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Female Engineer Sues Tesla, Describing a Culture Of 'Pervasive Harassment' (theguardian.com) 360

A female engineer has spoken out about a discrimination lawsuit against Tesla that she filed last year. AJ Vandermeyden, 33, has accused Tesla of ignoring her claims of "pervasive harassment" and says she has suffered "mental distress" and "humiliation." From a report on The Guardian: Vandermeyden, 33, shared her story with the Guardian at a time when Silicon Valley is reeling from the explosive allegations of former Uber engineer Susan Fowler. Offering a rare public account of discrimination from a tech worker who remains employed at her company, Vandermeyden said her dedication to Tesla motivated her to advocate for fair treatment and reforms -- despite the serious risks she knows she faces for going public. "Until somebody stands up, nothing is going to change," she said in a recent interview, her first comments about a discrimination lawsuit she filed last year. "I'm an advocate of Tesla. I really do believe they are doing great things. That said, I can't turn a blind eye if there's something fundamentally wrong going on." Vandermeyden began at Tesla in 2013 and was eventually promoted to a manufacturing engineering position in the general assembly department, which consisted mostly of men and where she was paid less than male engineers whose work she directly took over, according to her complaint.
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Female Engineer Sues Tesla, Describing a Culture Of 'Pervasive Harassment'

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  • by TWX ( 665546 ) on Tuesday February 28, 2017 @01:50PM (#53947427)
    I'm not exactly surprised. In most cases where I see the office/design part interface with the shop/implementation part there is the potential for this kind of friction. Even in cases where harrassment is not of a sexual nature, it's common for simple vulgarity to creep in even if just as a reaction to the minor cuts and body wear and tear when working and the need for a certain amount of toughness in order to do the job.

    Don't know enough about the salary aspect. She well might be underpaid becase of sexism, or she might have been brought in to do the job because they wanted someone that cost less in that role, and they didn't feel that the role justified the salary they previously paid.
    • by msauve ( 701917 ) on Tuesday February 28, 2017 @02:49PM (#53948017)
      "Don't know enough about the salary aspect. She well might be underpaid becase"...

      This could be as simple and common as the person she replaced had been in that job a while, advanced in it (including pay raises), and was now moving to an even more advanced job. She, OTOH, was new to that position, so might be expected to enter at the low end of the pay scale for it.
      • by TWX ( 665546 ) on Tuesday February 28, 2017 @03:02PM (#53948145)
        Absolutely.

        The only real metric is comparing salary scale across multiple people in the same position or with the same effective job duties. If someone's role is unique then it is difficult to gauge whether or not salary is fair. If there was only one ME in this type of capacity, and a previous staff member left for a new one to be brought in then it's hard to demonstrate any particular reason for differences.

        I remember Dad talking about one at his work when he was getting close to retirement- they decided to replace technical managers as they retired with non-technical managers. The technical managers came up through the technical working side of the shop and could essentially do all of the major jobs in addition to managing, and their pay was essentially the senior technical person's plus a reasonable bump up for their managerial duties. Eventually it was determined that they spent more time managing than they did directly touching technical matters, so as they retired or otherwise left they were replaced with nontechnical managers. This theoretically resulted in a cost-savings as the new managers probably made half to two-thirds the salary of the senior non-management tech staff, but caused problems when those managers could not themselves offer technical solutions when stressful periods required them to work harder, and it also pissed off technical staff by depriving them of a wrung on the org-chart. In the end I think they had to switch back to technical managers as someone finally realized that underlying understanding was necessary in order for the managers to make good decisions. Only took half a decade...
    • by Rei ( 128717 ) on Tuesday February 28, 2017 @03:29PM (#53948371) Homepage

      The auto industry in general is terrible for women. I once ran a small console software supplier for the auto industry. I think my attitude toward the industry is best summed up by the time when (at a meeting with major figures of a major auto maker) my sales rep privately informed me that they're skipping the third step of how they usually make deals, on account of me. The first step being discussing the project over a ridiculous-priced dinner. The second step being discussing it at the bar. The third step - skipped - being discussing it at a strip club.

      I had previously heard rumours of stuff like this, such as a HR rep at a startup automaker complaining to me that their sales rep was submitting strip club receipts for reimbursement as business expenses. But I got to see the culture firsthand.

      So when I hear about this sort of stuff at Tesla, I'm not surprised. Sad - I'd like to hope that they'd have a different culture, since they're trying to make a different kind of car - but not surprised.

      • I call bullshit. Have you ever tried to get a receipt from a stripper while sitting in gyno row? It's impossible, I know.

        • Receipt for the drinks you fucking idiot.

          • Drinks are a legit business expense. Why shouldn't I expense the drinks when I take a client out?

            We generally take clients where they want to go. Titty bar or super fancy restaurant, we bill it all back to their employers anyhow (plus 20% for the accounting costs).

