Elon Musk’s alleged penchant for not paying bills is catching up with him. In the wake of numerous lawsuits claiming the world’s richest man failed to pay severance owed to many of the 6,000 employees he fired after acquiring Twitter. On Monday, CNBC reported that the tech company now known as X is facing some 2,200 arbitration cases filed by ex-employees, which come with $3.5 million in required fees—an amount that doesn’t even include the actual severance owed to those Musk let go.

In October, shortly after taking Twitter’s reins, Musk laid off more than half of its employees, promising most at least two months’ salary plus a week’s pay for every year they’d worked at the firm. Thousands claim that they haven’t received a single dime, and ex-employees have since filed several lawsuits seeking their promised benefits.

  • The Giant Korean
    link
    English
    51 year ago

    What’s that come out to, around? 4 weeks pay per employee?

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      61 year ago

      Well, minimum 2 months per employee plus the 4 weeks. Let’s figure an average salary of $80k. 6000 employees with an average tenure of 4 years. Let’s go ahead and round that to 3 months salary. So he’s paying the equivalent of 1500 employee’s average salary. That works out to about $120m.

      I think my salary estimate is low there, and I have no idea what the tenure of the employees would be. Either way, not a small sum for a company that’s barely treading water.

      • The Giant Korean
        link
        English
        91 year ago

        I am gyessing that engineers at Twitter were probably making around $150k per year, give or take.

        • mosiacmango
          link
          fedilink
          7
          edit-2
          1 year ago

          I would guess 150-250k.

          Twitter was known for lower pay (and a lower pace) than the big names, but it’s still the bay area.

      • ripcord
        link
        fedilink
        21 year ago

        $80k/year*.25year*2200 = $44m in this case, though like you said your salary estimate is probably low

        • AreaSIX
          link
          fedilink
          11 year ago

          1500 = 6000 employees multiplied by 0.25 already. No need to multiply with .25 again.

    • @dmonzel
      link
      -11 year ago

      Literally the post:

      … X is facing some 2,200 arbitration cases filed by ex-employees, which come with $3.5 million in required fees-an amount that doesn’t even include the actual severance owed to those Musk let go.

      • @Shikadi
        link
        61 year ago

        That didn’t answer the question

        • @dmonzel
          link
          -7
          edit-2
          1 year ago

          Considering that number isn’t the amount of severance pay, it kinda did.

          • @Shikadi
            link
            11 year ago

            They were asking about the severance pay though? Did you reply to the wrong comment?

            • @dmonzel
              link
              11 year ago

              The way the comments read, they were asking if the amount that was given ($3.5mm) was for severance. I am pointing out that it is not, that it’s for fees only.

      • The Giant Korean
        link
        English
        51 year ago

        That’s the penalties, not the amount owed to the employees.