Technology
Tesla former HR head suggested new jobs for pro-union workers: Report
- Tesla‘s former head of human resources suggested to CEO Elon Musk that two employees who supported forming a union be given positions that could prevent them from advocating for a union, Bloomberg reports.
- According to the publication, former HR head Gabrielle Toledano, who joined the company in May 2017 and confirmed her resignation earlier this month after a leave of absence, said in an email to Musk that if the employees were placed on Tesla’s safety team, they might not be able to support a union.
- Toledano said in another email that placing the employees on the safety team would be an “Amazing way to turn adversaries into those responsible for the problem,” according to Bloomberg, which reports that Musk wrote “Exactly” in response to the email.
- “We encourage anyone who has ideas on how to improve safety to get involved with our safety team. These employees expressed interest in helping to improve safety at Tesla, so we explored ways to provide them with safety roles that would allow them to most effectively do that,” a Tesla representative told Business Insider.
- Toledano did not immediately respond to Business Insider’s request for comment.
Tesla’s former head of human resources suggested to CEO Elon Musk that two employees who supported forming a union be given positions that could prevent them from advocating for a union, Bloomberg reports.
According to the publication, former HR head Gabrielle Toledano, who joined the company in May 2017 and confirmed her resignation earlier this month after a leave of absence, said in an email to Musk that if the employees were placed on Tesla’s safety team, they might not be able to support a union.
“I am confirming now with Legal that if they join the Safety team then they would then be considered part of management and not eligible to advocate for a union should they accept those roles,” Toledano reportedly wrote.
Toledano said in another email that placing the employees on the safety team would be an “Amazing way to turn adversaries into those responsible for the problem,” according to Bloomberg, which reports that Musk wrote “Exactly” in response to the email.
“We encourage anyone who has ideas on how to improve safety to get involved with our safety team. These employees expressed interest in helping to improve safety at Tesla, so we explored ways to provide them with safety roles that would allow them to most effectively do that,” a Tesla representative told Business Insider.
Toledano did not immediately respond to Business Insider’s request for comment.
The emails were released as part of the National Labor Relations Board’s (NLRB) investigation into Tesla over claims that the company has violated federal labor laws by interfering with union-organizing activities and employee attempts to talk about safety issues, retaliating against employees who supported a union, and using an overly-broad confidentiality policy.
The company has denied those allegations, according to Bloomberg. The publication also reported that Toledano said in an NLRB hearing on Tuesday she considered the possibility of moving pro-union employees to safety positions an opportunity for them to “get involved in something they were criticizing.”
Have a Tesla news tip? Contact this reporter at [email protected].
Get the latest Tesla stock price here.
-
Entertainment6 days ago
Summer Movie Preview: From ‘Alien’ and ‘Furiosa’ to ‘Deadpool and Wolverine’
-
Entertainment5 days ago
What’s on the far side of the moon? Not darkness.
-
Business6 days ago
Thoma Bravo to take UK cybersecurity company Darktrace private in $5B deal
-
Business6 days ago
How Rubrik’s IPO paid off big for Greylock VC Asheem Chandna
-
Business5 days ago
TikTok faces a ban in the US, Tesla profits drop and healthcare data leaks
-
Business4 days ago
London’s first defense tech hackathon brings Ukraine war closer to the city’s startups
-
Business7 days ago
Zomato’s quick commerce unit Blinkit eclipses core food business in value, says Goldman Sachs
-
Business6 days ago
Photo-sharing community EyeEm will license users’ photos to train AI if they don’t delete them