Carne was working in a Google data centre for nine days. When she was fired for being “ungoogley.” She is now at the centre of a new National Labor Relations Board. Complaining against her employer, Modis, and Alphabet Inc.’s Google, ushering in yet another workplace dispute for the world’s third-largest company by market capitalization.
Carne, 29, worked at a Google site in South Carolina to maintain the equipment. Many of these positions are occupied by contract firms such as Modis, a division of Adecco Group AG. She stated that in her second week on the job, she attended a regular meeting where managers discussed upcoming schedules. Employees working holiday shifts are entitled to double pay, she recalls. But only if they had previously worked for the company for at least six months. Carne, who was unaware of the policy, spoke out against it. “I basically said, ‘That’s bullshit,'” she recalls.
I just want my job back
Later that evening, she receives an email from a Modis manager. The email states she was “unacceptable and ‘ungoogley.’ According to a copy of the message obtained by Bloomberg News. She was let go. Carne immediately contacted Alphabet Workers Union, a labour advocacy organisation. Google settled a separate AWU labour complaint involving the same South Carolina facility in March, agreeing not to silence workers discussing pay. Shannon Wait, the fired Modis employee from that case, was reinstated.
According to the new AWU complaint, Carne was exercising legally protected speech during the November meeting. Modis and Google representatives did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The AWU, an affiliate of the Communications Workers of America, has concentrated on the technology behemoth’s vast contract workforce. These employees typically earn significantly less and have fewer benefits than direct Google employees. Carne states she was receiving $16.50 per hour in the Modis position. Plus a $200 bonus during the pandemic when data centre employees were coming regularly.
“I just want my job back,” says Carne, who was fired for being ‘ungoogley’. She had recently moved from Michigan to take the role. “It felt like the winds were taken out of my sails.” In 2020, the NLRB’s Republican majority made use-case involving General Motors Co. To set a new precedent that makes it easier for companies to punish employees who say or do offensive things. While exercising their legal right to protest working conditions. Google is facing another NLRB case. On behalf of activist employees who were fired. On Tuesday, a judge ordered Google to turn over documents related to anti-unionization efforts.