Activision Blizzard's studios will have the power to determine their own return-to-office policies despite the company leaders' decision to drop its vaccine mandate. That's what Activision Blizzard executive Brian Bulatao said in a follow-up email after the company caught flak following the leak of his first one. In that first missive, Bulatao announced that the the company is lifting its vaccine mandate prior to US employees' return to office in the coming months. Not everyone's happy with the change, as you'd expect, and a group of workers scheduled a walkout for April 4th.
The ABK Workers Alliance, a group that formed after California's fair employment agency filed a sexual harassment lawsuit against the gaming titan, is staging a walkout to demand the "immediate reversal to lifting the vaccine requirement." It also wants the company to offer remote work as a permanent solution and to give each employee the freedom to decide whether to work remotely or in the office. An ABK Workers Alliance rep told Polygon that previous meetings with the company all ended with the decision to continue the vaccine mandate for workers returning to office. "This recent change was not run by any employees before being announced," they said.
Bulatao sent out his second email following the walkout's announcement, telling employees that the company's individual studios can "determine the processes and policies that work best for their employees and locations based on local conditions and risk." Also, returning to office remains a voluntary decision at this time. According to Bloomberg reporter Jason Schreier, Blizzard Entertainment president Mike Ybarra told staff in an email that the developer will continue its vaccine requirements "for at
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