Twitter engineer says he was fired for helping coworkers who faced layoffs | Inquirer
 
 
 
 
 
 

Twitter engineer says he was fired for helping coworkers who faced layoffs

/ 08:52 AM November 08, 2022

A former Twitter Inc engineer has accused the company of firing him days after it was acquired by Elon Musk because he developed a tool to allow workers to save important documents in anticipation of mass layoffs.

The engineer, Emmanuel Cornet, filed a complaint with the U.S. National Labor Relations Board on Monday, claiming he was engaged in protected activity when he shared the software on an internal Twitter messaging channel.

“Protected activities” are actions that workers can take without fear of employer retaliation under U.S. labor law. Twitter did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the complaint.

Cornet, based in San Francisco, said in the complaint that he was fired on Nov. 1, a few days before Twitter began laying off about half of its 7,500 employees in a cost-cutting bid by Musk, the world’s richest person.

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Twitter engineer was fired for helping coworkers who faced layoffs

A Twitter logo is displayed on a mobile phone near a computer screen showing promoted tweets on China, in this illustration picture taken September 8, 2022. REUTERS/Florence Lo/Illustration

Cornet and four other Twitter employees had filed a lawsuit in California federal court on Friday, accusing the social media company of violating federal and California laws requiring employers to give 60 days’ notice before engaging in mass layoffs.

In a series of tweets on Friday, Musk said that laid-off workers were offered 90 days of severance pay, which could satisfy Twitter’s obligations under the notice laws.

Cornet, in the complaint, said that late last month, amid rumors of mass layoffs at Twitter, he developed a Google Chrome extension to allow employees to download emails from their Twitter accounts. That would ensure workers could save important documents such as statements reflecting their stock in Twitter, performance reviews, and other human resource documents, he said.

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Cornet says he was fired the same day he published the extension and posted a link on an internal Twitter messaging channel. Twitter removed the link later that day, according to the complaint.

Suppose the NLRB issues a complaint against Twitter and ultimately rules for Cornet. In that case, it could order that he be reinstated with back pay, and the company post a notice informing employees of their rights under federal labor law.

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TAGS: company acquisition, firing, Twitter
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