Business Standard

New York sues Amazon over worker safety during pandemic

AG accuses e-com giant of failing to adequately protect staff at 2 warehouses

- KAREN WEISE

New York’s attorney general, Letitia James, sued Amazon on Tuesday evening, arguing that the company provided inadequate safety protection for workers in New York City during the pandemic and retaliated against employees who raised concerns over the conditions.

The case focuses on two Amazon facilities: a large warehouse on Staten Island and a delivery depot in Queens. James argues that Amazon failed to properly clean its buildings, conducted inadequate contact tracing for known Covid-19 cases, and “took swift retaliator­y action” to silence complaints from workers.

“Amazon’s extreme profits and exponentia­l growth rate came at the expense of the lives, health and safety of its frontline workers,” Ms. James argued in the complaint, filed in New York Supreme Court.

Kelly Nantel, a spokeswoma­n for Amazon, said the company cared “deeply about the health and safety” of its workers.

“We don’t believe the attorney general’s filing presents an accurate picture of Amazon’s industry-leading response to the pandemic,” Ms. Nantel said. Last week, Amazon preemptive­ly sued Ms. James in federal court in an attempt to stop her from bringing the charges. The company argued that workplace safety was a matter of federal, not state, law.

In its 64-page complaint last week, Amazon said its safety measures “far exceed what is required under the law.” It cited a surprise inspection by the New York City Sheriff’s Office that found Amazon “appeared to go above and beyond the current compliance requiremen­ts.” The company also detailed other safety measures it had taken, including temperatur­e checks and offering free Covid-19 testing on site.

New York, in its suit, said Amazon received written notificati­on of at least 250 employees at the Staten

AMAZON’S EXTREME PROFITS AND EXPONENTIA­L GROWTH RATE CAME AT THE EXPENSE OF THE LIVES, HEALTH AND SAFETY OF ITS FRONTLINE WORKERS”

LETITIA JAMES,

New York’s attorney general

WE DON’T BELIEVE THE ATTORNEY GENERAL’S FILING PRESENTS AN ACCURATE PICTURE OF AMAZON’S INDUSTRY-LEADING RESPONSE TO THE PANDEMIC”

AMAZON SPOKESWOMA­N

Island warehouse who had Covid-19. In more than 90 of those cases, the infected employee had been at work in the previous week, yet Amazon did not close portions of the building to provide proper ventilatio­n as the state required, the filing said.

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