        • by TWX ( 665546 )

          I call bullshit. Have you ever tried to get a receipt from a stripper while sitting in gyno row? It's impossible, I know.

          "Well you see, I ran my card through the slot presented to me, but the printer must've been broken..."

  • ass|u|me (Score:5, Interesting)

    by bhcompy ( 1877290 ) on Tuesday February 28, 2017 @01:51PM (#53947439)
    I'm assuming the culture at Tesla is similar to the culture at SpaceX, which is a culture of "fuck you, work 90 hour weeks because you're just here building your resume and I can work you to death if I want to", which is to say any pervasive harassment isn't a female problem, it's a cultural problem that is applied to every peon in the building. If that assumption holds true, the fact that she was paid less isn't because she's a girl, but because the market bears that salary for that position for a girl and Tesla can and will get away with anything it can to further its goals in the most cost effective way possible. Basically, it's the assassin saying "It's not personal, it's just business", which the courts tend to be okay with because it's not special treatment.
  • Horrible...if true (Score:5, Insightful)

    by grasshoppa ( 657393 ) on Tuesday February 28, 2017 @01:52PM (#53947453) Homepage

    Forgive me, but past accusations haven't exactly primed me to believe this. If true, it's absolutely something that should be corrected, and she should be lauded for having the courage to make it public. ...however, if it's sour grapes because she didn't get the promotion she wanted, I wonder if we'll ever hear about it?

    • The problem is the minor stuff gets ignored (and honestly, a good deal of it is just innocent human being human stuff which is WHY it gets ignored), and a lot of the genuine complaints are so beyond our experience that when they're brought up they sound just as outrageous as the false ones.

      I'm kind of on board with "Don't make a big deal of it in the press until it's gone through the courts". There's no reasonable way to judge what happened based on whether the claims seem credible or not, when reality is

      • by grasshoppa ( 657393 ) on Tuesday February 28, 2017 @02:32PM (#53947833) Homepage

        In my experience, I'd say a majority of sex and gender related claims are false. People use hotbutton issues to throw a fit when things don't go their way. Didn't get the promotion? Obviously it was because of your gender. Group of people laughing near you? They're obviously making fun of you. and so on...and so on.

        That said, I have seen situations of real, honest to goodness harassment and discrimination. Worse, I've seen companies try to "quietly" handle it ( ie: hush it up ). Those who step up and refuse to be victims have my utmost respect.

        However, they appear to be the minority.

    • I've hear lots of complaints about sexism in the work place, but never actually seen any in person, (besides reverse sexism). Naturally, as a man, I probably would see a lot less of it and most of my coworkers currently are women, so it would probably be very difficult for sexism to fly in this environment.

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        There's no such thing as reverse sexism. When women are sexist towards men, it is still sexism. Sexism isn't a gender specific term, and it can occur both ways.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      It sounds like sour grapes. She seems to believe that getting promoted into management is a meritocracy, when it is anything but. There are even people who avoid being promoted into management because of the stigma of having to deal with things they don't find interesting (anything that is outside of their field). In reality, managers do very little work related to their field of expertise. They use their years of expertise to help guide the project along, but they deal with all the bureaucratic nonsense, a

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      The troubling thing in these situations is always the possibility of the sour grapes/personal vendetta scenario you describe. That said, the very doubt this automatically raises means that a prudent person doesn't take such an accusation lightly.

      As I say to my kids, with seven billion people on the planet you can find examples of virtually any kind of behavior you can imagine. It doesn't make that behavior normal or representative of anything.

      So you can't jump to any conclusions one way or the other. You

  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 28, 2017 @01:53PM (#53947459)

    "which consisted mostly of men and where she was paid less than male engineers whose work she directly took over" This seems to imply this just because she is a woman, I'm a dude and I've been in this position myself, hell I've even been in a engineering management position and made less than the guys I was in charge of of.

    Sure this all could just be because she's a woman, but there is at least a real possibility that there were other reasons contributing to her situation.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Same here - my last project manager was also in his early 30s and in charge of directing me, gathering product requirements and ensuring my work met specifications made far less than I did (but more than he did in his last position).

      We also, as an established team, ribbed him for being the new guy and for trying to implement new processes (mostly good naturedly but there was a definite attitude of "I'm going to increase our productivity because I'm cool" - Think the Lieutenant in Aliens and you've got the r

    • I've seen more experienced people get a matter through the hard part and then hand it over to a more junior person. I've also seen people fired because they earned too much and then more junior people hired to replace them and yet they do the same work.

      Plenty of explanations that aren't sexism. Have to wait and see what evidence is offered to support the claim.

