Google added more than 70,000 employees during Eileen Naughton's time as head of human resources.
Google
has confirmed that head of human resources Eileen Naughton was
stepping away from her job as "vice president of people
operations" at the internet company.
"We're
grateful to Eileen for all she's done and look forward to her next
chapter at Google," Sundar Pichai, the head of Google and its
parent company Alphabet, said in a statement on Monday. Google added
more than 70,000 employees during Naughton's time as head of human
resources, according to Pichai.
Naughton
said that she would work with Pichai and chief financial officer Ruth
Porat to find a successor.
"My
husband and I have decided—after six years on the road, first in
London and now San Francisco—to return home to New York to be
closer to our family," Naughton said. In recent years, the
Google workplace has been disrupted by employee opposition to
top-level decisions ranging from forging contracts with the US
military to tailoring a version of the search engine for China.
Google
in November fired four employees on the grounds they had violated
data security policies, but the tech titan was accused of persecuting
them for trying to unionise staff.
The
dismissals of the quartet—dubbed the "Thanksgiving Four"
on social media—deepened staff-management tensions at a company
once seen as a paradigm of Silicon Valley freedoms but now embroiled
in numerous controversies. One of the workers fired was connected to
a petition condemning Google for working with the US customs and
border patrol agency, which has been involved in President Donald
Trump's crackdown on illegal immigration.
Google
employees have also openly opposed the company pursuing contracts to
put its technology to work for the US military. In 2018, Google
employees poured out of premises at its Mountain View campus and
around the world to protest the company's handling of sexual
misconduct allegations.
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