The Columbus Dispatch

Google reforms sexual misconduct policy

- By Michale Liedtke

SAN FRANCISCO — Google is promising to be more forceful and open about its handling of sexual misconduct cases, a week after high-paid engineers and others walked out in protest over its male-dominated culture.

CEO Sundar Pichai spelled out the concession­s in an email sent Thursday to Google employees. The note of contrition came a week after the tech giant’s workers left their cubicles in dozens of offices around the world to protest management’s treatment of top executives and other male workers accused of sexual harassment and other misconduct involving men. The protest’s organizers estimated that about 20,000 workers participat­ed in the walkout.

“Google’s leaders and I have heard your feedback and have been moved by the stories you’ve shared,” Pichai wrote in his email. “We recognize that we have not always gotten everything right in the past and we are sincerely sorry for that. It’s clear we need to make some changes.” Pichai’s email was obtained by The Associated Press.

Google bowed to one of the protesters’ main demands by dropping mandatory arbitratio­n of all sexual misconduct cases. That will now be optional under the new policies. It mirrors a change made by ride-hailing service Uber after the complaints of its women employees prompted an internal investigat­ion concluding its rank had been poisoned by rampant sexual harassment.

Google will also provide more details about sexual misconduct cases in internal reports available to all employees. The breakdowns A walkout by workers protesting over Google’s male-dominated culture on Nov. 1 prompted the company to reform its handling of sexual misconduct cases.

will include the number of cases that were substantia­ted within various company department­s and list the types of punishment imposed, including firings, pay cuts and mandated counseling.

The company is also stepping up its training aimed at preventing misconduct, requiring all employees to go through the process annually instead of every other year. Those who fall behind in their training, including top executives, will be dinged in their annual performanc­e reviews, leaving a blemish that could lower their pay and make it more difficult to get promoted.

Google got caught in the crosshairs two weeks ago after The New York Times detailed allegation­s of sexual misconduct about the creator of Google’s Android software, Andy Rubin. The newspaper said Rubin received a $90 million severance package in 2014 after Google concluded the accusation­s were credible. Rubin has denied the allegation­s.

Like its Silicon Valley peers, Google has already openly acknowledg­ed that its workforce is too heavily concentrat­ed with white and Asian men, especially in the highest paying executive and computer programmin­g jobs. Women account for 31 percent of Google’s employees worldwide, and it’s lower for leadership roles.

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