Tag Archives: Agreed

Russia offered to end war if Ukraine agreed not to join NATO: negotiator – Business Insider

  1. Russia offered to end war if Ukraine agreed not to join NATO: negotiator Business Insider
  2. ‘West Pushed Ukraine To…’: Zelensky Aide’s Bombshell Admission About Russia’s War | Details Hindustan Times
  3. Head of Ukrainian delegation at spring 2022 peace talks reports Russian delegation offered to end war if Ukraine abandoned NATO aspirations, says leaders had ’no trust’ Russia would follow through Meduza
  4. Ongoing conflict could have ended in 2022 if Ukraine agreed to remain neutral: Kyiv’s top MP Firstpost
  5. Russia offered to end its invasion of Ukraine if it dumped plans to join NATO, but Kyiv feared a double cross, Business Insider India
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Al Pacino has agreed to pay his girlfriend Noor Alfallah $30,000 a month in child support and another $110,000 for her to get her own place, court docs show – Yahoo Entertainment

  1. Al Pacino has agreed to pay his girlfriend Noor Alfallah $30,000 a month in child support and another $110,000 for her to get her own place, court docs show Yahoo Entertainment
  2. Al Pacino, 83, ordered to pay $30K a month in child support to 29-year-old girlfriend Fox News
  3. Al Pacino’s Child Support For His Baby With Noor Alfallah Is An Eye-Opener HuffPost
  4. Al Pacino to Pay $30,000 a Month in Child Support to Noor Alfallah: Documents PEOPLE
  5. Al Pacino ordered to shell out $30,000 monthly for child support to girlfriend Hindustan Times
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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EXCLUSIVE: Sophie Turner seen emerging from Taylor Swift’s NYC home with daughters after actress and husband Joe Jonas agreed to keep children in state amid custody battle – Daily Mail

  1. EXCLUSIVE: Sophie Turner seen emerging from Taylor Swift’s NYC home with daughters after actress and husband Joe Jonas agreed to keep children in state amid custody battle Daily Mail
  2. Taylor Swift loans Sophie Turner, kids an NYC apartment during bitter legal tangle with Joe Jonas Page Six
  3. Sophie Turner Makes Mom Jeans Chic on N.Y.C. Stroll amid Joe Jonas Divorce PEOPLE
  4. Sophie Turner wears wedding ring amid divorce battle, stays at Taylor Swift’s New York home with daughters Hindustan Times
  5. Taylor Swift is Lending Sophie Turner and Daughters Her NYC Apartment Amid Joe Jonas Divorce Entertainment Tonight
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Six of the Colorado River states agreed on water cuts. California did not

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For the second time in six months, states that depend on the Colorado River to sustain their farms and cities appear to have failed to reach an agreement on restricting water usage, setting up the prospect that the federal government will make unilateral cuts later this year.

Six of the seven Colorado River basin states sketched out a joint proposal for how they could meet the federal government’s demand to make unprecedented cuts to water usage as more than two decades of drought in the West have pushed crucial reservoirs to dangerously low levels.

But the largest water user, California, did not join them — an impasse that suggests the wrangling over how to conserve the dwindling water supply that serves 40 million people will continue in coming months. The Interior Department had asked states to contribute by Tuesday plans for how to voluntarily reduce water usage by 2 to 4 million acre feet — or up to one-third of the river’s annual average flow.

“Obviously, it’s not going swimmingly,” said Jeffrey Kightlinger, the former general manager of the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, a water provider that is a major player in the talks. “It’s pretty tough right now.”

The proposal by the six states — Arizona, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming — seeks to protect the major reservoirs in Lake Powell and Lake Mead from falling below critical levels, such as when the dams would no longer be able to generate electricity or at “dead pool,” when water would effectively be blocked from flowing out of these lakes. Before above-average snows in recent weeks, the Bureau of Reclamation was projecting that Lake Powell could start to reach such thresholds by this summer.

Officials fear ‘complete doomsday scenario’ for drought-stricken Colorado River

During the past two decades of drought, and particularly in recent years, the river’s flow has declined but states continue to consume more than the river provides, based on a framework established a century ago.

