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In Big Tech Layoffs, Cooks and Janitors Are Hit Hardest

Submitted by ckanon@abi.org on
For years, tech giants like Facebook and Google have been known for generous perks like free food and massages, outfitting their sprawling campuses in Silicon Valley and beyond to attract the best engineering talent and keep them in the office as long as possible, The Washington Post reported. Many of those services — plus others, from janitorial tasks to content moderation and engineering — are provided by an army of largely invisible contractors, who are employed by outside firms and don’t receive the same benefits or compensation as direct employees. Now, amid steep tech layoffs and cutbacks, due in large part to weaker spending on digital ads, those workers are some of the most vulnerable. Google, in an email to staff earlier this year, said it would cut down on the number of “microkitchens” that dot its offices and are stocked by contract workers. Others who provide support for the company’s army of engineers are being hit, too, as the firm cuts down on the free perks that defined its work culture for years. When Google laid off 12,000 employees in January, among them were two dozen massage therapists. Tech companies often tout the generous benefits they offer the full-time workers they lay off, including several months of severance pay, post-employment health care, immigration assistance and job search resources. But many temporary workers and subcontractors don’t get the same lifeline when tech companies cut or modify their jobs.