    • this is always a possibility, only provable with larger data sets. Most companies don't want to release this data. The ones people have been able to compile seem to indicated the average pay of women is less for equal work.
  • by Jahoda ( 2715225 ) on Tuesday February 28, 2017 @02:04PM (#53947589)
    Ok, well, first off, this woman is not an "Engineer" in the sense that she holds any academic credentials or certifications (neither am I). The article clearly states she started working at Tesla in 2013, was *promoted* to vehicle assembly. She is an "assembly engineer" in the same way that a guy working on the floor at Ford making IC cars is.

    After this, following claims that she was held to unreasonable performance standards and subject to sexual harassment on the shop floor, , she transfered to the "purchasing department", which Tesla was apparently glad to accomodate.

    These are simple facts which may or may not be relevant to the case, which appears to me that Tesla hired this woman, and has been happy to allow her to shift roles in the company and build her skillset. Apparently, she just purchased a Model-S. I have worked in IT for 15 years, and I sure can't afford a Model-S. So, anyway, sounds like a pretty damned good job to me.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 28, 2017 @02:16PM (#53947679)

      She is an Engineer in the same way that someone working at the Apple Store is a Genius.

    • by aicrules ( 819392 ) on Tuesday February 28, 2017 @02:28PM (#53947781)
      She definitely shouldn't have mixed the harassment and equal pay claims. That will only hurt her case. The "equal pay" claims will be impossible to prove anything and will make her just look like she nagging and therefore draw more skepticism into her harassment claims. The harassment, if true, is unacceptable. That kind of behavior is impossible to ever get away from completely, but management's reaction to it especially within a company that public, should be way better.
      • by Jahoda ( 2715225 ) on Tuesday February 28, 2017 @02:49PM (#53948023)
        The sexual harassment is one thing. If the facts are what she says they are, then I agree she should have a right to be treated respectfully by co-workers on the shop floor. (I don't for even one second believe that Tesla's culture condones or excuses such behavior - but that is my opinion and irrelevant here.)

        However, having regards equal pay, the deal is this: Her public linked in shows her to have been a pharmaceutical sales rep for ~4 years before joining Tesla. After a year in Tesla sales, she became a project coordinator. 7 months after this she was transfered to "assembly engineer". Now, I have no idea the quality of persons that she replaced, but if she, a 31 year old with zero previous mechanical and assembly experience (as evidenced by her resume), I certainly wouldn't expect her pay to be the same as a guy who has been working in a mechanical assembly position for even 5 years, to say nothing of if these were guys with 15 years on her.
      • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

        She definitely shouldn't have mixed the harassment and equal pay claims. That will only hurt her case. The "equal pay" claims will be impossible to prove anything and will make her just look like she nagging and therefore draw more skepticism into her harassment claims. The harassment, if true, is unacceptable. That kind of behavior is impossible to ever get away from completely, but management's reaction to it especially within a company that public, should be way better.

        To be fair for Tesla, if the previous holders of the position she took over have extensive experience at other manufacturers it is quite possible that they qualified for a higher wage based on experience alone. I work with people that do the exact same job I do but have 30 more years with the company than I do. I would expect them to make more than me. Same job rarely equals same pay between people unless it is a very cookie-cutter and dead end job.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Most replacements make less than the person they replace. Often the new person has less experience doing that specific task.

      • Can't get away from? Jesus are you in IT?

        Sexual harassment is nearly non-existent in the fortune 500 precisely because these companies have learned. They have zero tolerance policies towards this behavior and if you do it you will be written up and depending on the severity you might get marched to the door by security. Management does not tolerate this behavior because it can't be tolerated, the only solution to this type of behavior is immediate punishment.

        I don't work in an IT field, I work in an enginee

        • Oh i agree. You don't have it institutionally like is portrayed on mad men, but just like racism, there will always be people who don't share the accepted, common view of how people should be treated. No matter how good a job we do as a society it will exist. What I find absolutely incredible is that companies today still have the secondary issue of not ADDRESSING the harassment appropriately. That's where the lawsuit comes. If they dealt with it appropriately when she reported it, then she would have
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 28, 2017 @02:31PM (#53947815)

    >Therese Lawless, Vandermeyden’s lawyer,
    > who represented former Reddit CEO Ellen Pao in her high-profile discrimination lawsuit against venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers.

    Well, we know how that turned out for Ellen.

    >Vandermeyden recently took out a hefty loan to buy the cheapest version of the Model S Tesla car and has a reservation for the upcoming Model 3

    So after launching a potentially very expensive lawsuit you decide to get a "hefty" loan and buy a Model S? Huh.

  • by argStyopa ( 232550 ) on Tuesday February 28, 2017 @02:33PM (#53947855) Journal

    " where she was paid less than male engineers whose work she directly took over, according to her complaint."

    So why accept/keep the job if she's unhappy with the compensation?

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by geekpowa ( 916089 )

      Employment negotiation is a complex dynamic.