The proposal lays out potential new cuts for the states of the Southwest that lie downstream from the major reservoirs — Arizona, Nevada, and California — as well as the country of Mexico, which has treaty rights to a portion of the river’s water. The proposal would result in about 2 million acre feet of cuts — the low end of what the federal government has asked for — and would be largest for the biggest consumers of water: California and Arizona. As reservoir levels drop, the document suggests California, which has rights to 4.4 million acre feet of water, would need to cut more than 1 million acre feet.

California has offered to reduce just 400,000 acre feet. An acre foot is 326,000 gallons, or enough to cover an acre in water one foot deep. JB Hamby, chair of the Colorado River Board of California, told the Associated Press in a statement that the state “remains focused on practical solutions that can be implemented now to protect volumes of water in storage without driving conflict and litigation” and will submit its own plan.

The six other states made their case in a letter to the Bureau of Reclamation Monday.

In October 2022, Lake Powell was a quarter full due to a historic drought, which threatened power supplied to millions by the Glen Canyon Dam in Page, Ariz. (Video: John Farrell/The Washington Post)

“We recognize that over the past twenty-plus years there is simply far less water flowing into the Colorado River system than the amount that leaves it, and that we have effectively run out of storage to deplete,” the states wrote. The state representatives added that they would continue to work together and with the federal government and others “to reach consensus on how best to share the burden of protecting the system from which we all derive so many benefits.”

“This modeling proposal is a key step in the ongoing dialogue among the Seven Basin States as we continue to seek a collaborative solution to stabilize the Colorado River system,” Tom Buschatzke, director of the Arizona Department of Water Resources, said in a statement.

Reclamation is in the process of an environmental review of how to operate Glen Canyon and Hoover dams at low-water scenarios. By the summer, the process is expected to clarify the federal government’s legal authority to make unilateral cuts to states’ water allotments.

One of the central tensions of these complicated negotiations is how to balance cuts between farming regions against those in cities, including major population centers. Agriculture uses some 80 percent of the river’s water and also tends to have the most senior rights, some dating back to the 19th century. The way this “priority system” works, residents of Phoenix would lose water before vegetable farmers in Yuma. Those who grow alfalfa in Southern California’s Imperial and Coachella valleys would keep their water before people in parts of Los Angeles.

Arizona city cuts off a neighborhood’s water supply amid drought

Kightlinger, along with many other water experts and officials, say cuts of this magnitude and severity have to be shared, rather than doled out according to seniority.

“They can’t follow the priority system. That would be a disaster. That would be: We’re basically going to put all the cuts on the major share of the economy. That just simply can’t be reality,” he said.

But officials in these farming districts with long-standing water rights do not intend to give them up without a fight — or without compensation that meets their needs.

Alex Cardenas, the president of the board of directors of the Imperial Irrigation District, noted that the water rights among the farmers in his area of California near the border with Mexico predate the formation of the Bureau of Reclamation, which manages the river system. His water district uses about 2.6 million acre feet of water per year to irrigate more than 400,000 acres of farmland for alfalfa, grasses, and other crops.

“We stand behind the priority system on the river, and we also understand that there’s painful cuts that people need to make. But we will not serve as an emergency reservoir for uncontrollable, unsustainable urban sprawl,” Cardenas said. “We’re not going to wreck our local economy so that they can continue to grow their urban economy.”

As negotiations have progressed in recent months, the Imperial Irrigation District has offered to cut its usage by 250,000 acre feet — or about 10 percent. The Biden administration helped pave the way for that offer by pledging $250 million for environmental projects to address the dust-ravaged shorelines around the Salton Sea, California’s largest lake, that’s fed by agricultural runoff from the Imperial Valley.

Cardenas said that the prospect of a 10 percent cut to the region’s $5 billion agricultural economy would mean serious economic pain for a community that already suffers from high unemployment. But from the perspective of other states — even those cuts wouldn’t be nearly enough.

Negotiators have had a bit of help from nature to start the year. The rain and snowstorms that battered California in January have raised reservoir levels in the state and coated the Sierra Nevada mountains in snowpack that is 210 percent above normal for this time of year. The snowpack in the Rocky Mountains, the main source of runoff that feeds the Colorado River system, is also higher than normal but not by as much as in California.

