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Twitter’s Fired Workers Can’t Pursue Claim Through Class Action: Judge


People walk past Twitter offices in New York City on January 12, 2023.

Angela Weiss | AFP | beautiful pictures

Twitter Inc secured a ruling that would allow the social media company to force some laid-off workers to sue over their termination to pursue their claims through individual arbitration rather than a lawsuit. collective event.

U.S. District Judge James Donato on Friday ruled that five former Twitter employees are pursuing a proposed class-action lawsuit alleging the company failed to give adequate notice before firing them after acquired by Elon Musk must pursue their claims in private arbitration.

Donato accepted Twitter’s request to force five former employees to pursue their claims individually, citing agreements they signed with the company.

Twitter did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

However, the San Francisco judge left on another day “as assured by the developments in the case” whether to dismiss the entire class action, as he noted that three former employees Other Twitter, who allege it opted out of the company’s arbitration agreement, joined the lawsuit after it was first filed.

The attorney representing the plaintiffs, Shannon Liss-Riordan, said Monday that she has filed 300 arbitration requests on behalf of former Twitter employees and is likely to file hundreds more.

All of those workers claim they didn’t receive the full severance package Twitter promised before Musk took over. Some have also accused sexism or disability.

Last year, Donato ruled that Twitter must announce Thousands of workers have been laid off after being acquired by Musk following a proposed class action lawsuit alleging the company failed to give them adequate notice before terminating their contracts.

The judge said that before requiring workers to sign a severance agreement giving up the ability to sue the company, Twitter must give them “a brief and clear notice”.

Twitter laid off about 3,700 employees in early November in a cost-cutting measure by Musk, and hundreds of others have since quit.

In December of last year, Twitter was also denounced by dozens of former employees about various legal violations stemming from Musk’s takeover of the company, including targeting women for firing and failure to pay severance as promised.

Twitter is also facing at least three complaints filed with the US labor commission, alleging that workers were fired for criticizing the company, attempting to organize a strike, and other acts committed by the company. protected by federal labor laws.

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