San Francisco Chronicle

Black Facebook worker claims discrimina­tion

- By Barbara Ortutay

A Black Facebook employee, joined by two others who were denied jobs at the social network, has filed a complaint against the company, saying it discrimina­tes against Black workers and applicants in hiring, evaluation­s, promotions and pay.

The charge was filed with the Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission by Oscar Veneszee Jr., who has worked as an operations program manager at Facebook since 2017 and claims he has not been fairly evaluated or promoted despite his “excellent performanc­e” at the company. Two others joined Veneszee’s complaint, saying they were unlawfully denied jobs at the company despite being qualified.

Facebook said in a statement it takes discrimina­tion allegation­s seriously and investigat­es every case.

“We believe it is essential to provide all employees with a respectful and safe working environmen­t,“said spokeswoma­n Pamela Austin.

Black workers account for 3.8% of all U.S. Facebook employees and 1.5% of all U.S. technical workers at the company. Those numbers have barely budged over the past several years, a common pattern across large Silicon Valley firms.

This isn’t the first criticism a Black employee has leveled at Facebook. Mark Luckie, who left the Menlo Park company in 2018, sent a memo to his coworkers on his last day — also posted on Facebook — that chronicled what he called Facebook’s “black people problem.“

“Facebook’s disenfranc­hisement of black people on the platform mirrors the marginaliz­ation of its black employees,“Luckie wrote. “In my time at the company, I’ve heard far too many stories from black employees of a colleague or manager calling them ‘hostile’ or ‘aggressive’ for simply sharing their thoughts in a manner not dissimilar from their nonBlack team members.“

According to Veneszee’s complaint, filed on Thursday, “people of color and Black workers in particular remain underrepre­sented at all levels of Facebook and especially at the management and leadership levels. They do not feel respected or heard. And they do not believe that Black workers have an equal opportunit­y to advance their careers at Facebook.“

While there may be Black Lives Matter posters on Facebook’s walls, the complaint says, “Black workers don’t see that phrase reflecting how they are treated in Facebook’s own workplace.”

Barbara Ortutay is an Associated Press writer.

While there may be Black Lives Matter posters on Facebook’s walls, the complaint says, “Black workers don’t see that phrase reflecting how they are treated in Facebook’s own workplace.”

 ?? Richard Drew / Associated Press 2018 ?? The charge was filed with the Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission by Oscar Veneszee Jr., who has worked as an operations program manager at Facebook since 2017.
Richard Drew / Associated Press 2018 The charge was filed with the Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission by Oscar Veneszee Jr., who has worked as an operations program manager at Facebook since 2017.

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