California’s snowpack, aided by atmospheric rivers, could help drought

But the bountiful precipitation has also been a double-edged sword, creating a political challenge for negotiators trying to agree on painful cuts, according to analysts following the talks.

“If severe, extreme drought conditions continued then it’s easier for them to sell additional cuts,” said Michael J. Cohen, a senior researcher with the Pacific Institute and an expert on the Colorado River. “But there’s this public perception that look there’s flooding, why do we need to take additional actions now when there was so much water through all these recent storms.”

The past two years have also seen healthy winter snow accumulation in the Rockies only to have runoff levels into Lake Powell that were a fraction of normal, as terrain dried out by the warming climate absorbs more of the water before it can reach the reservoir. The water level in Lake Powell has fallen about a foot this year and currently stands 33 feet above the threshold where Glen Canyon Dam could not longer produce power.

“There’s a problem of aridification. But on top of that there’s a problem with the rules,” Cohen said. “The rules governing the system are not sustainable.”

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Israel’s Netanyahu says deal agreed with far-right to form gov’t | Israel-Palestine conflict News

Benjamin Netanyahu’s agreement sees him return to power as head of the most right-wing coalition in Israel’s history.

Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu said he has secured a deal to form a new government with hardline religious and far-right political partners, which will see him return to power as the head of the most right-wing coalition in Israel’s history.

Following his November 1 election win, Netanyahu secured a mandate to form a government backed by ultra-Orthodox Jewish parties and an extreme-right bloc that ran under the Religious Zionism alliance.

A deadline to conclude coalition talks had been set to expire at midnight on Wednesday.

Minutes before midnight, Netanyahu informed Israel’s President Isaac Herzog by phone that he had “been able to establish a government”, according to a statement from Netanyahu’s office.

It was not immediately clear when the new government would be sworn in. Netanyahu told Herzog he intended to do so “as soon as possible”.

“I have managed (to form a government),” he said on Twitter. A Herzog spokesperson confirmed the statement had been received.

Netanyahu, who is fighting corruption allegations in court, had already served as Israel’s premier longer than anyone in the country’s history – including a stint between 1996 and 1999 and a 12-year tenure from 2009 to 2021.

Among his most controversial moves to form his coalition has been a promise to give an expanded security ministry to the head of the ultra-nationalist Jewish Power party, Itamar Ben Gvir, who has a long history of using incendiary rhetoric against Palestinians.

The government roles Netanyahu has promised to hardliners such as Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich, from the far-right Religious Zionism party, have shocked Palestinians and liberal Israelis.

Ben-Gvir and Smotrich oppose Palestinian statehood and support extending Israeli control over the occupied West Bank.

Jewish Power party leader Itamar Ben-Gvir (left) following the announcement of exit polls in Israel’s general election in November 2022 [File: Corinna Kern/Reuters]

Ben-Gvir is expected to serve as security minister with authority over the police, while Smotrich’s Israeli settler party will have control over planning in the occupied West Bank, giving it wide powers over the lives of Palestinians and opening the door to an expansion of illegal Israeli settlements on Palestinian land.

Ben-Gvir also wants to take greater control over the police with legislation that would give him direct authority over policy matters normally decided by the police commissioner.

Another coalition partner Aryeh Deri, head of the ultra-Orthodox Shas party, is bidding to become finance minister, despite a conviction for tax fraud. He would take over the ministry for two years under a shared arrangement with Smotrich, who would serve for the first two years of the government’s term.

Also in the coalition is Avi Maoz – head of a small, religious, anti-LGBTQ faction – who has been placed in control of parts of Israel’s national education system and appointed a deputy minister in charge of “Jewish identity”.

The new government, which Netanyahu must reportedly present within a week, will take office after a year that has seen the worst levels of violence in the occupied West Bank in more than 10 years with more than 150 Palestinians killed by Israeli forces and some 20 Israeli killed.

Al Jazeera’s Rob McBride, reporting from West Jerusalem, said Netanyahu’s partners had, until now, been on the fringes of Israel’s political spectrum and Palestinians seem to be preparing for the worst.

