Los Angeles Times

Twitter settles with former employee

Deal comes as NLRB supports allegation of retaliatio­n for resisting return-to-office policy.

- By Josh Eidelson Eidelson writes for Bloomberg.

Twitter has settled with a former employee who U.S. labor board prosecutor­s concluded was illegally punished for protesting its return-to-office mandate.

Software engineer Alexis Camacho claimed the company put them on administra­tive leave in retaliatio­n for posting a message urging coworkers to take collective action against the company’s return-to-office policy.

A regional director of the National Labor Relations Board found merit in the allegation, and the NLRB informed Twitter that it would issue a complaint unless the company settled the case, according to agency spokespers­on Kayla Blado. Twitter and Camacho then reached a settlement, the terms of which weren’t disclosed.

Twitter’s attorney didn’t immediatel­y respond to an inquiry about the case, and the company didn’t specifical­ly respond to a request for comment.

Elon Musk, who took control of Twitter in October, told employees in November that they would immediatel­y be expected to spend at least 40 hours per week in the office, ending Twitter’s permanent work-from-anywhere option. He also quickly dismissed about half of the company’s workforce and most of its executive suite.

Camacho’s attorney,

Shannon Liss-Riordan, said in a text message that she was “very pleased” to have reached “a fair resolution” in the case. “We look forward to vindicatin­g the rights of our remaining clients through litigation, arbitratio­n, and wherever else we can,” LissRiorda­n, who represents more than 1,900 former Twitter employees who’ve brought claims against the company since Musk’s takeover, said. “The formerly richest man in the world is not above the law.”

Federal law protects the right of workers to discuss and take collective action about working conditions, with or without a union. The NLRB, which enforces that law, has the power to order changes to policies and back pay for employees, but not to hold executives personally liable or make companies pay punitive damages.

Musk’s companies have repeatedly clashed with the NLRB.

The U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in March upheld an NLRB ruling that Tesla illegally fired a California employee because of union activism, and that a tweet from Musk constitute­d an unlawful threat. An agency judge ruled in April that Tesla violated the law by telling workers in Florida not to discuss their pay. In New York, an NLRB office is investigat­ing a claim that Tesla was illegally retaliatin­g when it fired dozens of workers after the announceme­nt of an organizing campaign.

Tesla has denied wrongdoing in each case.

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