City
Epaper

Google announces new measures for safe, inclusive workplace

By IANS | Updated: September 26, 2020 10:35 IST

San Francisco, Sep 26 In another bid to build a more equitable and respectful workplace, Google has announced ...

Open in App

San Francisco, Sep 26 In another bid to build a more equitable and respectful workplace, Google has announced new measures that include new care programmes for employees who report concerns, and making arbitration optional for Google employees.

The company said it is setting up a new Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) Advisory Council to advise on and oversee these efforts that will report to the Leadership Development and Compensation Committee of the Board (LDCC) on a quarterly basis on the company's progress.

"We're building on our current practice of prohibiting severance for anyone terminated for any form of misconduct, and expanding the prohibition to anyone who is the subject of a pending investigation for sexual misconduct or retaliation," Eileen Naughton, VP, People Operations, said in a statement on Friday.

Google managers will receive guidance instructing them on how misconduct should impact an employee's performance evaluation, compensation decisions, and promotion outcomes.

"If there are allegations against any executives, a specialist team will be assigned and the results of any case will be reported to the Board's Audit Committee," Naughton said.

Other changes include making arbitration optional for all employees, temporary staff, vendors, and independent contractors for individual harassment, discrimination, and retaliation disputes with Alphabet, as well as following the new Alphabet model for executive investigations.

"We'll ensure that $310 million in funding goes toward diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives and programmes focused on increasing access to computer science education and careers; continuing to build a more representative workforce; fostering a respectful, equitable and inclusive workplace culture; and helping businesses from underrepresented groups to succeed in the digital economy and tech industry," Google said.

Together, Sundar Pichai, the DEI Advisory Council and the Board will uphold "Alphabet's unwavering commitment to prohibit and respond effectively to complaints of sexual harassment, discrimination, and retaliation and promote diversity, equity, and inclusion in the workplace".

"Recent years have involved a lot of introspection and work to make sure we're providing a safe and inclusive workplace for every employee," Naughton noted.

In late 2018, Alphabet's Board responded to employee concerns by overseeing a comprehensive review of policies and practices related to sexual harassment, sexual misconduct, and retaliation.

An independent committee of the Board also reviewed claims raised by shareholders in early 2019 about past workplace misconduct issues, the company informed.

( With inputs from IANS )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Eileen NaughtongoogleSundar PichaiAdvisory CouncilWord on macWho dgMicrosoft incUs google & youtubeSk duaDan patel
Open in App

Related Stories

LifestyleGoogle Rolls Out Mother’s Day 2026 Doodle; Search Engine Giant Celebrates Occasion With Handcrafted Card

TechnologyIPL 2026 Google Doodle: Search Engine Giant Rolls Out Neon-Themed Doodle to Celebrate Start of Indian Premier League

TechnologyWhy YouTube Witness Global Outage? TeamYouTube Reveals Reason

TechnologyYouTube Down: TeamYouTube Says Its Teams Are Looking Into Global Outage

TechnologyRamadan 2026 Moon Sighting Google Doodle: Search Engine Rolls Out ‘Search Crescent Moon’ Game to Wish Ramadan Kareem

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyHere's why the POCO X8 Pro Max is built differently

TechnologyFM Sitharaman urges top US nuclear firms to invest in India

TechnologyGlobal AI spending expected to surge 47 pc to $2.59 trillion in 2026

TechnologyIndia can emerge as global leader in advanced 5G capabilities: Industry

TechnologyUS dropping charges will push Adani's global expansion plans: Top law expert