DEI Under Fire is our monthly series that keeps you up-to-date on the latest DEI announcements and changes from the nation’s leading companies.
This month, Reuters reported that some retailers, including Target, Amazon, and Tractor Supply, have ended their DEI initiatives in writing but are quietly maintaining select efforts, like funding LGBTQ+ Pride and anti-racism events and backing resource groups for underrepresented staff workers.
Here are some of the latest changes we think you should know about. Remember to revisit this page throughout March for updates.
Companies are listed in alphabetical order.
Google removed language associated with DEI from its annual report. Melonie Parker, Google’s former head of diversity, stated that the company was “updating” programs that had “DEI content,” according to The Guardian.
This corresponds with an update Google Chief People Officer Fiona Cicconi shared in February. In an email Q&A viewed by Business Insider, Cicconi said that Google staff will be “evaluating programs, trainings, and initiatives, and will update them as needed, including those that raise risk, or that aren’t as impactful as we’d hoped.”
Salesforce
On Wednesday, March 5, the San Francisco-based software giant filed its annual financial disclosures, removing language explaining how some executive compensation was linked to employee diversity measures. Business Insider reported that it also excludes any language detailing diversity and inclusion as core company values, replaced with text focusing on equality.
“We value the equality of every individual at our company and in our communities and are dedicated to fostering a workplace that complies with these protections, creating an inclusive culture where every individual feels seen, heard and valued,” the company said in its filing.
Verizon
Verizon Communications Inc. has faced pushback from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) for upholdings its DEI commitments. FCC Chairman Brendan Carr urged the telecom carrier to reverse its encouragement of DEI in corporate values and training materials, as stated by Bloomberg. He said he’s “pleased with the progress that different companies are making on this front” but is “concerned by the apparent lack of progress at Verizon.”
Victoria Secret
Victoria’s Secret & Co. stopped its promotion goal for Black workers and changed its language on diversity, equity and inclusion. Language associated with DEI initiatives, with text on “inclusion and belonging,” is now archived, and a section of the website on supplier diversity has also been removed, according to Business of Fashion.
Chief executive officer Hillary Super told workers in a recent memo that the company will “ensure our global team is inclusive of a wide range of backgrounds, experiences and perspectives.” She also pledged “a culture of fairness and opportunity for all.”
Image: Antoinedigital
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