“No one is expecting this government to follow any paths towards peace,” McBride said.

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EXCLUSIVE G7 coalition has agreed to set fixed price for Russian oil -sources

WASHINGTON/LONDON, Nov 4 (Reuters) – The Group of Seven rich nations and Australia have agreed to set a fixed price when they finalize a price cap on Russian oil later this month, rather than adopting a floating rate, sources said on Thursday.

U.S. officials and G7 countries have been in intense negotiations in recent weeks over the unprecedented plan to put a price cap on sea-borne oil shipments, which is scheduled to take effect on Dec. 5 – to ensure EU and U.S. sanctions aimed at limiting Moscow’s ability to fund its invasion of Ukraine do not throttle the global oil market.

“The Coalition has agreed the price cap will be a fixed price that will be reviewed regularly rather than a discount to an index,” said a coalition source, who was not authorized to speak publicly. “This will increase market stability and simplify compliance to minimize the burden on market participants.”

The initial price itself has not been set, but should be in coming weeks, multiple sources said. Coalition partners agreed to regularly review the fixed price and revise it as needed, the source said, without disclosing further details.

Pegging the price as a discount to some index would have resulted in too much volatility and potential price swings, the source added.

The coalition worried that a floating price pegged below the Brent international benchmark might enable Russian President Vladimir Putin to game the mechanism by reducing supply, a second source with knowledge of the discussions said.

Putin could benefit from a floating price system because the price for his country’s oil would also rise if Brent spiked due to a cut in oil from Russia, one of the world’s largest petroleum producers. The downside of the agreed fixed price system is that it will require more meetings of the coalition and bureaucracy to review it regularly, the source said.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and other G7 officials argue the price cap, set to begin Dec. 5 on crude and Feb. 5 on oil products, will squeeze funding to Russia without cutting supply to consumers. Russia has said it will refuse to ship oil to countries that set price caps.

Shipping services are eager to see more details about the G7 plan which is due to take effect in a month.

A steady price cap could enable insurers to more confidently roll over contracts and initiate new ones without fear that the price could be adjusted by the countries buying Russian oil, which could have potentially exposed insurers to sanctions.

No immediate comment was available from Treasury or the embassies of coalition members, which include the G7 rich nations, the European Union and Australia.

Separately, The Wall Street Journal reported on Friday that the United States and its allies had agreed on further details on which sales of Russian oil will face the price cap.

Each load of seaborne Russian oil will only be subject to the price cap when first sold to a buyer on land, the countries determined. Reuters could not immediately verify the report which cited people familiar with the matter.

Reporting by Andrea Shalal and Timothy Gardner in Washington and Noah Browning in London; editing by Heather Timmons and Matthew Lewis

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Archives asked for records after Trump lawyer agreed they should be returned, email says

About two dozen boxes of presidential records stored in then-president Donald Trump’s White House residence were not returned to the National Archives and Records Administration in the final days of his term even after Archives officials were told by a Trump lawyer that the documents should be returned, according to an email from the top lawyer at the record-keeping agency.

“It is also our understanding that roughly two dozen boxes of original presidential records were kept in the Residence of the White House over the course of President Trump’s last year in office and have not been transferred to NARA, despite a determination by Pat Cipollone in the final days of the administration that they need to be,” wrote Gary Stern, the agency’s chief counsel, in an email to Trump lawyers in May 2021, according to a copy reviewed by The Washington Post.

Cipollone was the former White House counsel designated by Trump as one of his representatives to the Archives. A spokeswoman for Cipollone declined to comment Wednesday.

The previously unreported email — sent about 100 days after the former president left office with the subject line “Need for Assistance re Presidential Records” — shows just how early Archives officials realized that many documents were missing from the Trump White House. It also illustrates the myriad efforts Archives officials made to have the documents returned over an 18-month period, culminating with an FBI raid earlier this month at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence in Florida.

Stern, the chief counsel at the Archives, does not say in the email how he determined that the boxes were in Trump’s possession. He wrote that he also had consulted another Trump lawyer during the final days of Trump’s presidency — without any luck. “I had also raised this concern with Scott in the final weeks,” Stern writes in the email, referring to Trump lawyer Scott Gast, who is also copied on the email.

