Word inside Twitter is that A LOT of employees are not saying “yes” to staying at Musk’s “extremely hardcore Twitter 2.0.” He has been meeting today with engineers to convince them to stay. His deadline to decide to stay or leave expired 6 min ago. https://t.co/IErjQTMRE6
— Alex Heath (@alexeheath) November 17, 2022
Incidentally, a disabled employee is now suing Twitter over Musk’s ban on remote work.
Hearing from multiple employees that the odds of Twitter breaking in the near future are very high.
— Alex Heath (@alexeheath) November 17, 2022
Twitter employees can opt in to Musk’s “bend the knee” mandate to hold onto their jobs.
— Lisa Bloom (@LisaBloom) November 17, 2022
Then a small brave group could approach management and state that while everyone is willing to work hard and strive for excellence, they oppose the mandate of “long hours at high intensity.”
If these concerted activity workers are fired in retaliation, they’re entitled to broad remedies.
— Lisa Bloom (@LisaBloom) November 17, 2022
These remedies have recently been expanded beyond front pay, back pay to include “new and alternative remedies.”
Thanks new NLRB counsel! ✊🏼 pic.twitter.com/2HrjeNIOyz
That's thread 1; this is thread 2.Requiring an employer to publicly apologize for unlawful behavior has a special place in my heart, to restore dignity to workers who stand up. pic.twitter.com/8jeEXIPUTB
— Lisa Bloom (@LisaBloom) November 17, 2022
Let’s talk about the legal problems Elon just created for himself with this cruel new staff email.
— Lisa Bloom (@LisaBloom) November 16, 2022
You’re fired if you don’t commit to long hours at high intensity within 24 hours?
Let’s start with disabled workers. pic.twitter.com/SRrIz1iDlE
Next, childcare still overwhelmingly disproportionately impacts female workers, for whom working long hours on a regular basis is often just a hard no.
— Lisa Bloom (@LisaBloom) November 16, 2022
So we have a gender discrimination issue too.#TwitterLayoffs
Fourth, workers over 40 get 21-45 days to consider releasing claims, which would be part of that “severance” he’s talking about.
— Lisa Bloom (@LisaBloom) November 16, 2022
Not 24 hours.#TwitterLayoffs
Thread 2 especially is full of assumptions and hand-waving references to the law. It shouldn't be taken as proof Elmo has screwed the pooch, but it can be read as making clear Elmo hasn't a clue what he's doing.Update: Twitter HR is now telling everyone who does not sign the ridiculous new pledge they have resigned. Employment law does not work that way. You cannot deprive people of unemployment benefits and wrongful termination cases by saying that they resigned. Nice try though!
— Lisa Bloom (@LisaBloom) November 17, 2022
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