World

Apple to pay RM115 mil settlement over discrimination allegations

Sum covers backpay, civil penalties

Updated 2 years ago · Published on 10 Nov 2023 7:10PM

Apple to pay RM115 mil settlement over discrimination allegations
Under the agreement, Apple will pay up to US$25 million in backpay and civil penalties to settle allegations that the company illegally discriminated in hiring and recruitment against US citizens, as well as certain non-US citizens whose permission to live in and work in the country does not expire. – AFP pic, November 10, 2023

SAN JOSE – US technology giant Apple agreed to pay US$25 million (RM115 million) to settle allegations that it engaged in discriminatory hiring practices, the US Justice Department (DoJ) said yesterday, reported German news agency (dpa).

Under the agreement, Apple will pay up to US$25 million in backpay and civil penalties to settle allegations that the company illegally discriminated in hiring and recruitment against US citizens, as well as certain non-US citizens whose permission to live in and work in the country does not expire.

The settlement resolves the DoJ’s determination that the company violated anti-discrimination requirements of the Immigration and Nationality Act during its recruitment for positions falling under the permanent labour certification programme (PERM). 

The PERM programme is administered by the US labour and homeland security departments. 

It allows employers to sponsor workers for lawful permanent resident status in the US after completing recruitment and meeting other requirements. 

Any US employer that utilises the PERM programme cannot illegally discriminate in hiring or recruitment based on citizenship or immigration status.

The DoJ’s investigation, which started in February 2019, found that Apple did not advertise positions it sought to fill through the PERM programme on its external job website, even though its standard practice was to post other job positions on this website. 

It also required all PERM position applicants to mail paper applications, even though the company permitted electronic applications for other positions.

In some instances, Apple did not consider certain applications for PERM positions from its employees if those applications were submitted electronically, as opposed to paper applications submitted through the mail. 

These less effective recruitment procedures nearly always resulted in few or no applications to PERM positions from applicants whose permission to work does not expire. – Bernama-dpa, November 10, 2023

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