      My first and only blue chip job, I was fairly junior just a few years into career yet I firmly established as able to deliver and innovate and provide tech that opened up alot of new rev for them, but always been rubbish at asserting and negotiation. Some freshly minted grads came in, barely could compile a hello world, and I found out they started on 20% more than me. Was so angry about it and acted out of character driven by the emotion of indignation. Kicked u

  • If you believe you have been harassed then first go find a judge and pursuit your case in civil/criminal court.

    When there is an actual finding feel free to report that in a news article. Don't go to the public with an unsubstantiated one sided story not one member of the public is in any position to properly evaluate in order to push emotional buttons and exert PR pressure.

    God knows most of us have dealt with people who just make shit up for personal gain or who expend more mental energy screwing over cowo

  • If she can afford a Model S while working on the Assembly line I don't think she is underpaid. I have 15 years working in IT and a Masters from a top 10 University and I cant afford a Model S. (Unless she thinks the harassment suit is her big payday and she has already started spending the settlement money)

    The catcalls is an issue Women have faced ever since they came on the factory floor. In this day and age it should not happen. However the responsibility for that is on the mothers of the guys doing the c

    • by nobuddy ( 952985 )

      I believe tesla workers get amazing discounts on the cars. Kind of a Henry Ford tactic- the more of them that drive them the more the cars are seen on the roads.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    This whole summary is misleading.

    • She's not a engineer, she worked on the assembly line.
    • She's upset that men were promoted to certain positions when she wasn't. She said she was the only woman working on the assembly line, so logic would dictate that if 99.9% of the people working with her were men, chances are pretty good someone will get promoted to a position you wanted.
    • She leaked information to the media, so is she really surprised the company doesn't want to promote her when she goes around doing that.
  • by nobuddy ( 952985 ) on Tuesday February 28, 2017 @03:28PM (#53948365) Homepage Journal

    Note: I am pro union, and think Tesla workers are making a mistake by rejecting UAW. I also disagree with the UAWs tactics in regards to Tesla.

    The UAW has been sending workers in to Tesla to incite problems and try to rally workers to unionize. Her claim may be valid, but needs thorough investigation to verify. It is entirely possible she is either a plant, or paid off by the union to make a rallying point.
    By all other records Tesla pays exceedingly well, has stellar benefits, and treats workers well. Tons of overtime requirements- but that is normal in the auto industry, and Tesla pays generous overtime rates. The workers are not interested in a union because they don't need one and as such don't want the fees. This may bite them in the ass later, but for now their wishes should be honored by the union.

  • another woman complaining about a bad company at which she's chosen to remain. Yes, HR will always protect the company, that's why the company pays for an HR department. If you don't like what's going on, and if you don't like how you're treated, and if you don't like the amount that you're being paid, then you get to do the one thing that every man gets to do -- you get to threaten to quit. That's called negotiating to get what you want. And most of the time, you get to leave. That's exactly what it t

  • Wolf-crying? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by lucaiaco ( 2652295 ) on Tuesday February 28, 2017 @04:33PM (#53949051)
    I have been working in the US for several years, and I have noticed this dangerous trend of constantly labeling as misogynist or racist behavior anything that targets a woman or a minority for things that have nothing to do with race or gender. As an outsider (I am from Europe, and worked in Asia), I can say that nowhere I have seen such an obsession with these two topics. If a white person sucks, and get fired, you talk about the actual causes of the firing. If it's a woman or a minority doesn't get hired, or get fired, it's often sexism and racism. I am sure there are real cases of racism and maybe even sexism, but this constant and indiscriminate wolf-crying is going to delegitimize real victims and actually make people hire fewer of these people.

    If I were to hire in this country, I'd be damn sure not to hire a woman or a minority which had a background in social justice (even a blog post or some classes in college would be a no go). There is just a chance that the person is some sort of fanatic. It sounds awful, but from what I can tell that equates to having a ticking bomb ready to explode under my ass. I don't care what your race or your ethnicity is, if shit hits the fan bad things may happen, and the last thing I would want is to have a lawsuit for discrimination and a wave of bad publicity for my business. Aww, yes, I am a such an awful person. Well, sorry, and welcome to the real world.
  • Women's privilege (Score:4, Informative)

    by Sqreater ( 895148 ) on Tuesday February 28, 2017 @04:39PM (#53949099)
    This seems just another case of a women who has had a lifetime of women's privilege deference and accommodation running into the hard truths of equality in a tough work environment. The courts will probably force the feminization of the work environment--women's privilege at work once again. The result, of course, will be the destruction eventually of an aggressively creative and forward pushing company.
  • by bobm ( 53783 ) on Tuesday February 28, 2017 @05:01PM (#53949289)

    from the article:

    She is hopeful her lawsuit and public comments wonâ(TM)t end her career at a company she loves.

    Would a sane person really think that suing the company they work for won't impact their future with the company?

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