Temporary Workers of America represented Lionbridge's Tier1 employees
in the Microsoft's App Certification Lab
The lab closed down on Dec 3, 2016 but we kept fighting and communicating on line
Instructive reading for organizing contractors in high tech
Solidarity!
Thursday, August 30, 2018
Paid parental leave matters: Microsoft requires 12 weeks of paid parental leave for its contractors employees
The new paid parental leave requirement was announced in the Microsoft's blog by Corporate VP Dev Stahlkopf with the headline: Paid parental leave matters. Read the interesting comments by Nat Levy in Geekwire, the Seattle Times (Rachel Lerman). Probably more to come. Congratulations to Microsoft's management for moving in the right direction. Now the questions should be asked to other big high tech companies (Google, FB, Amazon, etc): what are your paid parental leave requirements for your contractors? Still unresolved for Microsoft's contractors employees, and it does count: the status of the public holidays (about 10 per year). They should be additional paid time off coming on top of the 'at least 15 days' presently required, not included within the 15 days of PTO.
Thursday, August 23, 2018
Our story according to Bloomberg-Businessweek
Here. RIP? By Josh Eidelson and Hassan Kanu on August 23, 2018
Friday, August 3, 2018
Employees of security firms working for Google and Facebook, ignored by the high tech robber barons
This excellent article by Kate Conger in Gizmodo explains why despite having a union they cannot extract any concession from their employers while Google and Facebook, who should be considered joint employers, do nothing to implement requirements that would protect people working for them. Shame on them. It's exactly what happened to us: Lionbridge and the other contractors only changed their policies because Microsoft forced them to do something to keep their contracts. We were laid off when Microsoft had enough of us winning our charges of joint employment to NLRB. But Google nor FB can send away their security officers. If not publicly exposed and shamed they can keep ignoring the situation, letting their contractors exploit the people who take care of their security :(
Spread the shame until they do the right thing: change their requirements for their contractors.
Spread the shame until they do the right thing: change their requirements for their contractors.
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