Facebook to pay millions in employment discrimination dispute

The Justice Department announced last December that it was filing a lawsuit that accused Facebook of giving hiring preferences to temporary workers.

The logo for Facebook appears on screens at the Nasdaq MarketSite in New York's Times Square.

The logo for Facebook appears on screens at the Nasdaq MarketSite in New York's Times Square. Source: AP

Facebook will pay up to A$19 million (US$14 million) to settle civil claims brought by the US government that the social media company discriminated against workers and violated other federal recruitment rules, US officials said on Tuesday.

The two related settlements were announced by the US Justice Department and Labor Department. The Justice Department announced last December that it was filing a lawsuit that accused Facebook of giving hiring preferences to temporary workers, including those who hold H-1B visas that let companies temporarily employ foreign workers in certain specialty occupations. Such visas are widely used by tech companies.

Kristen Clarke, assistant US attorney general for the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division, called the agreement with Facebook historic.
"It represents by far the largest civil penalty the Civil Rights Division has ever recovered in the 35-year history of the Immigration and Nationality Act's anti-discrimination provision," Ms Clarke said in a call with reporters, referring to a key US immigration law.

The case centred on Facebook's use of the so-called permanent labour certification, called the PERM program.

The US government said that Facebook refused to recruit or hire US workers for jobs that had been reserved for temporary visa holders under the PERM program. It also accused Facebook of "potential regulatory recruitment violations."

Facebook will pay a civil penalty under the settlement of A$6.35 million, plus up to A$12.70 million to eligible victims of what the government called discriminatory hiring practices.


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Published 20 October 2021 6:27am
Source: Reuters, SBS


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