Snapchat Inc. to pay $15 million to settle discrimination and harassment lawsuit in California
UNB
Publish: 20 Jun 2024, 07:54 PM
SAN
FRANCISCO (AP/UNB) - Snapchat Inc. will pay $15 million to settle a lawsuit
brought by California's civil rights agency that claimed the company
discriminated against female employees, failed to prevent workplace sexual
harassment and retaliated against women who complained.
The settlement with
Snapchat Inc., which owns the popular disappearing-message app by the same
name, covers women who worked for the company in California between 2014 and
2024, the California Civil Rights Department announced Wednesday. The
settlement is subject to court approval.
The agreement resolves a
more than three-year investigation over claims that the Santa Monica,
California-based company discriminated against female employees when it came to
pay and promotions, the department said in a statement.
The bulk of the
settlement money will go to employees who faced discrimination at Snapchat
Inc., California officials said.
"In California,
we're proud of the work of our state's innovators who are a driving force of our
nation's economy," said Kevin Kish, director of California's civil rights
agency. "This settlement with Snapchat demonstrates a shared commitment to
a California where all workers have a fair chance at the American Dream. Women
are entitled to equality in every job, in every workplace, and in every
industry."
Snapchat Inc. said it
disagrees with the agency's claims but that it decided to settle to avoid
costly and lengthy litigation.
"We care deeply
about our commitment to maintain a fair and inclusive environment at Snap, and
do not believe we have any ongoing systemic pay equity, discrimination,
harassment, or retaliation issues against women," the company said in a
statement.
Snapchat Inc. grew from
250 employees in 2015 to over 5,000 in 2022. But the growth didn't translate to
advancement for female employees who "were told to wait their turn, were
actively discouraged from applying for promotions, or lost promotion opportunities
to less qualified male colleagues," California officials said.
In particular, women in
engineering roles, which account for about 70% of Snap's workforce, found
barriers when trying to advance from entry-level positions, according to the
complaint.
California's civil
rights agency also said in its lawsuit that women were sexually harassed and
that when they spoke up, they faced retaliation that included negative
performance reviews and termination. Male managers routinely promoted male
employees over more qualified women, the agency said.
"Women were told,
both implicitly and explicitly, that they were second-class citizens at
Snap," the agency said in its lawsuit.
The settlement will
require the company to hire an independent consultant to evaluate its
compensation and promotion policies and retain an outside auditor of its sexual
harassment, retaliation, and discrimination compliance. The company will also
have to train its staff on preventing discrimination, retaliation and sexual
harassment in the workplace, officials said.
Snapchat Inc. also
agreed to provide information to all employees about their right to report
harassment or discrimination without fear of retaliation.
END/AP/UNB/SIS
