NEW YORK — It seemed like a high-profile opportunity to lead an influential environmental group's ambitious new push for green energy financing.
And so, in May 2023, Pedro da Silva joined the Sierra Club Foundation, the charitable arm for the nonprofit started by naturalist John Muir. A former investment management professional, da Silva directed its ''Shifting Trillions'' program that aimed to move major banks' investments away from the fossil fuel industry and towards climate solutions.
The effort emerged as George Floyd's murder prompted the Sierra Club to place newfound emphasis on environmental justice. As institutions grappled with their perpetuation of white supremacy, the club apologized for its founder's racist views and vowed to hire more diverse staff.
But da Silva says the foundation's commitments to racial justice did not extend internally. In a wrongful termination suit filed Thursday in California state court, the 29-year-old former employee alleges that normal workplace interactions got twisted into an unfair harassment complaint that leaned on racist stereotypes about predatory Black men.
He took the firing as a form of retaliation to the dissatisfaction he repeatedly expressed with the organization's discrimination and lack of diversity.
''That's what hurts movements so much,'' da Silva told the Associated Press. ''Especially organizations like these, they publish these statements about diversity being a strength and then they make it impossible for diverse leaders to survive."
It's been a tumultuous period for the Sierra Club, among the country's oldest grassroots environmental groups. Facing a $40 million budget deficit in 2023, then-executive director Ben Jealous oversaw three rounds of layoffs that eliminated about 10% of staff.
Jealous, its first Black leader, was ousted last August after staff accusations of harassment and bullying — a move Jealous considers ''racial retaliation." Jealous and da Silva are represented by the same civil rights and employment firm: Hadsell Stormer Renick & Dai, LLP.