Google has settled a class action lawsuit filed in 2022 by former employee April Curley and other Black workers alleging the company discriminated in hiring, pay, and promotion, according to The Economic Times. The settlement includes pay equity reviews, pay transparency measures, and limits on mandatory arbitration in employment disputes through at least August 2026. According to civil rights lawyer Ben Crump, Google did not admit liability as part of the agreement.
Settlement Details and Allegations
The case covered current and former Black or "Black+" employees in job levels 3-6 in California from March 18, 2018 to December 31, 2023, and in New York from October 15, 2017 to December 31, 2023.
Plaintiffs alleged that Google operated a "two-tiered" system that placed qualified Black and multiracial workers in lower-level roles than their peers. The suit stated that hiring managers relied on subjective standards, including whether Black candidates seemed "not 'Googly' enough," which plaintiffs characterized as a "dog whistle for race discrimination."
The complaint also covered retaliation against employees who raised concerns about bias. Plaintiffs said Google steered Black employees into lower-paid and lower-level roles, blocked advancement, and fostered a hostile workplace for workers who spoke up.
Broader Implications for Workplace Discrimination Law
The settlement adds to legal pressure on companies to build measurable systems for hiring and pay that can be audited. Google agreed to regular pay equity reviews, audits, and compensation transparency steps.
This aligns with recent legal developments, including the Supreme Court's unanimous ruling in Ames v. Ohio Department of Youth Services, which determined that Title VII—the main U.S. federal law banning workplace discrimination—applies equally across demographic groups and does not place extra burdens on "majority" group plaintiffs.
For employers, the ruling raises expectations for workplace systems that deliver equal outcomes across groups, not only policies aimed at stopping intentional bias. Business leaders increasingly face rising expectations for trackable evidence that hiring, pay, and promotion processes are fair and applied consistently.