San Antonio Express-News

Fired Google worker files federal complaint

- By Greg Bensinger

A fifth Google engineer has claimed she was fired in retaliatio­n for protected workplace activism, the latest example of what a small but vocal group at the search-engine giant says is evidence of management overreach as it attempts to revamp its freewheeli­ng culture to resemble a more convention­al company.

Kathryn Spiers, who helped keep Google’s Chrome browser secure, said she was fired Saturday after two years at the company. This happened, she said, after company officials questioned her about who else she had worked with as part of her activism and whether she had intended to be disruptive to the workplace, among other matters.

Spiers created software that showed a pop-up message when employees on company networks looked at the website of IRI Consultant­s, which is known to help corporatio­ns with anti-union pushback and which was recently hired by Google, or when they reviewed a company employee rule book. The message said, “Googlers have the right to participat­e in protected concerted activities.”

Spiers’ firing follows that of four other workers in November over what they also said was retaliatio­n for discussing unionizati­on at Google and other workplace activism. The four engineers have become a central example for other activists at the company who say Google is trying to snuff out anti-management messages.

Google has denied the allegation, saying those four employees were fired for violations of company policy, including reviewing colleagues’ calendars and other documents unnecessar­ily and outside the scope of their work.

“You don’t need to fire everyone, you just need to fire enough to scare everyone into compliance,” said Spiers, who filed an “unfair labor practices” complaint Monday night with the National Labor Relations Board. The other four workers filed a similar complaint jointly this month. A Freedom of Informatio­n Act request filed by The Washington Post revealed that three additional complaints were filed with the NLRB in the past three weeks. It could not be determined how many workers were involved in those complaints.

The NLRB investigat­es all such complaints and generally completes its reviews in three to four months.

“We dismissed an employee who abused privileged access to modify an internal security tool,” said Google spokeswoma­n Katie Hutchison. “This was a serious violation.”

Spiers said she probably caught the attention of Google officials earlier for helping to create software that sent notificati­ons to top internal attorney Kent Walker whenever any employee opened any document, a reaction to Walker’s reminder to workers about the rules around reviewing informatio­n deemed outside their regular work.

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