In the email, Stern again asks for the documents from Trump’s residence to be returned.

Gast did not respond to a request for comment. A Trump spokesman did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The Archives did not respond to a request for comment.

Stern’s email to three Trump lawyers takes an almost pleading tone at times. Cipollone is not copied on the email, which is sent to Gast and two longtime Cipollone deputies.

Stern cites at least two high-profile documents that the Archives knew at the time were missing — letters from North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and a letter from former president Barack Obama at the beginning of Trump’s presidency.

“We know things are very chaotic, as they always are in the course of a one-term transition,” Stern writes. “ … But it is absolutely necessary that we obtain and account for all presidential records.”

Stern did not state in the email what the Archives believed were in the boxes in the White House residence.

Throughout the fall of 2021, Stern continued to urge multiple Trump advisers to help the Archives get the records back, according to people familiar with the conversations, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe private conversations. Trump only decided to give some of the documents back after Stern told Trump officials that the Archives would soon have to notify Congress, and Stern told Trump advisers that he did not want to escalate and notify Congress, these people said.

“’We just want everything back’ was his message,” according to one Trump adviser.

Trump then returned 15 boxes of documents to the Archives in early 2022, and Archives officials urged Trump’s team to continue looking for more material at the beachfront club. But they also referred the matter to the Justice Department after realizing there were hundreds of pages of classified material in the boxes returned to the National Archives.

After extensive interviews with Trump aides, FBI officials raided Mar-a-Lago Aug. 8 and seized an additional 11 sets of classified records after executing a search warrant — adding to the large volume of secret government documents recovered from the former president’s home.

The Post has previously reported on the former president’s long-standing habit of retiring to his private residence in the White House with official documents that regularly piled up. In interviews with former White House staffers, they recalled sending boxes of disorganized materials to the residence with Trump’s body man, at the then-president’s request.

Trump and advisers have claimed that there was a standing declassification order for all documents taken to the residence, but multiple senior former administration officials have said they knew of no such order. Trump has also lamented to friends that he did not give the documents back because they were his personal property and did not belong to the U.S. government.

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Russian missiles strike Odesa one day after grain export deal agreed

Serhii Bratchuk, a spokesman for the Odessa military administration, said two missiles hit the infrastructure of the port and two were shot down by Ukraine’s air defense.

At least six explosions were heard in Odesa, according to Ukrainian member of parliament Oleksiy Goncharenko.

It comes one day after ministers from both Ukraine and Russia signed an agreement — brokered by the United Nations and Turkey in Istanbul — to allow grain exports from Ukrainian Black Sea ports aimed at easing the global food crisis sparked by war.

“That’s all you need to know about deals with Russia,” Estonia’s Prime Minister Kaja Kallas added on Twitter. The EU’s High Representative for Foreign Affairs Josep Borrell said the bloc “strongly condemns” the attack.

“Striking a target crucial for grain export a day after the signature of Istanbul agreements is particularly reprehensible & again demonstrates Russia’s total disregard for international law & commitments,” Borrell wrote Saturday on Twitter.

“Russia agreed to some deal on grain export, but immediately after this attacked it — showing they want to continue to threaten the world’s food security,” Ukrainian member of parliament Oleksiy Goncharenko said Saturday in an interview with CNN.

“There will be new campaigns where [Putin] will definitely attack Odesa and the only answer of the world for this is to give weaponry to Ukraine – finally to give Ukraine long range missiles, fighters. And that is the only answer for this aggression from Putin and to restore international order,” he said.

The strikes hit a pumping station at the port, Serhii Bratchuk, spokesman for the Odesa regional military administration, said Saturday.

“Today, 4 rockets hit Odesa. Thank God that our units of the air defense forces destroyed 2 missiles on approach. Two more missiles flew to the port, to the infrastructure facility,” Bratchuk said in an interview with Ukrainian media. “This is a pumping station, which is located on the territory of the Odesa port.”

Bratchuk said there were no casualties and that the grain stored there was not damaged. He also said the strikes were launched from a warship.

