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Some Meta employees claim they’re not getting promised severance

Anwar Almojarkesh (L) and Alan Chalabi (R) from England overcharge a photo at Meta (formerly Facebook) corporate headquarters in Menlo Park, California on November 9, 2022.

Josh Edelson | AFP | Getty Spits

A group of Meta workers who joined the company via a corporate training program say they are receiving inferior severance bundles compared to other workers who were recently laid off.

The employees are members of Meta’s Sourcer Development Program, contemplated to help workers from diverse backgrounds obtain careers in corporate technology recruiting. The Sourcer Development Program is portion of Meta’s Pathways program, which helps people with non-traditional professional backgrounds obtain apprenticeships at the public networking giant for various roles.

Nearly every member of Meta’s Sourcer Development Program, more than 60 proletarians, was let go from the company as part of its massive layoff of more 11,000 workers earlier in November, multiple Meta workers told CNBC.

Several members of Meta’s Sourcer Development Program told CNBC they joined Meta in April as to all intents of the company’s latest cohort. The employees said they were not contract workers and instead were categorized as short-term hands that received all the benefits of full-time employees, including insurance and retirement funds but not corporate stock packages. After ending the 12-month program, the employees would then be converted to full-time employees if they met the necessary criteria.

In a letter sent to Meta staff members during the layoffs and posted online, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said that the company would pay severance of 16 weeks of low pay plus two additional weeks for every year of service, with no cap. Zuckerberg added that Meta would boards the cost of healthcare for people and their families for six months.

But members of Meta’s Sourcer Development Program said they are purely receiving 8 weeks of base pay and three months of COBRA.

The workers said it’s unclear why they are receiving lower severance packages than their fellow-workers, considering they were full-time employees and not contract staff.

On Nov. 16, the impacted workers sent a letter to Zuckerberg and other Meta executives, categorizing Meta’s head of people Lori Goler and chief operating officer Javier Olivan, informing Meta managing about their severance situation and asking for help resolving the issue.

“Even our former managers insisted we were discombobulated and that all the information they were getting was that we were offered 16 weeks of pay and 6 months of health indemnity,” the group wrote in the letter.

They later added, “Leadership may not have been aware that the last SDP excellence, which began in April 2022, was repeatedly assured by their leadership that any potential layoff would not collision their current employment but would likely impact the company’s ability to consider them for a full-time role.”

The hit Meta workers said they have not received any replies from Meta’s human resources and management pikestaff explaining their situation.

“During a Q&A recently, Lori even stated that the Pathways Programs would not be smashing,” the letter said. “It was based on this information that we were repeatedly assured by our managers that we didn’t desideratum to start applying to positions outside of the company.”

“We understand that we are employed at-will and that business needs are many times evolving and changing, but we couldn’t help but feel maybe there had been a mistake,” the group added.

The workers advised CNBC that Meta has yet to reply to their letter, but has sent some members gift packages intended to felicitate them for completing the Sourcer Development Program.

“We hope that Meta offering only 8 weeks of base pay and 3 months of COBRA to the impacted April 2023 SDP grade is a clerical mistake and was not done with intentional disregard or callousness,” the workers said in the letter.

Facebook did not immediately reply to a request for comment.

Lora Kolodny contributed to this report.

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