Her role was "eliminated" - then handed to someone who asked her how to do the job
She was told her job was being eliminated. Her old team, she says, got a new boss instead.
A technology program management director spent more than three years at Equinix, the global data center company, before her exit became the basis for a federal lawsuit. According to a complaint filed June 29, 2026 in federal court in North Carolina, she led a worldwide team and managed a portfolio with an annual budget of about $41 million, with reviews that showed she met or exceeded what the company expected.
Then, in November 2024, the call came. An acting manager and a human resources representative told her she was being laid off, effective that December, the complaint says. The reason given: her position was being eliminated and her duties were no longer needed. They also told her, according to the filing, that her performance was "great" and that it was "not a reason" for letting her go.
That is where her account turns. The director alleges the job did not actually disappear. The complaint says her duties, her team, and her projects were all reassigned to a younger employee outside her racial group - someone the filing describes as having "never managed employees before" and lacking the skills to run either the team or the work. The plaintiff was 48 at the time, the complaint says; she alleges the replacement was under 40.
The detail likely to stick with HR readers comes next. After the handover, the complaint says, the replacement reached out to the former director and asked her to explain how to do the job.
She is suing on two fronts. She alleges race discrimination under Title VII and age discrimination under the federal Age Discrimination in Employment Act. The stated reason for her firing, the complaint says, "was a pretext for race discrimination." She filed a charge with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and received a right-to-sue letter before going to court, according to the filing. She is asking for her job back or front pay, plus back pay, damages, and legal fees.
For anyone who runs an HR function, the friction point is the distance between "your role is redundant" and what allegedly happened to the role. Under both Title VII and the ADEA, calling a position eliminated and then moving the same work to someone younger or of a different background is the classic setup for a pretext argument - the claim that the official reason was a cover for something else. Generous exit praise can backfire too, because it strips away the easy, lawful explanation for the decision.
The takeaway is old but durable: when you run a reduction in force, the documentation has to line up with reality. If the work survives, calling the role "eliminated" invites exactly this kind of suit.
The allegations have not been tested, and no court has ruled on any of the claims.