TSMC was sued for discrimination: it is easier for a Taiwanese to get a job at a chip factory in the USA than for an American

Current and former TSMC employees, including its chief recruiting officer, have sued the company, accusing it of discrimination in hiring practices. The world’s largest contract chip manufacturer, according to the plaintiffs, gave preference to employees who were citizens of Taiwan to the detriment of American workers.

Image source: tsmc.com

The lawsuit was filed on behalf of Deborah Howington, director of human resources, last August. She claims to have witnessed HR create a workplace in which “non-Asian employees and non-Taiwanese nationals are subject to greater scrutiny than similarly situated Asian (including Taiwanese) employees.” Subsequently, about a dozen more TSMC employees joined the lawsuit.

TSMC’s human resources department in Taiwan sends the company’s U.S. division resumes of candidates who have already been vetted and are available to work in the U.S. The U.S. division then “simply hires these Asian/Taiwanese applicants even if no job openings were available in the U.S.,” the suit says. Knowledge of Mandarin or Chinese was indicated as desirable, even if it was not required by the position; this criterion was used to weed out employees who did not speak one of these languages ​​and to limit their career advancement. The company’s visa-holding Taiwanese workers were used to eliminate union positions to the detriment of American employees, the plaintiffs allege.

Previously, media reported that TSMC was having difficulty adapting to American work culture – the company’s labor practices discouraged American workers, and in order to meet deadlines, it was forced to bring several hundred of its employees from Taiwan. To date, few actual CHIP Act payments have been made, and it is unclear whether discrimination lawsuits against American workers will affect the release of funds to the Taiwanese company.

admin

Share
Published by
admin

Recent Posts

A demo of Dispatch, a comedy game about a superhero agency from the former developers of Tales from the Borderlands and The Wolf Among Us, has been released on Steam

Developers from the American AdHoc Studio, founded by former Telltale Games, Ubisoft and Night School…

22 hours ago

Digma DP-FHD800A LCD Full HD Projector Review: A Modern Approach

When you think about a home theater, you immediately imagine bulky projectors with a bunch…

22 hours ago

Lian Li Introduces HydroShift II LCD-C Liquid Cooling System with 360mm Radiator and Three Configurations

Lian Li has introduced a series of maintenance-free liquid cooling systems HydroShift II LCD-C. It…

22 hours ago

Apple: App Store App Developers to Earn $406 Billion in 2024

Amid mounting pressure from U.S. regulators, Apple has released the results of an independent study…

22 hours ago

ASRock Admits Its Motherboards Break Ryzen 9000 Processors

Following a report from YouTube channel Tech Yes City that ASRock linked Ryzen 9000 processor…

22 hours ago

Apple to Change OS Numbering: iOS 26 to Come This Year Instead of iOS 19

Apple is preparing a large-scale rebranding of its line of operating systems. This was reported…

2 days ago