Los Angeles Times

3 black workers at Tesla f ile suit

Contract employees allege they endured racial abuse and slurs.

- By Samantha Masunaga samantha.masunaga @latimes.com Twitter: @smasunaga

The contract workers allege they endured racial harassment and discrimina­tion at the automaker’s plant in Fremont, Calif.

Three former Tesla Inc. contract workers faced racial harassment and discrimina­tion while working at the electric carmaker’s factory in Fremont, Calif., according to a lawsuit filed this week.

Plaintiffs Demetric Diaz, his father, Owen Diaz, and Lamar Patterson alleged that they were the targets of “racially motivated abuse, including the frequent use of racial slurs” when they worked at Tesla’s factory.

All three men are black and said in the lawsuit that supervisor­s and co-workers used racial epithets or said things such as, “Go back to Africa. We don’t want you here.” The lawsuit also alleges that Tesla employees and supervisor­s left racist caricature­s and images around the factory for black workers to see.

The three plaintiffs said in the lawsuit that although they complained to Tesla supervisor­s and to their respective staffing agencies, no one took action. Di-az served as a production associate at the Fremont factory and helped work on the battery manufactur­ing system for the Model S electric sedan, according to the lawsuit. Diaz and Patterson worked as elevator operators.

A Tesla spokespers­on said in a statement that the Palo Alto, Calif., company takes “any and every form of discrimina­tion or harassment extremely seriously” and that the company became aware of the allegation­s when contacted by media outlets.

“In situations where Tesla is at fault, we will never seek to avoid responsibi­lity,” the spokespers­on said. “But in this instance, from what we know so far, this does not seem to be such a case.”

The lawsuit, filed Monday in Alameda County Superior Court, names Tesla as a defendant, along with West Valley Staffing Group, Chartwell Staffing Services Inc. and Citistaff Solutions Inc. The plaintiffs got their contract positions at Tesla through the staffing agencies.

Di-az brought up the alleged abuse to his supervisor in 2015 and, within days, was issued a written warning for using his phone on the production line, the lawsuit says. Within a week, Di-az was terminated for “breaking the rules,” though other employees with similar warnings were not fired, according to the lawsuit.

Di-az’s father, Diaz, sent an email to a supervisor about a confrontat­ion with another supervisor, whom Diaz had previously approached about his role in the alleged harassment, the lawsuit says. It says Diaz was told that there would be a follow-up, but was never contacted again about the incident.

The suit says Diaz and Patterson quit their jobs at Tesla in 2016 because they were no longer able to bear the “abusive and racially harassing treatment.”

Citistaff, which had employed Diaz, and Chartwell, which had employed Patterson, each declined to comment on the allegation­s Wednesday, saying they had not been served with a copy of the lawsuit yet. West Valley did not respond immediatel­y to a request for comment.

Tesla said that the plaintiffs worked at the company for a short time. The only “somewhat relevant” evidence was an email from Diaz to his supervisor in which Diaz said a co-worker was making aggressive comments but made “no mention of the use of any racist language,” Tesla said.

The company said it recently launched an online anti-discrimina­tion and harassment training program and set up an employee relations team to investigat­e workplace concerns.

“We will never be able to stop every single person in the factory from engaging in inappropri­ate conduct, but we will continue to do everything that we can to encourage the right behavior and to take action whenever something bad happens,” Tesla said.

 ?? David Butow For The Times ?? TESLA said it was unaware of the contract workers’ discrimina­tion allegation­s until it was contacted by the media. Above, the company’s Fremont, Calif., factory.
David Butow For The Times TESLA said it was unaware of the contract workers’ discrimina­tion allegation­s until it was contacted by the media. Above, the company’s Fremont, Calif., factory.

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