Meta Must Face Lawsuit Claiming It Prefers Cheaper Foreign Workers
U.S. Magistrate Judge Laurel Beeler in San Francisco said three U.S. citizens who accused Meta of refusing to hire them though they were qualified may pursue a proposed class action.
Meta and its lawyers did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The plaintiffs — information technology worker Purushothaman Rajaram and software engineer Ekta Bhatia, both naturalized U.S. citizens, and data scientist Qun Wang — said they each applied for several Meta jobs between 2020 and 2024, but were turned down because of Meta’s “systematic preference” for visa holders.
Meta, based in Menlo Park, California, said there was no proof it intended to discriminate, or would have hired the plaintiffs if they were not U.S. citizens.
But the judge cited statistics that 15% of Meta’s U.S. workforce holds H-1B visas, which typically go to foreign professionals, compared with 0.5% of the overall workforce.
She also cited Meta’s October 2021 agreement to pay up to $14.25 million, including a civil fine, to settle federal government claims it routinely refused to consider American workers for jobs it reserved for temporary visa holders.
“These allegations support the plaintiffs’ overall complaint that they were not hired because Meta favors H-1B visa holders,” Beeler wrote.
The government had sued Meta in December 2020, seven weeks before President Donald Trump ended his first White House term.
“We are hopeful that the lawsuit will help remedy the favoritism towards visa workers that is common in the tech industry,” Daniel Low, a lawyer for the three plaintiffs, said in an email. “Fully addressing the issue will require additional enforcement or legislative reform.”
Beeler had dismissed an earlier version of the lawsuit, which named only Rajaram as a plaintiff, in November 2022.
A divided federal appeals court revived the case last June, saying a Civil War-era law barring discrimination in contracts based on “alienage” protected U.S. citizens from bias.
Many conservative groups have cited that law, Section 1981 of the Civil Rights Act of 1866, in challenging diversity initiatives in the workplace, which Trump also opposes.
The case is Rajaram et al v Meta Platforms Inc, U.S. District Court, Northern District of California, No. 22-02920.
(Reporting by Stempel in New YorkEditing by Bill Berkrot)
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