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    YouTube Music Employees Find Out They’ve Been Laid off in the Middle of City Council Meeting About Employment Rights

    Alyssa MillerBy Alyssa MillerMarch 10, 2024Updated:March 10, 2024No Comments5 Mins Read
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    Source: Austin City Council
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    During an Alphabet Workers Union speech at an Austin City Council meeting in Texas, Google’s parent company, Alphabet, laid off the YouTube Music team.

    The news came as a shock as union members were pleading to the city council in Austin to set a vote on a resolution between the company and the union.

    The Moment Workers Discovered They Were Laid Off

    Source: Austin City Council

    Some of the Alphabet workers discovered that the layoff was happening while speaking at the Austin City Council meeting. A viral video captures a team member running up to the union speaker and informing them and the city council that they laid them off.

    “We just got laid off, our jobs are ending today, effective immediately,” one worker tells the city council in the video of the meeting.

    Who Are the YouTube Music Workers?

    Source: Sanket Mishra/Pexels

    The Alphabet Workers Union-CWA represents the team consisting of moderators employed by Google contractor Cognizant in Austin. This group of contractors is responsible for approving music content for YouTube Music.

    According to a statement emailed to The Verge, Google spokesperson Courtenay Mencini said, “Contracts with our suppliers across the country routinely end on their natural expiry date.”

    The Workers Went on Strike Early in 2023

    Source: Alphabet Workers Union/X

    The team of 40+ workers went on strike in February 2023. The union was “demanding a return-to-work policy that’s “fair, flexible, and does not threaten the safety and livelihoods of workers,” according to an AWU press release (via The Verge).

    The union claimed that many workers hired to work remotely received inadequate pay and argued that going to the office would incur excessive expenses.

    Why Did the Union Go On Strike?

    Source: Shawn Collins/Flickr

    In a statement on X,  formerly known as Twitter, the union said that the YouTube Music team was receiving low pay. “Even as workers contribute to the success of the billion-dollar platform, they are paid as little as $19 an hour and receive minimal benefits,” the union said.

    The pay was so low that multiple members were working multiple jobs to make ends meet.

    Google Pushed Back Against the Union

    Source: Wikimedia Commons

    However, Google previously argued that it did not have to negotiate with the team at YouTube Music since they were not Google employees.

    However, the National Labor Relations Board (NLRD) ruled that the company had to negotiate with the team back in March 2023 because the company controlled benefits, hours of work, and the direction of the contractors’ work.

    Cognizant Explains Why They Laid Off YouTube Music Workers

    Source: Wikimedia Commons

    Cognizant, a professional service company contracted by Alphabet for the YouTube Music team, stated that they let go of the workers after the contract ended as planned.

    Jeff DeMarrais, the Cognizant chief communications officer, said that they would give the workers seven weeks of pay and opportunities to find another role (via The Verge).

    The Union Workers Speak Out

    Source: Alphabet Workers Union/X

    “This is devastating. We have been fighting for years now to get Google, one of the most powerful and well-resourced companies in the world, to negotiate with us so that we could make a living in exchange for the work we do to make their products better,” contractor and union member Jack Benedict said in a statement.

    Benedict continued: “It is disgusting that Google has taken this path when confronted with its workers’ modest demands to be treated fairly on the job.”

    Silicon Valley Is Looking for Change at Google

    Source: fauxels/Pexels

    The layoffs come as Alphabet and Google CEO Sundar Pichai faces outcry for his resignation. Ben Thompson, an analyst and the author of the “Stratechery” newsletter, wrote that Google needed to transform after several mishaps, including Gemini’s recent controversy.

    This transformation would “mean removing those who let the former run amok, up to and including CEO Sundar Pichai.”

    Who Is Sundar Pichai?

    Source: Sam Churchill/Flickr

    In 2015, Google appointed Pichai as CEO, and in 2019, Alphabet did the same. Throughout his tenure, he has proven to be a strong CEO. He has been protecting Google’s prized search business while dealing with regulators.

    While Pichai has brought Google’s market cap up from $400 billion to around $1.7 trillion, many in Silicon Valley feel like it is time for a change.

    Is the Right Team Managing Google? 

    Source: ThisIsEngineering/Pexels

    Pichai and Google are feeling the pressure from growing competition from the innovations in artificial intelligence (AI). Unfortunately, Google hasn’t been able to keep up with the changing landscape of AI.

    “The most recent saga only further raises increasingly louder questions around whether this is the right management team to guide Google into this next era,” Thompson wrote.

    This Is a Bad Look for the Companies

    Source: Alphabet Workers Union/X

    Whatever the technicalities and legalities behind the YouTube Music workers axing is, it comes as a shock since, especially since it happened during the unions pleads to the Austin city council.

    This is a bad look for YouTube, Cognizant, and Google as they prepare to go through possible changes in leadership.

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    Alyssa Miller

    Alyssa Miller is a writer, editor, and educator with a passion for entertainment and pop culture. She graduated from the University of San Francisco with a Bachelor of Arts in English and a minor in Communications. Before graduating, Alyssa worked as a freelance entertainment and film education writer, contributing to a variety of publications, including Britain’s First Frame Magazine. She also continued to write short stories and screenplays in her free time.

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