‘Outrageous’ attack

Friday’s deal promised to unblock ports on the Black Sea to allow the safe passage of grain and oilseeds — some of Ukraine’s most important exports.

Russia has so far been blocking maritime access to those ports, meaning that millions of tons of Ukrainian grain has not been exported to the many countries that rely on it.

“Today, there is a beacon on the Black Sea. A beacon of hope — a beacon of possibility — a beacon of relief — in a world that needs it more than ever,” UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said Friday at the signing ceremony, which was attended by Ukrainian and Russian ministers.

But Saturday’s attack led to anger and concern over the future of that deal.

“This is all you have to know about “agreements” with the Russians. Explosions in the seaport of #Odesa. One day after the agreement with #Turkey and #UN was signed re export of #Ukraine’s #grain under which #Russia has committed not to shell the port,” Ukrainian parliament member Solomiia Bobrovska tweeted.

Brachuk has advised residents to stay in shelters as the air alerts continue.

“This was a glimmer of hope,” Samantha Power, Administrator of the United States Agency for International Development, said Saturday in relation to the grain deal.

“Now, we just get word that Russian forces have bombed the port infrastructure of Odesa, the very port infrastructure that is needed to move these grains out on the black sea,” Power said.

“This is grotesque and it’s just the latest indication of the cold indifference Vladimir Putin has for the cost of the war in Ukraine — a manmade war that he created for no reason; the cost in Ukraine to human life there; and the ripple effects all around the world,” she said.

Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar said Saturday that Russia claimed it had “nothing to do” with the strikes.

“The Russians told us in certain terms that they have nothing to do with this attack. They monitor the situation very closely and in detail,” Akar said in a video statement.

“It really concerned us that such an event happened after we signed the deal on grain shipments. We are disturbed as well. But we continue to fulfill our responsibilities about this agreement and we also expressed in our meetings that we are in favor of the parties to continue their cooperation here calmly and patiently,” said Akar, who represented Turkey at the signing of the grain deal in Istanbul on Friday.

Akar also said Turkey received information about the strikes from Ukraine and “then we talked by phone with the Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov and the Ukrainian Infrastructure Minister Oleksandr Kubrakov, with whom we were already in contact.”

“They stated that one of the missile attacks hit one of the silos there, and the other one fell in an area close to the silo, but the important thing there is that there is no problem with the loading capacity and ability of the docks, and that the activities there can continue,” he said.

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Google agreed to pay $118 million to settle a gender discrimination lawsuit

Google’s parent company Alphabet will pay $118 million to 15,500 current and former female employees in order to settle a class action lawsuit that has been in the works for five years.

The plaintiffs in the case account for a broad range of roles within the company, including managers, engineers, sales representatives and at least one pre school teacher. 

They accused Google of putting overqualified women in roles that were paid less, denying promotions to women and generally paying female employees on average close to $17,000 less than men. 

Google is one of the many tech giants who have experienced labor problems relating to pay, workplace culture and hiring practices in recent years. Others who have faced lawsuits include Uber, Twitter and Microsoft.  

In addition to the money, the court ordered Google to use a third party expert to analyze the company’s HR practices and an independent labor economist will be used to examine the tech giant’s pay equity for the next three years.

The deal must be certified by a judge to move forward, a hearing is scheduled for June 21. 

The lawsuit was originally filed in September 2017.

Four of the plaintiffs have been named publicly. Lamar (left) was a pre-school teacher at the Google Children’s Center in Palo Alto while Holly Pease (right) worked at Google for more than 10 years in numerous roles including as a senior manager of business systems integration and manager of corporate data

Kelli Wisuri (left) worked as a Google Brand Evangelist among other sales roles during her 2 and a half years at the company. Kelly Ellis (right) worked as a software engineer at Google’s Mountain View office for four years starting in 2010

In May 2021, the case elevated to a class action suit by a judge in San Francisco. 

This meant that the plaintiffs could be grouped together rather than being forced to take individual cases against Google. 

The plaintiffs accused Google of being in violation of California’s Equal Pay Act. 

Four of the plaintiffs are named in the lawsuit, Kelly Ellis, Holly Pease, Kelli Wisuri and Heidi Lamar. All formerly worked for Google in California.

