuit was not the first time she's gone after Google on gender issues. In 2015, she said in a Twitter post that she had been subjected to sexual harassment at the company. She complained, but instead of investigat­ing her claim, Google reprimande­d her, Ellis alleged. Google did not respond to a request for comment on that claim by Ellis.

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