USA TODAY International Edition

Airbnb taps Holder to take on discrimina­tion

CEO says company has to ‘ do more to get our house in order’

- Elizabeth Weise @ eweise USA TODAY

Stung by complaints of discrimina­tion and racism among some of its hosts, Airbnb has hired former attorney general Eric Holder to help it craft an anti- discrimina­tion policy.

The home- rental company announced last month it would review all aspects of its platform with an eye to fighting bias and discrimina­tion.

Critics have said that by creating a digital space that allowed individual­s to choose to whom they rent apartments and houses, Airbnb unwittingl­y enabled its hosts to act on their biases.

A Harvard Business School study last year found widespread discrimina­tion by Airbnb hosts. Renters who have said they were repeatedly turned down by hosts — a pattern that tended to reverse if they swapped their profile photo for one of a cityscape, for instance — have protested the racial discrimina­tion under the hashtag # AirbnbWhil­eBlack.

Holder’s hiring is part of Airbnb’s efforts to deal with the problems that have arisen. He said he was looking forward to working with Airbnb to develop and implement what the company calls “a world- class” anti- discrimina­tion policy.

“Airbnb is committed to building a community where everyone can belong, no matter who they are or what they look like. I’m eager to help them craft policies that will be the model for companies who share Airbnb’s commitment to diversity and inclusion,” Holder said in a statement.

Holder was attorney general from 2009 to 2015, during which he championed the civil rights of minorities and gays. He left a year ago and rejoined his former law firm, Covington & Burling.

During his tenure, he oversaw a parallel civil rights inquiry into the shooting of Michael Brown by police officer Darren Wilson in Ferguson, Mo. During the inquiry, his office issued written guidance to police across the country, identifyin­g practices to help police maintain public safety while safeguardi­ng constituti­onal rights.

In a post Wednesday, Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky said Airbnb has “an obligation to be honest about our own shortcomin­gs, and do more to get our house in order.” He said a part of the process has been learning how to fight explicit racism and implicit biases that can lead to discrimina­tion.

The company also engaged anti- bias expert Robert Livingston of Harvard University to help it improve its unconsciou­s bias training. It previously brought on Laura Murphy, the former head of the American Civil Liberties Union’s Washington, D. C., legislativ­e office, to help lead the review of how hosts pick guests.

 ?? 2014 PHOTO BY SAUL LOEB, AFP/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Eric Holder was attorney general from 2009 to 2015.
2014 PHOTO BY SAUL LOEB, AFP/ GETTY IMAGES Eric Holder was attorney general from 2009 to 2015.

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