The Arizona Republic

GOOGLE MANIFESTO FUELS SEXISM DEBATE

Men, women on both sides are taking a stand

- Laura Petrecca @LauraPetre­cca Contributi­ng: Marco della Cava, Alia E. Dastagir, Jessica Guynn, Jon Swartz

The hot-button issue of gender bias in the workplace has just gone thermonucl­ear.

Over the weekend, an incendiary manifesto from Google software engineer James Damore — citing biology as one reason why women weren’t well-represente­d in technology jobs or leadership positions — inflamed an already-contentiou­s debate.

Then on Monday, Damore was fired. A frenzied social media firestorm ensued, with conservati­ve commentato­rs, women’s rights activists, rankand-file workers and others bombarding social media with impassione­d posts.

Some hailed Damore as a hero for his courage to pen a memo that touted the benefits of ideologica­l diversity over gender diversity. Others said he was a bigot who fostered a hostile work environmen­t.

The manifesto maelstrom puts a glaring spotlight on the challenges companies face in the drive for greater gender diversity and inclusion. There are myriad views on what it will take to achieve workplace equality, as well as lingering doubt parity will ever come.

“There’s deep sociologic­al change that needs to happen that can only happen over time,” says Jessica Rovello, CEO of Arkadium, a developer of AI tools for publishers, who adds that she has had frequent encounters with both overt and unconsciou­s bias in her career. “It will take years, if not decades, to have gender parity in the workplace. But with small steps, we move forward.”

The issue became so serious Google CEO Sundar Pichai ended his vacation to discuss the matter with staffers, eventually making the decision to fire Damore. Pichai was expected to address the issue with employees on Thursday, but Google abruptly canceled that meeting amid employee safety concerns.

The Google imbroglio is just one in a string of high-profile gender bias and harassment incidents at major companies and comes as some firms ramp up their inclusion initiative­s and work to eradicate an exclusiona­ry, male-centric atmosphere. The number of companies that have dedicated staff and funding to diversity programs grew from 13% in 2011 to 17% in 2014, according to survey data from the Society of Human Resource Management. At companies such as Twitter and Microsoft, executives tasked with improving diversity and inclusion programs aim to create environmen­ts where women and minorities get a better chance of both landing jobs and thriving in new positions.

But women still hold fewer leadership positions than men, are paid less, aren’t fully represente­d in expanding industries such as tech and still face high rates of harassment. Consider:

Nearly 70% of Google’s overall staffers are men, as is 75% of its leadership, according to company statistics from January 2017. Of the nation’s overall computing workforce, women make up just a quarter of workers, according to the National Center for Women & Informatio­n Technology.

In 2016, the median weekly full-time earnings for all female workers was $749 and equivalent for all male workers was $915, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics and the Census Bureau’s Current Population Survey.

Among Fortune 500 companies, 32 CEOs are women, according to Fortune magazine’s June tally, a record number that still represents only 6% of those corporate leaders.

uAlmost 60% of women have reported gender harassment, which includes sexist, crude or offensive behavior at work, according to a June 2016 U.S. Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission report.

This increased focus on corporate diversity has put business leaders in the cross hairs. Uber CEO Travis Kalanick stepped down in June after facing claims he fostered a toxic and sexist work culture. Binary Capital partner Justin Caldbeck resigned from his VC firm after being accused of harassing women who were trying to raise money from him. Last year, Fox News CEO Roger Ailes was ousted in a sexual harassment scandal.

And there are questions about the effectiven­ess of such programs, and in some instances, concern some initiative­s — and penalties — have gone too far. Both women and men recently stood by some of their embattled peers, such as Caldbeck, painting their punishment­s as too swift and harsh and saying that some men have served as scapegoats for years of bottled up frustratio­n over unchecked sexism in tech. There’s a “witch hunt mentality,” says Heidi Dangelmaie­r, who runs an all-female innovation firm, GirlApprov­ed, in New York.

In his memo, Damore laid out the difference­s between men and women, saying that on average, woman have higher anxiety and lower stress tolerance and that men have a higher drive for status. While those thoughts outraged many people, others have urged that Damore’s points be assessed with balance.

“At most, Damore argues that because of innate cognitive and personalit­y difference­s, a 50/50 gender balance in the tech sector may be unrealisti­c,” USA TODAY Opinion contributo­r Cathy Young wrote.

Men and women on both sides of the divide are making stands and airing grievances. This alone is a positive sign that perhaps change is coming, Jahan Sagafi of Outten & Golden says. “Women are more confident now about coming forward and putting it out there,” he says. “With each additional woman who points out discrimina­tion, there’s a chance to spur real change.”

“It will take years, if not decades, to have gender parity in the workplace. But with small steps, we move forward.” Jessica Rovello, CEO of Arkadium, a developer of AI tools for publishers

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 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? The Google imbroglio is just one in a string of high-profile gender bias and harassment incidents at major companies.
AP FILE PHOTO The Google imbroglio is just one in a string of high-profile gender bias and harassment incidents at major companies.
 ?? ARKADIUM ?? Arkadium CEO Jessica Rovello
ARKADIUM Arkadium CEO Jessica Rovello

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