Los Angeles Times

Microsoft opens bias inquiry sought by investors

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Microsoft said Thursday it is opening an inquiry into how it responds to workplace sexual harassment and gender discrimina­tion, including its handling of allegation­s about co-founder Bill Gates.

The review is a response to pressure from Microsoft investors. Nearly 78% of shareholde­rs at the company’s Nov. 30 annual meeting voted to demand more accountabi­lity in addressing workplace sexual harassment complaints.

“We’re committed not just to reviewing the report but learning from the assessment so we can continue to improve the experience­s of our employees,” Chief Executive Satya Nadella said in a statement.

The Wall Street Journal reported last year that Microsoft’s board hired a law firm in 2019 to look into Gates after a Microsoft engineer alleged that she had had a sexual relationsh­ip with Gates over several years. Gates resigned from the board in 2020.

Activist investor proposals to change corporate policy rarely succeed. Microsoft had urged shareholde­rs to reject the proposal, which called on the company to investigat­e its harassment policies and release a public report about them.

But the investment firm behind the proposal,Arjuna Capital, said it was pleased with how the company has responded since the vote.

“I’m actually quite impressed with how Microsoft has followed up,” said Natasha Lamb, co-founder of the socially minded investment firm.

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