In the lawsuit, the plaintiffs alleged that women were paid approximately $16,794 less than men in similar roles per year.  

Ellis worked as a software engineer at Google’s Mountain View office for four years starting in 2010. She was in a senior manager position when she left the company in 2014.

Ellis cited Google’s ‘sexist culture’ as the reason for her departure. 

In the lawsuit, Ellis said that she was paid as an entry level engineer when she joined the company despite having four years experience. 

She alleged that a male colleague who graduated from college the same year as she did and had less experience was paid more. 

In 2018, a San Francisco judge imposed a restraining order on a former Google contractor who wrote on Twitter that Ellis deserved to be raped for suing the company.

Google is one of the many tech giants who have experienced labor problems relating to pay, workplace culture and hiring practices in recent years

Kelly Ellis (left), a former Google software engineer who was one of three women to file a lawsuit against the company in September over unequal pay, persuaded a San Francisco court on Wednesday to grant a restraining order against Alex Gulakov (right)

Alex Gulakov tweeted to Ellis on January 2: ‘You deserve to be raped fat worthless c***. Roofies from the deep web are easy to get and it’s time to shut your c*ckhole.’ 

Ellis alleged that Gulakov harassed her in a phone call over Google Hangouts in which he called her a ‘feminazi.’ 

Pease worked at Google for more than 10 years in numerous roles including as a senior manager of business systems integration and manager of corporate data. 

Pease was quoted by her lawyers saying that she is ‘optimistic that the actions Google has agreed to take as part of this settlement will ensure more equity for women.’ 

She charged Google with leading the charge to ‘ensure inclusion and equity for women in tech.’

Wisuri worked as a Google Brand Evangelist among other sales roles during her 2 and a half years at the company. She resigned in 2015. 

Lamar was a pre-school teacher at the Google Children’s Center in Palo Alto. She was the the last person to join the lawsuit, doing so in 2018 having previously filed her own legal action against the company. 

Lamar, who has a master’s degree in education, said in documents she was paid $18.51 per hour while a male colleague without a master’s received $21 per hour. 

She added, as did others in the lawsuit, that in her interview she was asked about her previous salary and received that amount. 

The practice of asking potential employees about their previous salary was outlawed in California in 2018.  

According to a statement from the plaintiff’s law firm, Lieff Cabraser Heimann and Berinstein: ‘[The plaintiffs] believe these programs will help ensure that women are not paid less than their male counterparts who perform substantially similar work, and that Google’s challenged leveling practices are equitable.’ 

In February 2021, Google was forced for fork over $3.8 million to female engineers who argued that they had been paid less than male counterparts and for discrimination against hiring Asian women.  

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Investors think unlikely Musk buys Twitter at agreed $44 bln price

May 10 (Reuters) – The stock market took the view for the first time on Tuesday that it was unlikely that Elon Musk will acquire Twitter Inc (TWTR.N) for $44 billion, as he originally agreed.

The implied probability of the deal closing at that price fell below 50% when Twitter shares hit $46.75, based on the $54.20 deal price and Twitter’s shares having closed at $39.31 on April 1, the last trading day before Musk revealed he had amassed a stake in the social media company.

Twitter shares fell as much as 3% to touch a low of $46.50 in afternoon trading.

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Elon Musk attends the opening ceremony of the new Tesla Gigafactory for electric cars in Gruenheide, Germany, March 22, 2022. Patrick Pleul/Pool via REUTERS

Musk, the world’s richest person and also the chief executive of electric car maker Tesla Inc (TSLA.O), on April 25 clinched a deal to buy the social media platform. read more Twitter said at the time that Musk secured $25.5 billion of debt and margin loan financing and was providing a $21 billion equity commitment.

Musk, who is worth $268 billion according to Forbes, had said he was not primarily concerned with the economics of Twitter.

“Having a public platform that is maximally trusted and broadly inclusive is extremely important to the future of civilization. I don’t care about the economics at all,” he said in a recent public talk.

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Compiled by the Global Finance & Markets Breaking News team
Editing by Matthew Lewis and Chizu Nomiyama

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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