Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Judge orders Google to hand over anti-union strategy documents in retaliatio­n hearing

- Tribune News Service Los Angeles Times

Google will have to turn over documents outlining its anti-union strategy in response to a National Labor Relations Board complaint against the online search giant, according to an order issued Friday.

The board first filed its complaint against Google in December 2020, accusing the company of spying on employees, blocking employees from speaking with each other about work conditions and firing several employees in retaliatio­n for attempting to unionize, all of which are illegal under federal labor law. In June of this year, the board expanded its complaint to include three more former workers who allege that the company fired them in retaliatio­n for protesting its work with U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

At stake is a weighty question for American workers in the tech sector and beyond: Do workers have the right to protest at work?

The precedent is clear for some areas, explicitly protecting workers from retaliatio­n for workplace organizing over traditiona­l labor issues such as wages, hours and working conditions. But when the NLRB added the workers who claim they were fired for organizing against Google’s work with the border agency to the complaint, the case’s scope grew to include the possibilit­y that protesting the broader business decisions of an employer could be protected under labor law.

Google has said in the past that it fired the workers in the complaint not for their workplace activism, but for violating its data security policies, an allegation that the workers have denied. The company did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on the order.

The new ruling revolves around Google’s work with IRI Consultant­s, a labor relations firm that Google retained in 2019 to create a campaign of “antiunion messaging and message amplificat­ion strategies and training” tailored to Google’s workforce, a project code-named “Project Vivian.”

The former Google employees subpoenaed the company’s records pertaining to the campaign earlier this year. Google responded by saying that it found 1,507 relevant documents, but that it would not hand them over, arguing that they were protected by attorney-client privilege.

In September, the NLRB assigned Judge Paul Bogas to serve as “Special Master” in the case, and review the documents one by one to determine whether Google’s argument held up.

Bogas’ interim report, filed Friday, found that only nine of the 80 documents he had reviewed so far contained any informatio­n covered by attorney-client privilege, and for many documents only small sections could be redacted under that claim. He also wrote that Google “felt it necessary to attempt to conjure a privilege by detouring IRI material through outside legal counsel” — in other words, Google asked IRI to route its communicat­ions through a law firm in an attempt to keep it shielded under attorney-client privilege.

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